General elections were held in the Netherlands on Wednesday 15 March 2017 to elect all 150 members of the House of Representatives.

The incumbent government of Prime Minister Mark Rutte was the first to serve a full term since 2002. The previous elections in 2012 had resulted in a ruling coalition of his People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and the Labour Party (PvdA). Because the second Rutte cabinet lacked a majority in the Senate, it relied on the support of Democrats 66 (D66), the Christian Union (CU) and the Reformed Political Party (SGP).

The VVD lost seats but remained the largest party, while the PvdA saw a massive loss in vote share and seats, failing to win a single municipality for the first time in the party's history. The Party for Freedom (PVV) made gains to reach second place, with the CDA, D66 and GroenLinks also increasing their number of seats. It was clear that at least four partners would be needed for a coalition with a parliamentary majority. The official election results were certified and published on 21 March. The elected MPs took their seats on 23 March.

Electoral system and organisation

Polling station in Winterswijk
Asscher campaigning

The House of Representatives (Dutch: Tweede Kamer) is composed of 150 seats elected by proportional representation in a single nationwide constituency, with a legal threshold of 1 full seat (0.67%), and residuals assigned by the D'Hondt method. The Senate is indirectly elected by the States-Provincial.

Electronic voting has been banned since 2007; votes must be cast with a red pencil.

Following reports from the General Intelligence and Security Service (Algemene Inlichtingen- en Veiligheidsdienst, AIVD) that Russian hacking groups Fancy Bear and Cozy Bear had made several attempts to hack into Dutch ministries, including the Ministry of General Affairs, to gain access to secret government documents. Minister of the Interior and Kingdom Relations Ronald Plasterk announced that votes for the election would therefore be processed by hand, although that decision was later reversed.

The election was also seen as an indication of interest in the national political system in the Caribbean Netherlands, after the low turnout seen there in the 2012 election.

Participating parties

ListPartyLead candidateDistricts
1People's Party for Freedom and DemocracyVVDMark Rutte20
2Labour PartyPvdALodewijk Asscher20
3Party for FreedomPVVGeert Wilders20
4Socialist PartySPEmile Roemer20
5Christian Democratic AppealCDASybrand van Haersma Buma20
6Democrats 66D66Alexander Pechtold20
7Christian UnionCUGert-Jan Segers20
8GroenLinksGLJesse Klaver20
9Reformed Political PartySGPKees van der Staaij20
10Party for the AnimalsPvdDMarianne Thieme20
1150PLUS50+Henk Krol20
12Entrepreneurs PartyOPHero Brinkman20
13VoorNederlandVNLJan Roos20
14DENKDENKTunahan Kuzu20
15Nieuwe WegenNiWeJacques Monasch20
16Forum for DemocracyFVDThierry Baudet20
17The Civil MovementDBBAd Vlems19
18Free-minded PartyVPNorbert Klein19
19GeenPeilGPJan Dijkgraaf19
20Pirate PartyPPAncilla van de Leest19
21Artikel 1A1Sylvana Simons18
22Non-VotersNSPeter Plasman16
23Libertarian PartyLPRobert Valentine16
24Lokaal in de KamerLidKJan Heijman16
25Jezus LeeftJLFlorens van der Spek7
26StemNLSNLMario van den Eijnde9
27Human and Spirit/Basic Income Party/Peace and JusticeMenS–BIPTara-Joëlle Fonk2
28Free Democratic PartyVDPBurhan Gökalp2

Campaign

The 2017 Dutch–Turkish diplomatic incident happened less than a week before the election; it was speculated that this benefited the Prime Minister's party (VVD), as Rutte's response to the incident was well received.

Debates

2017 Dutch general election debates
DateOrganisersVenueP Present NI Non-invitee A Absent inviteeNote
RoemerKrolThiemeKlaverAsscherPechtoldRutteSegersBumaWilders
26 FebruaryRTL NieuwsDe Rode HoedPNINIPPPANIPA
5 MarchBNR Nieuwsradio, RTL Nieuws, ElsevierCarré TheatrePPPPPPPAPA
13 MarchEenVandaagErasmus UniversityNINININININIPNINIP
14 MarchNOSBinnenhofPPPPPPPPPP

Opinion polls

Polls showed a precipitous collapse for both the VVD and PvdA following their decision to form a coalition government together after the 2012 elections, with support for the latter splitting among other left-wing or liberal parties. As with other right-wing populist parties, the Party for Freedom (PVV) rose in polls during the European migrant crisis, with the party topping polls from September 2015 through to late February 2017. However, in the relative absence of Geert Wilders during the campaign – notably refusing to participate in both RTL debates – support for the PVV collapsed, and the VVD secured a narrow lead in the final weeks before the election.

The seat projections in the graphs below are continuous from September 2012 (the last general election) up to the current date. Each colored line specifies a political party; numbers on the vertical axis represent numbers of seats. These seat estimates are derived from estimates by Peilingwijzer ("polling indicator") by Tom Louwerse, a professor of political science at Leiden University; they are not strictly polling averages, but the results of a model calculating a "trajectory" for each party based on changes in support over time between polls conducted by I&O Research, Ipsos, TNS NIPO, LISS panel, Peil, and De Stemming, and adjusting for the house effects of each individual pollster.

