A year ago, Geert Wilders, the firebrand Dutch populist, stood triumphant after his Freedom Party’s electoral surge. He traded his shot at the premiership to cobble together a coalition, believing he’d aligned the stars to dismantle what he saw as the European Union’s ruinous edicts, in large part, its immigration mandates.
In July 2024, a government including Wilders’ PVV took office, igniting hope across Europe that the progressive tide was receding. “The Netherlands’ new cabinet was sworn in Tuesday,” we were told, marking “the first time that Geert Wilders’ far-right party became a part of the Dutch government.”
A hard-right shift, the sharpest in decades, promised to choke off migration and demand an opt-out from the EU’s border policies.
This wasn’t just a Dutch affair. Migration has become Europe’s obsession, fueling nationalist and far-right ascents from Paris to Berlin. Marine Le Pen’s National Rally stormed France’s first round of voting, only to be kneecapped in the second by the usual establishment maneuvers.
Wilders, undeterred, raged against the bureaucratic sclerosis stifling his promised revolution. His coalition scored one defiant victory, spitting in the eye of Brussels’ high priestess, Ursula von der Leyen. When she came peddling her multibillion-euro European defense fund, the Dutch parliament, by a razor-thin 73-71 vote, told her to find other fools to bankroll it. The motion, sparked by the right-wing JA21 and backed by three coalition parties plus the opposition Socialists, wasn’t binding, but it was a middle finger to the EU’s grandees. “The Netherlands’ parliament on Tuesday narrowly voted against a multibillion-euro European Union defense plan,” the reports noted, leaving von der Leyen’s scheme wobbling.
Yet, for all the bluster, the battle always circled back to immigration, the issue eroding the Dutch way of life.
And so, the Dutch experiment in defying the EU’s open-borders dogma lies in ruins, not for lack of will, but for the stubborn resistance of a system that bends only to break those who challenge it. Wilders’ gambit, like those of his populist kin across the continent, exposes the chasm between the voters’ cries and the elites’ intransigence.
This wasn’t just a Dutch affair. Migration has become Europe’s obsession, fueling nationalist and far-right ascents from Paris to Berlin. Marine Le Pen’s National Rally stormed France’s first round of voting, only to be kneecapped in the second by the usual establishment maneuvers.
Germany’s hard-right, despite soaring to second place in votes and public favor, faced similar sabotage. The pattern is clear: the people’s will, expressed at the ballot, is too often smothered by the elites’ machinations.
Wilders, undeterred, raged against the bureaucratic sclerosis stifling his promised revolution. His coalition scored one defiant victory, spitting in the eye of Brussels’ high priestess, Ursula von der Leyen. When she came peddling her multibillion-euro European defense fund, the Dutch parliament, by a razor-thin 73-71 vote, told her to find other fools to bankroll it. The motion, sparked by the right-wing JA21 and backed by three coalition parties plus the opposition Socialists, wasn’t binding, but it was a middle finger to the EU’s grandees. “The Netherlands’ parliament on Tuesday narrowly voted against a multibillion-euro European Union defense plan,” the reports noted, leaving von der Leyen’s scheme wobbling.
Yet, for all the bluster, the battle always circled back to immigration, the issue eroding the Dutch way of life.
On Tuesday morning, Wilders detonated his own government over it, pulling his five PVV ministers from the coalition. “No signature for our asylum plans. No changes to the [coalition] agreement. PVV is leaving the coalition,” he declared on X, plunging The Hague into chaos. The government, a fragile alliance of Wilders’ PVV, the populist Farmer-Citizens Movement, the centrist New Social Contract, and the liberal VVD, had been teetering.
Crisis talks collapsed when Wilders demanded immediate commitment to his “ten-point plan” on asylum, including a radical proposal to “close the borders to asylum-seekers.” His partners balked. “The PVV promised voters the strictest asylum policy ever,” Wilders told reporters, his voice taut with conviction. “I had no choice but to say: We rescind support for this Cabinet.”
And so, the Dutch experiment in defying the EU’s open-borders dogma lies in ruins, not for lack of will, but for the stubborn resistance of a system that bends only to break those who challenge it. Wilders’ gambit, like those of his populist kin across the continent, exposes the chasm between the voters’ cries and the elites’ intransigence.
The fight, it seems, is far from over.
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