Cabinet
collapse sparks anger and warnings: what the papers say
June 4, 2025
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/06/cabinet-collapse-sparks-anger-and-warnings-what-the-papers-say/
The fall of
Dick Schoof’s cabinet, after just 11 months, has prompted fierce commentary and
sober reflections in the Dutch press. Editorials and analyses in the main
newspapers agree on one point: Geert Wilders’ abrupt withdrawal from the
coalition has thrown Dutch politics into renewed turmoil, with serious
consequences for the country.
In its
editorial, the Volkskrant writes: “The country deserves a better cabinet.” It
describes the Schoof government as a “disastrous squabbling club” and
criticises VVD leader Dilan Yesilgöz’s decision to open the door to cooperation
with Wilders’ PVV in the first place.
The paper
notes that Wilders’ “constant threats of a cabinet crisis whenever he did not
get his way” were further signs that “responsibility became too much” for him.
Voters
deserve “parties that are practically able to govern, that are democratically
organised and that respect the Dutch rule of law and the international legal
order,” the paper said.
Columnist
Bas Heijne, writing in the NRC, argues that Wilders acted “in the knowledge
that he was condemning himself to the sidelines of politics. And this time
probably for good.”
Heijne
writes that “he has no successor and has built nothing,” and calls the Schoof
government “a hopeless cabinet” from the start. Wilders’ rhetoric, he said,
served “to hide his appalling lack of administrative competence.” Heijne
concludes that Wilders’ supporters will still enjoy his “aggressive
indignation” and “visions of threat and doom” — but that is “what they will
have to make do with from now on.”
The
Telegraaf, in its editorial, is scathing: “Reckless, irresponsible and utterly
unreliable!” The paper accuses Wilders of living up to “his reputation as a
quitter” and “abandoning his 2.5 million voters.”
It argues
that 11 months after the election promises of right-wing reform, “it turns out
to be one big disappointment.” The editorial concludes: “The PVV-led coalition
has failed.”
The
Financieele Dagblad blames Wilders for forcing his coalition partners to sign
an underdeveloped ten-point asylum plan, and notes: “He pulled the plug.” The
editorial concludes: “Wilders should have taken responsibility by working on a
solution, instead of walking away.”
Trouw, in
its analysis, describes the collapse as a “deep wound” in The Hague and an
“experiment of a radical right-wing party participating in government” that
ends in “chaos, with anger and bewilderment.”
Former
coalition partners, especially the VVD and BBB, have accused Wilders of putting
himself first, the paper says. The analysis concludes that for the right-wing
bloc in parliament, the deepest wound is that “they failed to make a truly
right-wing cabinet work.”
Failed
experiment
The AD
describes the PVV coalition experiment as failed, though this is “still
whispered rather than openly stated.” It
highlights the anger of coalition partners, who accused Wilders of being
“reckless” and points out that even PVV ministers heard the news through the
media.
The Parool,
in a detailed reconstruction of the meeting which led Wilders to pull out,
portrays the collapse as an “explosion.” The paper reports that Wilders told
his coalition partners: “It is simply over. I am stepping down.”
The
coalition partners, the paper said, felt Wilders was simply looking for a way
to break the coalition. “Wilders wanted no more defeats,” the paper said. “This
was never really about asylum.”
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