Results

Preliminary results were published on 15 March, and the official result was announced at 16:00 CET on 21 March. The total wasted vote was 161,327 votes or 1.55%.[citation needed]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy2,238,35121.2933−8
Party for Freedom1,372,94113.0620+5
Christian Democratic Appeal1,301,79612.3819+6
Democrats 661,285,81912.2319+7
GroenLinks959,6009.1314+10
Socialist Party955,6339.0914−1
Labour Party599,6995.709−29
Christian Union356,2713.3950
Party for the Animals335,2143.195+3
50PLUS327,1313.114+2
Reformed Political Party218,9502.0830
DENK216,1472.063New
Forum for Democracy187,1621.782New
VoorNederland38,2090.360New
Pirate Party35,4780.3400
Artikel 128,7000.270New
Nieuwe Wegen[nl]14,3620.140New
Entrepreneurs' Party12,5700.120New
Lokaal in de Kamer[nl]6,8580.070New
Non-Voters[nl]6,0250.060New
Civil Movement[nl]5,2210.050New
GeenPeil4,9450.050New
Jezus Leeft3,0990.030New
Free-Minded Party[nl]2,9380.030New
Libertarian Party1,4920.0100
MenSBIP–V-R7260.0100
StemNL5270.010New
Free Democratic Party1770.000New
Total10,516,041100.001500
Valid votes10,516,04199.55
Invalid/blank votes47,4150.45
Total votes10,563,456100.00
Registered voters/turnout12,893,46681.93
Source: Kiesraad

By province

Results by province
ProvinceVVDPVVCDAD66GLSPPvdACUPvdD50+SGPDENKFvDOthers
Drenthe19.612.814.410.27.811.98.64.62.63.50.80.31.81.1
Flevoland20.714.710.710.07.98.15.14.73.23.83.92.12.13.0
Friesland17.011.218.99.78.411.18.45.12.92.90.90.21.81.5
Gelderland20.911.713.911.98.89.15.44.52.92.84.11.41.51.1
Groningen13.911.211.612.611.913.98.36.03.62.80.70.51.61.4
Limburg17.919.614.910.66.813.74.00.62.94.60.11.12.01.2
North Brabant24.114.613.311.67.812.34.21.22.63.30.51.71.61.2
North Holland23.210.88.014.812.37.16.81.84.43.10.43.02.02.3
Overijssel18.711.619.810.67.09.25.56.02.12.53.01.51.51.0
South Holland22.114.510.212.18.76.75.53.73.33.13.13.32.11.6
Utrecht22.710.010.715.311.75.75.24.93.42.32.62.71.51.3
Zeeland19.713.313.58.16.29.55.64.62.93.59.50.71.71.2
Caribbean Netherlands12.44.223.625.98.95.57.13.03.51.30.40.51.32.4

Government formation

The election resulted in a House of Representatives where at least four parties would be required to form a coalition with a majority (76 seats). Media sources speculated that incumbent Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the VVD would seek to form a government with the support of the centre-right CDA and liberal D66. CU was thought to be the most likely candidate to be the fourth member of the coalition. Minister of Health, Welfare and Sport, Edith Schippers, was selected by the VVD to serve as the party's informateur on 16 March and appointed by Speaker of the House Khadija Arib, seeking to determine whether Jesse Klaver of GroenLinks solely desired a left-wing government, or instead simply viewed the VVD as an unlikely coalition partner. Similarly, talks with Emile Roemer of the Socialist Party (SP), who repeatedly stated during the campaign that his party would not govern with the VVD, remained a possibility.

The leaders of D66, CDA, PvdA, VVD, SP, GroenLinks, and CU stated that they would not enter a coalition with the PVV, and Roemer has also said that the SP will not join a coalition with the VVD.

The first proposed coalition was one involving the VVD-CDA-D66 and GroenLinks. This was the preferred coalition of Alexander Pechtold, Lodewijk Asscher and Gert-Jan Segers, while Jesse Klaver continued to argue that the major policy differences between GL and the VVD would make a coalition difficult. Nevertheless, the four parties began more serious negotiations toward a coalition agreement. Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS) reported that "labour market reform, investment in law enforcement and additional money for nursing homes" would be areas of agreement between the parties, while "refugee policy, income distribution, climate and medical ethics issues are potential stumbling blocks".

On 15 May, talks on the proposed four-way VVD-CDA-D66-GL coalition failed. It was reported that the main dispute concerned immigration, but GL leader Jesse Klaver cited climate issues and income differences as other issues where the parties disagreed. The end of the talks was reported to be a consensus decision, with no party blaming any others.

Coalition talks were reported to be at an impasse, with the VVD and CDA favouring a coalition with the CU, D66 favouring a coalition with either PvdA or SP, SP being absolutely opposed to a coalition with the VVD, CDA being opposed to a coalition without the VVD, PvdA rejecting any coalition, and all parties with more than five seats rejecting a coalition with the PVV. D66 said that it would consider a coalition with the CU very difficult due to disagreements on medical-ethical issues such as doctor-assisted suicide, due to the lack of representation of the political left within that coalition, and due to the small majority of one seat in both chambers, which could make for an unstable coalition.

In late June 2017, discussions began again between VVD, D66, CDA and CU under the lead of new informateur Herman Tjeenk Willink. After a three-week summer break, talks resumed on 9 August 2017, and were reported to be close to a conclusion due to representatives of unions and employers’ organizations joining the discussions, which typically happens near the end of such negotiations. In September 2017, a budget deal compromise was reached allowing the coalition talks to continue. While still 'close to conclusion', it appeared likely that the talks about government formation would exceed the record since World War II of 208 days set in 1977. After 208 days of negotiations, the VVD, D66, CDA and CU agreed to a coalition under a third informateur, Gerrit Zalm, and all members of the House of Representatives of the involved parties approved the agreement on 9 October 2017. On 26 October the new cabinet was formally installed 225 days after the elections, setting a record for the longest cabinet formation in history.

See also

Further reading

  • Mathilde M. van Ditmars, Nicola Maggini & Joost van Spanje (2019) , West European Politics

External links

  • Media related toDutch general elections 2017at Wikimedia Commons