WEDNESDAY,
29 NOVEMBER 2023 - 09:47
Wilders visits anti-asylum seekers meeting in
Kijkduin; Other politicians critical
PVV leader
Geert Wilders briefly visited a meeting in Kijkduin on Tuesday evening where
locals protested against the arrival of asylum seekers. The move raised
eyebrows among other politicians, including potential coalition partners NSC
and BBB, Nieuwsuur reports.
Around 120
asylum seekers have been staying at a hotel in Kijkduin since this weekend
because the arrival center in Ter Apel is overflowing. The municipality of The
Hague arranged the hotel and an information meeting for locals on Tuesday.
Wilders
briefly attended that meeting to “encourage” local residents, he said. He
didn’t actually go inside for security reasons but did show his face at the
entrance. In conversation with the press, he said that he wanted an asylum
freeze and that the Netherlands was being “flooded” with asylum seekers. “I
will support you through thick and thin,” he told a local.
According
to Wilders, Tuesday’s appearance was nothing out of the ordinary because he has
been attending such meetings for years. “I would find it very cowardly if I
didn’t do that after the elections,” he said to Nieuwsuur.
The Hague
mayor Jan van Zanen said Wilders is welcome to show his involvement but
stressed that Kijkduin “is not the place for a party politics circus.” Van
Zanen attended the actual meeting. He believes his municipality should
contribute to solving the crisis in asylum shelter. “Despite last week’s
election results, these people should not sleep in the grass,” he said.
NSC leader
Pieter Omtzigt called Wilders’ presence at the meeting strange but added that
Wilders is free to go where he wants. BBB leader Caroline van der Plas said: “I
personally wouldn’t do it. I would say: let’s focus on the exploration [for
forming a new government].”
NSC and BBB
are considered the most likely coalition partners to form a government with
Geert Wilders’ PVV. Today, formation scout Ronald Plasterk is meeting with the
leaders of the four largest parties after the elections - PVV, GroenLinks-PvdA,
NSC, and VVD - to start exploring possible coalitions. That is the first step
in the formation process. The VVD already said it wouldn’t be part of the next
government, and the left-wing combination is an unlikely match for Wilders’
far-right PVV. So the NSC is Wilders’ only option for taking a major step
towards a majority in parliament. The PVV has around 37 seats after the
elections and NSC 20. There are 150 seats in the Tweede Kamer, so at least 76
seats are required for a majority.
Other
politicians were also critical of Wilders’ visit to Kijkduin. CDA leader Henri
Bontenbal called it “not great” and “a bit polarizing.” PvdD leader Esther
Ouwehand pointed out that Wilders isn’t modeling how he’d be “the Prime
Minister for all Dutch people.”
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