Early results from Wednesday’s elections in the Netherlands show a large fall in support for the radical-right Party for Freedom (PVV), led by Geert Wilders, and gains for the two mainstream parties, the VVD and PvdA. Cas Mudde argues that despite Dutch voters rejecting the broadly Eurosceptic platform of the PVV, Eurosceptic sentiment within the country is growing and the anti-European populist parties on the far-right and far-left will be ready to capitalise on any failures by the mainstream parties in government.
After a short but hectic election campaign the Dutch voter has spoken. And she has spoken very differently at the polls than in the opinion polls. Depending upon the polling agency, opinion polls from the last days were roughly 20 to 25 seats (out of 150!) wrong in their predictions. According to the first results, which historically tend to be fairly accurate, the mainstream right-wing People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) gained 41 seats and the mainstream left-wing Labour Party (PvdA) 39, winning 10 and 9 seats, respectively. In sharp contrast, the radical right Party for Freedom (PVV) won only 15, losing 9, while the radical left Socialist Party (SP) stayed at 15, roughly half of what they polled just over two weeks ago.
What has happened in the Netherlands in the past week? And, given that the New York Times has proclaimed the Netherlands as “an unusually good European weather vane,” what are the lessons to be learned for Europe? Is this the start of a new era of strong mainstream parties or just an interregnum in a fairly consistent move toward a volatile and increasingly Eurosceptic continent?
What seems to have happened in the last week of the campaign is that the roughly 40 per cent of voters that were undecided have given in to the two-horse-race framing of the election by the media and have divided their votes almost equally over the two mainstream parties. As many voters said in interviews, they had given a “strategic vote,” i.e. they had voted with their mind rather than their heart. As it had become clear to all that neither the PVV nor the SP was considered Koalitionsfähig (acceptable for a coalition) by the mainstream parties, and that the VVD and PvdA were going to constitute the core of the new government coalition, many people decided to vote for the mainstream party of their political leaning, to pull the new government more to the left/right. Alternatively, they didn’t bother to vote at all, in protest of the fifth election in ten years and the lack of a real alternative; turnout was 74 per cent, just barely above the historic low of 73.4 per cent in 1989.
The results are a big victory for both the establishment parties and the establishment media, national and international, which has done their utmost to discredit the two radical parties. As Geert Wilders bitterly remarked last night, Brussels is celebrating the loss of the PVV. While exaggerating his own role, as usual, he was not wrong. It is no coincidence that in the last week the two top EU politicians, EU president Herman van Rompuy and President of the European Commission José Manuel Barroso, warned against the rise of “anti-European populism,” as Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti recently termed it. But the pro-European establishment was not even mainly concerned about the PVV. Rather, they feared the “anti-European populism” of the left-wing SP, whose ideas were described by The Economist as “as much of a throwback to the 1970s as the platform shoes that are much in fashion in Amsterdam.”
Both parties had campaigned on a very EU-critical platform, particularly in the traditionally very pro-European Dutch context. The SP presented a fairly standard left-wing Eurosceptic position, which is supportive of the ideal of European integration, but critical of the “neoliberal dictates” from Brussels. The PVV went a significant step further, becoming one of the first non-marginal parties in Europe to call for a withdrawal from the European Union. In fact, even older, and previously more radical, populist radical right parties like the Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) or Belgian Flemish Interest (VB) do not call for their country to withdraw from the EU.
But while the Dutch have shunned the Euro radicals, and the elections do “set the stage for pro-European talks,” things are not back to ‘normal’ in the Netherlands. Because, paradoxically, while the ‘anti-European’ parties might have lost the battle, it remains to be seen whether they also have lost the war. In many ways, these have been the most Eurosceptic elections in Dutch history. Only the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) remained truly Europhile, true to the Christian democratic tradition (and reached a new historic low). All other parties held positions that ranged from qualified support to outright sepsis and rejection. Moreover, VVD leader Mark Rutte might have successfully fought off Geert Wilders, for now, but he did this by, among others, promising that he would not bail Greece out again. Similarly, the PvdA’s new leader, Diederik Samson, destroyed SP leader Emile Roemer in the debates, but adopted much of the SP’s anti-austerity position.
Hence, the much anticipated VVD-PvdA government, which will take several weeks (months) to finalize, will put the new Dutch position in between Angela Merkl’s pro-austerity Germany and François Hollande’s pro-stimulus France. It will have little other reason for existence than being pro-EU at a time that the Dutch population is growing more and more critical of its handling of the economic crisis. So, while the notoriously pro-European figures of the Eurobarometer still show broad general support for the European Union, roughly two-thirds of the Dutch population thinks EU-membership is “a good thing,” more independent sources show growing opposition to key EU policies. Most importantly, a good 60 per cent of Dutch people want the government to stop lending money to crisis-hit euro countries such as Greece.
In short, while the European establishment can take a sigh of relief for now, the Dutch election results should not be interpreted as a victory for the European Union. Rather, what it seems to reflect, according to some preliminary analysis, is that despite the first truly European campaign in Dutch history, the vast majority of voters have yet again voted on the basis of purely domestic issues. They have turned to (more or less) trusted established parties to turn the national economy around, despite rather than because of their European position. If they succeed in doing so, which seems highly unlikely given the limited national powers over the economy and the opposing economic views of the VVD and PvdA, Euroscepticism will remain an irrelevant political attitude in the Netherlands. However, if they fail to do so, and they continue to muddle through with (lukewarm) support for the European bailout programs, the “anti-European populist” parties will be there to point out their campaign promises and pick up the disappointed voters.
This article first appeared at Extremis Project – follow Extremis Project on Twitter @ExtremisProject
Please read our comments policy before commenting.
Note: This article gives the views of the author, and not the position of EUROPP – European Politics and Policy, nor of the London School of Economics.
Shortened URL for this post: http://bit.ly/PmlLT1
_______________________________
Cas Mudde – University of Georgia
Cas Mudde is teaches in the Department of International Affairs of the University of Georgia (USA). He has published widely on topics such as political extremism, democratization in Eastern Europe, civil society, and Euroskepticism. He is the author of Populist Radical Right Parties in Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2007).
Nice analysis with a few inaccuracies. Of course the most pro-Europe Dutch party are the left-liberals of D66. With 12 seats. And people voted either VVD or PvdA because the largest party may take the initiative in the coalition negotiations. Important in the Dutch political context. I share your view that the pro-European spin is wishful thinking. In the so called television Carré-debate prime minister Mark Rutte answered negatively on the question he would do his utmost to save the euro. Pro-European Dutch style. Hard to understand.