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Nieuws uit 2006

24 November 2006

Dutch socialists paint the town red

STEVE McGIFFEN looks at the signficance of sweeping electoral gains in the Netherlands for Europe's fastest-growing left party.

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24 November 2006

After the election, every party's opinion about who should govern must be heard

“An authoritative person should take look at how the different parties see the election result,” SP leader Jan Marijnissen told journalists gathered at the national press centre in Nieuwspoort on Friday. Someone should be found who is respected on all sides and this person should spend a few days listening to each parliamentary group, finding out which parts of their own programmes they see as open to negotiation and what coalition of parties they would prefer to see taking part in the first round of talks aimed at forming a government.

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24 November 2006

Dutch Socialist Party: the reasons for their success

Elections: An anti-neoliberal party which last year brought about the failure of the European Constitution, the SP knows how to defend clear alternative proposals in the face of a consensus of left and right.

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23 November 2006

General Election: SP wins massive support throughout country

The parliamentary elections held yesterday in the Netherlands led to a veritable political earthquake. The biggest winner was the SP, which grew from nine to twenty-five seats in Parliament's 150-strong lower house, the country's main legislative body. The two parties of the outgoing governing right-wing coalition, the Christian Democratic CDA and the free market liberals of the VVD, lost between them a total of nine seats and thus the majority needed to continue in power. There is, however, no left majority either, for while the SP gained a total of sixteen seats, the social democratic PvdA (Labour Party) dropped from forty-two to thirty-three, with the Green Left falling from eight to seven. A coalition of centre-right CDA and centre-left PvdA also lacks a majority and would not be possible without the cooperation of other parties. The party founded by the right-wing populist leader Pim Fortuyn, gunned down during the general election campaign of 2002, lost all of its MPs and will no longer be represented in the lower house.

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22 November 2006

SP leader Jan Marijnissen: 'The socialists have overtaken the liberals!'

Quarter to ten, and SP campaign leader Hans van Heijningen introduces party leader Jan Marijnissen to a crowded , noisy Melkweg as “the winner of the parliamentary elections of 2006!”. Jan appears from the back of the hall, preceded by all of the SP's newly-elected candidates in a flurry of flowers, balloons and wild applause.

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22 November 2006

Exit polls show enormous gains for SP

At ten minutes to nine national broadcaster RTL publishes its exit polls. Gathered for the SP's election night celebration at the Melkweg in Amsterdam, the public holds its breath. RTL begin with the very small parties: EénNL (One Netherlands) wins one seat; the Party for Animals wins two, which draws applause from the crowd. The right-wing Christians of the SGP win two seats, as do the centrists of D66, which not long ago dwarfed the SP with a double-figure tally. The Green Left, for a long time the SP's rather bigger rival for the left vote, could manage only six, while the Christian Union – a much more progressive religious party than the SGP - grows to seven. More applause. Geert Wilders, a right-wing maverick MP who heads his own list, wins eight seats, which is greeted by groans. Then we move on to the big parties. The decline of the most right-wing of them, the 'Thatcherite' VVD, from twenty-eight seats to twenty is greeted with jubilation. And then – the SP has shot up from nine to thirty seats! The Melkweg goes crazy! The predictions for the PvdA (Labour Party), a decline from forty-two to thirty-four, and the CDA (Christian Democrats) down from forty-four to thirty-nine, are lost in the wave of joyful noise.

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