European election upset for
Geert Wilders as Dutch turn cold on anti-EU party
Dutch exit polls confound predictions to leave far-Right and anti-Islam
leader with 12.2 per cent of vote, behind all pro-EU mainstream political
parties
By Bruno
Waterfield, Scheveningen10:00PM BST 22 May 2014 / http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/netherlands/10850610/European-election-upset-for-Geert-Wilders-as-Dutch-turn-cold-on-anti-EU-party.html
Geert
Wilders came fourth in European elections in the Netherlands on Thursday night,
confounding predictions that he would lead a populist and far-Right backlash
against the European Union across the continent.
Dutch exit
polls put the far-Right and anti-Islam leader on 12.2 per cent of the vote,
putting him behind all the pro-EU mainstream political parties.
'Definitive'
exit polls put him behind the ruling centrist VVD on 12.3 per cent and almost
three per cent behind the pro-EU D66 liberals and Christian Democrats, each on
over 15 per cent.
Previous
opinion polls had put Mr Wilders in the lead but there was widespread
controversy over his alliance with the France’s Front National and the exit
polls suggested that his share of the vote fell, compared with 2009, by 4.8
percentage points.
The result
is a major blow to Mr Wilders who will lose two seats in the European
Parliament with his MEPs now reduced to three out a total of 26 Dutch
representatives.
After
delaying a downbeat post-election party in a tiny sports bar in the suburbs of
Scheveningen, a Dutch seaside town on the outskirts of The
Hague , Mr Wilders insisted he would fight on “for national
sovereignty, for less immigration, for less Brussels ”.
"Our
people stayed at home. We'll carry on fighting. We'll find partners who share
our views against the EU across Europe ,"
he said.
His
supporters, wearing customised “Wilders Akbar” football shirts - a provocative
play on the Islam chant “Allahu Akbar”, or “God is Great” - had arrived in
celebratory mood but hissed as the first exit polls were released by Dutch
state broadcaster.
Around 400
million people across the EU’s 28 member states are eligible to vote in the
elections that began in Britain
and the Netherlands
on Thursday and will conclude when most countries vote on Sunday.
The
preliminary exit polls were released when voting closed in the Netherlands at
9pm local time.
Unlike Britain , which keeps all exit polls under wraps
until Sunday night, the Netherlands
has constitutional requirements that mean polling surveys are published
immediately.
Turnout was expected to be lower than the
37 per cent who voted during the last European elections five years ago, amid
fears that participation across Europe is
heading for an all-time low.
After the elections Mr Wilders will join
forces with Marine Le Pen’s Front National to create a European Freedom
Alliance with other far-Right parties in Austria ,
Belgium , Italy , Slovakia
and Sweden .
Mr Wilders, who has tried to distance
himself from traditional far-Right groups, was forced to distance himself from
comments by Jean-Marie Le Pen earlier this week that the Ebola virus could
solve Europe ’s immigration “problem” by
killing Africans. “I don’t agree with it. I think it was a ridiculous remark,”
he said.
The European Parliament has a total of 751
seats to be distributed across Europe on the
basis of population size during elections that finish on May 25.
As the EU has grown and as its parliament
has become increasingly important, popular participation in European elections
has slumped.
In 1979, the first direct European election
to the parliament, a respectable 62 per cent of eligible voters turned out to
cast their ballots. But in 2009 and as MEPs became more important than ever
after the Lisbon Treaty, the turnout slumped to 43 per cent.
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