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Illustration by Natália Delgado/POLITICO |
How to
watch the Dutch election like a pro
POLITICO
lays out everything you need to know about a critical vote that is currently
too close to call, as far-right Geert Wilders takes on the mainstream again.
By EVA
HARTOG
October
28, 2025 7:38 pm CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/how-to-watch-the-dutch-election-like-a-pro-2/
Europe is
holding its breath: Will the Netherlands swing left or maintain its rightward
course?
The Dutch
head to the polls Wednesday for a vote that could cement the far right as the
most popular political party in the Netherlands — and expose the wider struggle
European centrists face to beat back anti-establishment forces.
But even
if anti-immigration firebrand Geert Wilders wins the election, as current
opinion polls suggest he might, he is short of allies and has next to no chance
of becoming prime minister, or even being in government — likely setting off a
scramble to form a coalition that excludes the far right.
The last
Dutch government was in office for less than a year — 336 days to be exact —
before it collapsed, triggering the third election in five years, as the
Netherlands struggles to govern itself.
To get
you prepared for more drama, we’ve compiled this essential guide to everything
you need to know ahead of the big reveal Wednesday evening.
Who’s
running?
Twenty-seven
parties spanning the political spectrum will be competing for 150 seats in
parliament, and a chance at having one of their own appointed as Dutch prime
minister.
When do
we get the results?
Polls
open Wednesday at 7:30 a.m. CET and close at 9 p.m.
Exit
polls are announced as soon as voting ends — and around midnight, national news
agency ANP publishes preliminary results. Figures per municipality will trickle
in over the course of the evening, and final results can be expected the next
day.
What
should I watch out for?
The main
question is not just whether Dutch voters will lean left or right, but also
which of the many competing parties on each side they’ll go for.
Whether
supporters of the far-right populist Party for Freedom (PVV) will stick with
founder Geert Wilders, shift to another hard-right or right-wing party, or stay
home altogether will be critical.
In short:
it’s a political battle royal.
What are
the polls saying?
For
weeks, polls have suggested that the PVV will come out on top — while its
former coalition partner, the center-right liberal People’s Party for Freedom
and Democracy (VVD), is lagging.
The
centrist D66 is having a real moment, with all eyes on its leader Rob Jetten,
who is giving the large traditional parties a run for their money in his bid to
become the party’s first prime minister in Dutch history.
In a
tightly contested election, the Christian Democratic Appeal’s down-to-earth
Henri Bontenbal is another candidate who has been floated as the potential next
prime minister — given no one wants to team up with Wilders — a prospect that
would’ve shocked anyone watching two years ago when voters ditched the
conservative CDA en masse
Green-Left
Labor, led by veteran politician Frans Timmermans, is also in the mix.
But as
the Dutch say: Don’t sell the hide before the bear is shot. In the last
election, most voters didn’t make up their minds until the final moments. This
means that for Wilders especially, turnout will be critical.
No matter
what his result, he is expected to be frozen out of coalition talks, having
burned too many bridges in The Hague. If he wins the most votes but is still
sidelined from government, he’s likely to use it as ammunition to argue his
followers are being ignored and Dutch democracy is dead.
A recap
The Dutch
are still reeling from the electoral earthquake that upended the political
landscape in 2023, when Wilders’ PVV won the most votes for the first time
ever.
After
decades of being politically sidelined for its anti-Islam, anti-immigrant and
anti-establishment standpoints, the PVV was suddenly at the center of the most
right-wing government in modern Dutch history.
To form a
coalition, it teamed up with three other forces right of center, including the
VVD and two smaller newcomer parties.
But from
Day One, the alliance was plagued by infighting and public drama worthy of a
soap opera. And Wilders, considered too toxic for the post of prime minister,
criticized his own coalition relentlessly from the parliament benches.
And since
we’re already dragging up old cows out of the ditch (Nederglish for bringing up
old grievances) …
… the
(most recent) collapse
That
brings us to this past June, when Wilders suddenly quit the coalition, arguing
it wasn’t strict enough on migration despite the fact that the asylum and
migration minister wore a PVV badge.
The
question now is: Will Dutch voters opt for stability by moving back to the
center, or will they forgive Wilders for triggering a political meltdown and
opt for more far-right disruption?
For
weeks, polls have suggested that the PVV will be the big winner. |
The
answer could have wide-ranging repercussions.
In a
September report, the group Democracy Monitor warned of “urgent” democratic
backsliding in the Netherlands, citing, among other factors, increased support
for authoritarian leadership styles and declining public trust in politics
overall.
What are
the campaign issues?
Unsurprisingly,
after the last two Cabinets collapsed over migration, limiting the number of
asylum-seekers in the Netherlands is a central topic.
One one
end of the spectrum, the PVV is calling for a complete asylum ban (which goes
against EU rules); while, on the other side, Green-Left Labor proposes a
refugee quota and cooperation with Brussels.
Other
major matters dominating the debate include housing, health care and — to a
lesser extent — the climate. There is broad agreement on raising defense
spending to the NATO target of 5 percent of gross domestic product, though
parties disagree on exactly how to finance this increase.
Overall,
the campaign has been rather tepid. VVD leader Dilan Yeşilgöz took on a cursing
Wilders in a game of Mario Kart; D66’s Rob Jetten showed off his IQ in a TV
game show; and CDA’s Bontenbal tried to charm online voters with a video of him
making a his own kapsalon.
But the
temperature has risen somewhat in the last few days, with Timmermans
threatening legal action after media linked PVV parliamentarians to an
AI-driven attack against him online, while rising star Jetten was reprimanded
by a TV host for making a “sexist” remark about a Dutch princess.
So, will
the Dutch have a new leader the day after the vote?
Ha! No.
The
election result is only the starting gun for a long and convoluted negotiation
process that rivals the choosing of a new pope.
First, a
scout is appointed to explore which parties could work together based on their
electoral result and their views (a majority coalition requires 76 seats).
Then, the baton is passed to a so-called informateur, who takes the talks a
step further and draws up a preliminary coalition agreement.
45,000
demonstrators marched demanding the Dutch government improve its policy on
climate change, just three days before the Dutch general election. |
Finally,
the informateur is replaced with a formateur, who is usually also the next
prime minister, and who divvies up various ministries across the coalition
parties.
Once the
Cabinet is assembled, they pay a traditional visit to the Dutch King and —
voilà—white smoke.
When will
we know what the next government will look like?
That is
anyone’s guess. The last Cabinet formation took 223 days.
The
all-time record stands at 299 days. (If that makes your jaw drop, we kindly
refer you to neighboring Belgium, where the record is 541 days.)
If we
Dutch people can manage it, you won’t have to read another one of these again
until the next planned election — in four years.
Koen
Verhelst contributed to this report.

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