Centrist
D66 party makes huge gains in Dutch election
Result
opens a path for D66 leader Rob Jetten to form a government as the youngest
ever prime minister of the Netherlands
Jon
Henley Europe correspondent and Senay Boztas in Leiden
Thu 30
Oct 2025 06.31 GMT
The
centrist D66 party made huge gains in Dutch elections, likely giving it the
lead in government formation as the party of far-right leader Geert Wilders
lost support.
With 90%
of the votes counted early on Thursday, D66 and Wilders’ Freedom Party (PVV)
were both projected to take 26 seats in the 150-seat lower house of parliament.
It was a
sharp fall for Wilders from a record showing in 2023, while D66 made the
biggest gains and almost tripled its seats.
Exit
polls and early results had indicated a narrow victory for the progressive D66,
with Wilders trailing in second place. But vote counting indicated a slightly
stronger showing for the anti-immigration firebrand.
The shift
in the early hours of Thursday is unlikely to alter the composition of the next
government coalition. All major mainstream parties have ruled out governing
with Wilders after he brought down the last coalition led by his PVV.
The
result instead opens a path for D66 leader Rob Jetten to form a government as
the youngest ever prime minister of the Netherlands.
“We have
today achieved D66’s best ever result,” Jetten told jubilant supporters at the
party’s election gathering in Leiden. “Millions of Dutch people have turned a
page. They have said goodbye to the politics of negativity, of hate, of ‘it
can’t be done.’
“Let’s
also turn the page on Wilders and work on a splendid future for our beautiful
country … in the coming years, we will do everything we can to show all Dutch
people … that politics and the government can be there for them again,” he
added.
Even if
final results put the Freedom party in first place, Wilders’ short-lived period
in power after the PVV’s shock victory in 2023 seems over for now: all major
mainstream parties have ruled out joining a coalition with his party.
The
election was triggered by Wilders pulling the PVV out of the government in
June, less than a year after it took office, after the partners refused to
endorse his radical anti-refugee plans, widely seen as unworkable or illegal or
both.
Wilders
acknowledged his party was unlikely to be part of the new government, but said
his decision to quit was justified. “The voter has spoken. We had hoped for a
different outcome but we stuck to our guns,” he posted on social media.
Under the
proportional Dutch system, 0.67% of the vote yields one MP, a bar that was
cleared by 15 of the 27 parties contesting the election – which included
parties for the over-50s, for youth, for animals, for a universal basic income
and for sport.
That
fragmentation means no single party ever wins a majority, and the country has
been governed by coalitions – made up, in its three most recent governments, of
four parties – for more than a century. The next government will be no
different.
“When it
comes to forming a new government in the Netherlands, election results are not
the end, they’re the start,” said Rem Korteweg of the Clingendael Institute in
The Hague. “The cards have been shuffled. Now the negotiations can begin.”
The
centre-left GreenLeft/Labour alliance (GL/PvdA) had a poor night, finishing
third with 20 seats – five fewer than in the outgoing parliament and than polls
had predicted – prompting the party leader, Frans Timmermans, to step down.
The
veteran former European Commission vice-president said he took “full
responsibility” for the result, adding: “It is time for me to take a step back
and hand over the leadership of our movement to the next generation.”
But the
centre-right Christian Democrats (CDA), who also campaigned on a return to
“decent” and “responsible” politics in the Netherlands after the most extreme
government in the country’s recent history, nearly quadrupled their seat tally
to 19.
With 76
seats needed to form a governing coalition, one possible scenario could be a
broad-based alliance involving D66, CDA, GL/PvdA and the liberal-conservative
VVD – the only member of the outgoing government to improve its seat tally,
with 23.
That
could be hard to negotiate, however, as the VVD opposes a tie-up with the
centre-left GL/PvdA. The VVD leader, Dilon Yeşilgöz, has “repeatedly said she
wants a rightwing coalition”, noted Armida van Rij of the Centre for European
Reform.
An
alternative, more rightwing constellation might bring in the radical right
JA21, which gained eight seats to finish on nine. Unlike the VVD, all other
outgoing coalition members lost heavily, with one, New Social Contract, failing
to win any seats at all.
In a
campaign dominated by migration, healthcare costs and the Netherlands’ acute
housing crisis, Wilders’ PVV had led consistently in the polls until days
before the election, when the mainstream centre-left to moderate right parties
caught up.
Wilders
had said “democracy would be dead” if the PVV ended up as the largest party and
was shut out of government. His opponents said first place did not guarantee
government and any coalition with a majority is democratic.
Coalition-building
in the Netherlands can take months. After the vote, an informateur tests
possible options that could command a majority. Potential partners then
negotiate an agreement and must undergo a confidence vote in parliament.
Whatever
the future cabinet’s complexion, it will need to act. Despite the campaign’s
focus on migration, voters have consistently said the country’s biggest problem
is its housing shortage, estimated at about 400,000 homes in a nation of 18
million.
Unless
that question – and other pressing issues, including soaring healthcare costs –
are properly addressed, analysts warn that the Netherlands’ apparent return to
what looks like a more commonsense form of government could prove short-lived.

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