Sneers on social media, financial disputes hurt
coalition talks
January 30,
2024
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2024/01/sneers-on-social-media-financial-disputes-hurt-coalition-talks/
Tensions
are rising between the four parties currently in talks on forming a new
government, and some commentators are now suggesting far right leader Geert
Wilders could be steering them towards collapse.
According
to the Financieele Dagblad “the PVV and VVD have broken the wall of silence
around the talks to sneer at each other”, while the Telegraaf says there are
“concerns about Wilders’ flirtation with new elections”.
“Everyone
may be sticking to the radio silence in front of the cameras, but social media
messages, gossip, and what people are saying away from The Hague are leading to
doubts and irritations between the PVV, NSC, BBB and VVD,” the AD said in its
analysis.
Meanwhile,
radio station BNR interviewed two political campaign experts who suggested
Wilders did not want the talks to succeed. “There is a major likelihood that
the talks will break down and if that happens, everyone needs a believable
‘exit’,” Jurjen van den Bergh from campaign bureau De Goede Zaak told the
broadcaster.
At the
weekend, Wilders placed a message on social media which hinted at the PVV’s
priorities in the negotiations. “I hope we can manage it so that new elections
are not necessary,” he signed off.
Wilders
also posted a tweet criticizing VVD leader Dilan Yesilgöz, and describing her
as “sour”. Yesilgöz for her part told the VVD party conference on Saturday that
“if you are expert enough at sending angry messages out into the world, you can
win an election,” in a thinly veiled reference to Wilders’ social media habits.
Wilders
himself on Monday admitted that the talks are under considerable pressure.
“There is a lot at stake and the negotiations are tough,” he told reporters
ahead of the day’s talks. “I can’t make things better than they are and we will
see what happens.”
The weekend
tit for tat between Wilders and VVD leader Dilan Yesilgöz is just one issue
facing the four right-wing parties and divisions over the finances pose a major
obstacle to any agreement, observers say.
Pressed by
reporters on Monday, negotiation leader Ronald Plasterk admitted that the
potential coalition’s finances are a “complicated” issue. “There needs to the
prospect of an agreement and that is naturally the big question when it comes
to the money,” he said.
Finances
The
formation process has been ongoing for over two months with little obvious
progress. Plasterk has pledged to brief parliament on his progress in early
February.
The AD
reported on Monday that the right-wing parties PVV, VVD, NSC and BBB would vote
down any plans that committed the government to extra spending while the talks
are ongoing.
The
question of balancing the finance
highlighting the division between the VVD and NSC, parties that advocate
strict fiscal responsibility, and the PVV, which wants to keep public spending
high by slashing funding in areas such as culture and aid.
Financial
experts warned last autumn that the government will need to find €17 billion in
spending cuts to offset the effect of higher interest rates and budget for the
effects of an ageing population, climate change and global instability.
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