NSC sits out next stage of coalition talks,
Plasterk steps down
February
13, 2024
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2024/02/nsc-sits-out-next-stage-of-coalition-talks-plasterk-steps-down/
Pieter
Omtzigt has said his Nieuw Sociaal Contract party will stay out of the next
round of talks to form a new Dutch government, but has not ruled out a pact
with a minority right-wing cabinet.
Omtzigt
walked out of the negotiations last week just as Ronald Plasterk, the former
Labour (PvdA) minister overseeing the four-party discussions, was preparing to
send a progress report to parliament.
Plasterk
said Omtzigt’s absence in the last days made it difficult to judge if a cabinet
could be formed, but recommended that all four parties start a second round of
discussions under a different leader.
Omtzigt
said it would be a “good idea” for the other three parties – the far-right PVV,
the Liberal VVD and the farmers’ party BBB – to look at forming a minority
cabinet, but said NSC would not take a seat at the negotiating table.
Parliament
will debate Plasterk’s report on Wednesday, after which MPs are expected to
appoint a new informateur to lead the next round of talks and draw up an
agenda.
Omtzigt
told Plasterk and the other party leaders on January 10 that his party was not
prepared to form a majority cabinet with the other three because the
differences between NSC and the PVV on the constitution were too great.
Confidence deal
VVD leader
Dilan Yesilgöz also said at the start of the negotiations that her party would
not join a cabinet with Geert Wilders’s PVV, but was willing to support a
minority coalition through a confidence and supply deal.
Plasterk
said in his report that “it should be clear that not everyone in a cabinet can
support it from outside,” a remark that will add to the pressure on Yesilgöz to
change her stance.
Many rank
and file members of the VVD are also keen for the party to form a right-wing
cabinet with the PVV and BBB.
Wilders
posted a message on X, formerly known as Twitter, saying the talks needed to
continue because the country “must be governed”.
“It is
worth looking to see if – and moreover in what form – we can continue
together,” he said.
Timmermans: “No solution”
Frans
Timmermans, leader of the left-wing alliance GroenLinks-PvdA, the second
largest party in parliament after the PVV, said the talks had failed, but it
was up to the right-wing parties to break the deadlock.
“The
Netherlands has been waiting almost three months for a solution to the many
problems we have and we are no closer to getting one,” Timmermans told
EenVandaag.
“Wilders
has the largest party in the Lower House, so he rightly has the initiative.
They need to find a way to reach an agreement and as I understand it, that is
probably going to be through some kind of minority construction.
“I think
the country deserves a majority cabinet, but apparently they can’t make it
work.”
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