PVV calls
for asylum freeze, rent cuts and North Sea drilling
August
25, 2025
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/08/pvv-calls-for-asylum-freeze-rent-cuts-and-north-sea-drilling/
Geert
Wilders has once again made a “total freeze on asylum” the top priority for his
PVV party at the general election in October.
The PVV’s
40-page manifesto is fronted by an AI-generated image of Wilders and the
10-point plan for stricter asylum rules that triggered the collapse of the
government in June.
In a
three-minute video on the PVV’s website, Wilders vowed his party would ”not
allow anyone else at all into the Netherlands to claim asylum”, describing
refugees as “fortune hunters who are coming mainly for our houses, our benefits
and our women”.
He blamed
the other three parties in the former coalition – NSC, VVD and BBB – for
forcing the collapse of the government and early elections by refusing to agree
to implement the PVV’s 10-point plan immediately.
In fact,
many of the measures were already in the coalition agreement or two asylum
bills drafted by PVV minister Marjolein Faber that were going through
parliament when Wilders pulled the plug on the cabinet.
Opinion
polls suggest support for the PVV has slipped from 20% to around 18.5% since
the government fell, which would still make it the largest party in parliament
with between 28 and 32 seats.
However,
the other major parties – the Christian Democrats (CDA), GroenLinks-PvdA and
the VVD – have ruled out joining a coalition with Wilders’ party after the
election on October 29.
EU
opt-outs
Wilders
claims a total ban on asylum is feasible because ”almost all asylum seekers
enter our country via Germany and Belgium, which are safe countries”.
But that
would require the Netherlands to negotiate an opt-out from European asylum
agreements, which was explicitly ruled out last October by EU home affairs
commissioner Ylva Johannson.
Wilders
said the Netherlands should follow Germany’s lead in stepping up border
controls, even though German courts have ruled that turning refugees back at
the border is illegal and the Dutch audit office concluded that the temporary
checks introduced last November had no impact on the number of asylum claims.
The PVV
manifesto calls for all 70,000 Syrian refugees to have their asylum status
revoked so they can be sent back to Syria or “another Arabic country”,
including around 600 Syrian Christians.
The party
would abolish the so-called “spreading law”, which gives the minister for
asylum the right to force local authorities to accommodate a proportionate
share of refugees, and close all accommodation facilities set up under it.
No
support for Ukraine
Wilders
also says the Netherlands should abandon the current coalition’s commitment to
“support Ukraine against Russian aggression politically, militarily,
financially and morally“ and cease all funding to Kyiv. All Ukrainian men over
the age of 18 would be sent home.
Settled
refugees still living in reception centres, intended for people whose asylum
claims are being considered, would be ordered to leave after 14 weeks, even
though European and international law forbids governments from deliberately
making people homeless.
Local
councils would not be allowed to give refugees settled status priority when
allocating social housing.
Although
the first chapter of the PVV, and two-thirds of Wilders’ campaign video, are
dedicated to ensuring “fewer asylum seekers’ centres and less Islam”, the PVV
also has policies on housing, healthcare and education.
Cut
housing regulations
Wilders
wants to speed up the housebuilding programme by simplifying the planning
system and scrap planning restrictions that protect endangered species. The PVV
also wants to shut down the public broadcaster NPO and turn the media village
in Hilversum into a residential neighbourhood.
The party
would increase the capacity to build on farmland by scrapping restrictions on
nitrogen pollution, though this would again bring the Netherlands into conflict
with European law.
Wilders
says the Netherlands should enforce its veto rights within the EU to cut the
number of conservation zones near farmland, known as Natura 2000 zones.
But the
EU cannot unilaterally abolish the rules that require the Netherlands to cut
nitrogen compound emissions from construction and farming. They are part of the
EU’s obligations under the Bern Convention, a binding international agreement
to protect natural habitats that spans the whole of Europe and parts of Africa.
Lower
bills
The PVV
wants to cut household bills by reducing VAT on energy from 21% to 9% and
setting a zero rate for groceries. Rents in social housing would be cut by 10%.
The plans
would be funded by cancelling all international development aid and reducing
the Netherlands’ EU contributions, though the other 26 member states would have
to agree to a Dutch rebate.
The
government abandoned a planned rent freeze in June after the Council of State
warned that it would lead to housing corporations building fewer houses and
private landlords, who hold 20% of the stock, would have to be compensated.
The
excess charge on health insurance, currently set at €385 a year and described
in the manifesto as a “fine on sickness” would be abolished under the PVV and
dental check-ups included in the basic insurance package.
Direct
democracy
The PVV
wants to abolish the Senate, creating a single democratic chamber, and
introduce “direct democracy” through binding referendums and elected mayors.
All MPs, ministers and the royal household would have their salaries cut by
25%.
The PVV
would cancel the energy transition fund, scrap targets for installing heat
pumps and disconnecting households from the gas supply and turn the environment
ministry into a “ministry for affordable energy”.
Instead
the Netherlands should follow Donald Trump’s lead by withdrawing from the Paris
Agreement and drilling for oil and gas in the North Sea.
Wilders
also called for Islamic schools to lose their constitutional right to freedom
of religious instruction, a measure that could take a decade to implement under
the complicated rules for amending the Dutch constitution.
Schools
should restore traditional teaching methods and ”gender propaganda” would be
outlawed. Gender neutral passports, which have been legal in the Netherlands
since 2018, would be abolished and the principle of ”two biological genders”
enshrined in law.
In
another policy carried over from the 2023 manifesto, the Netherlands should
also rescind its apologies for its slave trading history, which were made by
king Willem-Alexander two years ago.
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