SATURDAY,
27 APRIL 2024 - 13:50
https://nltimes.nl/2024/04/27/republicans-demand-reduced-salary-benefits-king-protest
Republicans to demand reduced salary and benefits
for the king during protest
The anti-monarchist movement, Republiek,
organized a demonstration in Emmen on King's Day calling for the Dutch king's
earnings to be slashed, and saying that he should be subject to income tax,
inheritance tax, and gift tax like everyone else. They think King
Willem-Alexander should only be allowed to earn the maximum amount that may be
paid to public servants in the Netherlands, a standard named for former Prime
Minister Jan Peter Balenende.
Instead of the 1.1 million euros paid annually to
Willem-Alexander, he should earn no more than roughly 233,000 euros per year,
the current level of the Balkenende Standard, the Republicans said. The
movement launced a petition campaign that officially kicked off on Saturday.
"The
vast majority of Dutch people are bothered by the millions of income for the
Oranjes," said Republiek chair Floris Müller. In addition to his salary of
1.1 million euros, Willem-Alexander receives almost 6 million euros in expense
allowances.
"At a
time when so many people are struggling, it is inexplicable that we pay the
head of State so much money, it is unfair and a symbol of social
inequality," said Müller. The Oranjes, the members of the Dutch Royal
Family, are among the richest families in Europe.
As such,
the compensation is not necessary, he argued. “It is nothing more than a
billionaire subsidy and we want to put an end to that with our petition.”
Republiek
placed a large scoreboard along the route the Royal Family walked during their
visit to Emmen on Saturday. The scoreboard shows the current status of the
number of signatures they have collected. "An interactive
demonstration," Müller called the action, where people could also sign up
during the event.
"I
hope, of course, that the king will also sign it," Müller joked earlier
this week. The leader of the movement said he hopes that the petition will
eventually be signed at least 50,000 times before it closes ahead of
Prinsjesdag, the Dutch government's Budget Day held annually on the third
Tuesday in September. The organization then wants to present the collection of
signatures to the Tweede Kamer, the lower house of Parliament.
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