Jetten
turns the page on Wilders, but can’t close the book
October
30, 2025 Gordon Darroch
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2025/10/jetten-turns-the-page-on-wilders-but-cant-close-the-book/
Rob
Jetten will need a steady hand to carve out a stable cabinet.
Within
minutes of Wednesday night’s exit poll D66 leader Rob Jetten stepped up on
stage in Leiden, pumped full of confidence, and declared it was time to “turn
the page on Wilders and work towards a great future for the Netherlands”.
In his
enthusiasm Jetten seemed to have forgotten the first rule of Dutch politics:
write Geert Wilders off at your peril. And sure enough, by daybreak it became
clear that the book was far from closed on the far-right leader.
It was a
stunning result for D66 and one there was little hint of as the election
campaign got under way in mid-September, when Jetten’s party was back in fifth
place, around 18 seats behind the PVV.
The party
climbed steadily at first and then accelerated, with a campaign targeted
squarely at the centre ground, combining a “tough but fair” stance on asylum
and migration and plans to develop cheap, renewable energy with investment in
education and technology, recognition for a Palestinian state and a European
army.
D66 took
votes from the shipwrecked NSC, from GroenLinks-PvdA, from VVD voters who were
alienated by Dilan Yesilgöz’s move to the hard right, from potential Christian
Democrats who were unsure of Henri Bontenbal’s views on Christian school,s from
non-voters and even from the PVV.
Television
debate
Jetten
benefited from some strokes of fortune: he was a last-minute replacement for
Wilders in the opening television debate after Wilders pulled out, ostensibly
for security reasons.
His party
offices were attacked when an anti-immigration protest in The Hague turned into
a full-scale riot, allowing him to denounce the influence of far-right ideology
in parliament.
Even his
appearances on the popular TV quiz De Slimste Mens (“The Smartest Person”),
which was recorded months earlier but broadcast during the campaign, was
credited with boosting his screen time.
But
Jetten took the breaks well. His television performances were polished and
upbeat, in contrast to his early days when he was mocked as “robot Jetten” for
his heavily scripted answers and wooden delivery.
And he
judiciously refrained from dwelling on the attack on his offices in The Hague
after the first few days, preferring to focus on the positive aspects of the
D66 campaign.
More than
anything, Jetten seemed to capture the mood among voters who were disillusioned
after two years of stagnation and in-fighting in the right-wing coalition
formed by PVV, NSC, VVD and the farmers’ party BBB.
“Positive
forces”
While
Wilders painted an apocalyptic picture of a country ruined by mass migration
and out-of-touch leaders, Jetten had a more hopeful vision, encapsulated in
D66’s Obama-influenced slogan Het kan wél.
“Politicians
in the Netherlands should be more optimistic and ask how we can make our
country better, instead of talking each other into the ground the whole time,”
he told Dutch News.
He
depicted the Netherlands as a nation with vast potential that had suffered from
leaders who lacked the vision to unlock it. The country was not angry, as
Wilders kept hollering, just disappointed.
The
“positive forces” Jetten referred to during the campaign were epitomised by his
headline policy of building 10 new cities.
Where
other parties talked of adding a street here and there to fix the housing
crisis, D66 had ambitious plans to build not just houses, but bright modern
neighbourhoods with schools, public transport links and green spaces, using
innovative technological solutions.
Jetten
explicitly referred to the Delta works, invoking memories of a time when the
Netherlands was celebrated for its world-beating engineering skills.
Far-right
remains strong
D66 is
not averse to a spot of nationalism – witness the energetic flag-waving at the
party’s election night celebrations in Leiden – but it prefers the progressive
nationalism of the 20th century to the migrant-bashing of the 21st.
But the
flip side is that if he becomes prime minister, Jetten will not be able to heal
the Netherlands’ divisions overnight with a dose of political positive
thinking.
The
far-right vote has splintered but still accounts for nearly one-third of the
seats in parliament. Some of the PVV’s share went to JA21, a party that has
similar views on Islam and asylum but has not been ruled out as a coalition
partner.
The even
more radical, pro-Russian Forum for Democracy increased their share from three
seats to seven. Wilders and the other populist right parties will continue to
be a thorn in Jetten’s side and keep pushing the issue of immigration to the
forefront of the public debate.
D66 is on
course to beat the PVV by the narrowest of margins: the parties are level on
seats, although Jetten could gain a psychologically significant one-seat
advantage once the overseas votes are counted.
Coalition
headache
Even
then, 27 seats – less than a fifth of the total – is the smallest number ever
for an election winner. Jetten will have to find at least three other parties
for a coalition and none of the options are easy.
Jetten’s
own preference is for a stable coalition of the centre, which would mean a
combination with the right-wing liberal VVD, GroenLinks-PvdA and the Christian
Democrats.
But that
scenario has been complicated by the VVD’s unexpectedly strong performance and
the fact that D66 took more votes from the left than from the progressive wing
of the VVD.
The
latter party’s leader, Dilan Yesilgöz, firmly ruled out joining a government
with GL-PvdA, and being the second largest party in the quartet will give her
considerable leverage.
Yesilgöz
wants to see a “centre-right cabinet with a strong VVD”, which realistically
would mean swapping out GL-PvdA for JA21, a party that has little in common
with D66.
But on
current numbers that quartet would fall just short of a minority in parliament
and have serious challenges getting laws passed by the Senate, where the
parties have less than one-third of the 75 seats.
The need
to bring a fifth party on board could give Jetten an opportunity to balance
JA21 with the ChristenUnie, which has three seats and worked well with D66 in
Mark Rutte’s last two cabinets, despite their ideological diifferences.
The only
snag would be that Rutte’s last cabinet collapsed two years ago when his
justice minister demanded tough restrictions on bringing in asylum seekers’
families, which the ChristenUnie, as a party of strong family values, firmly
rejected.
The
justice minister in question was, of course, Dilan Yesilgöz.

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