Split in
Wilders’ PVV increases options for minority coalition
January
21, 2026
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2026/01/split-in-wilders-pvv-increases-options-for-minority-coalition/
The split
in the far-right PVV after seven of its MPs formed a breakaway party could
create opportunities for the incoming government, which will need support from
the opposition to get its legislation through parliament.
The new
group, led by Gidi Markuszower, said it wanted to “do business” with the
minority cabinet of D66, CDA and VVD – in stark contrast to PVV leader Geert
Wilders, who turned down an invitation to drink coffee with the coalition
parties last week.
Wilders’s
“hard opposition” was one of the reasons given by the seven MPs for quitting
the party, along with the loss of 11 seats at the general election and the
failure to create a membership structure.
“The
country wants to see solutions, not just criticism,” the MPs said. “The PVV is
more than one man with a Twitter account and we can realise far more than just
severe criticism of Islam.”
The MPs,
many of whom were elected for the first time in October, have said they want to
meet Rianne Letschert, who is chairing the negotiations to form the next
government, in the next week.
D66
leader and prospective prime minister Rob Jetten gave a guarded welcome to the
idea. “If a new parliamentary party wants to work constructively with us, that
creates opportunities,” he said.
Constructive
parties
“The
question is what kind of line the new party takes. That’s something we’ll find
out in the next few months.”
Dilan
Yesilgöz, leader of the right-wing liberal VVD, said: “It means there is more
room to look around and see if there are constructive parties who can think
with us.”
Christian
Democrat leader Henri Bontenbal preferred a wait-and-see approach. “It depends
on what they’re going to do,” he said. “I wouldn’t wish this misery on anybody
and I’m not going to dance on someone else’s grave.”
Bontenbal
pointed out that the PVV will still be a “substantial opposition party” even
with 19 seats, but the split means it is no longer the largest group outside
the coalition.
That
honour now falls to the left-wing alliance GroenLinks-PvdA, whose leader Jesse
Klaver was sceptical of the Markuszower group’s pledge to be more constructive.
“I need to see what this brings first,” he said.
The other
parties on the hard right, FVD and JA21, have said they are not interested in
merging with the former PVV MPs, but they are likely to work closely together.
Right-wing
alternative
D66 and
CDA have ruled out working with the PVV or FVD, but a combination of JA21 and
the Markuszower group would have 16 seats, creating a viable right-wing
alternative to GL-PvdA. That will appeal to Yesilgöz, who campaigned on a
pledge to shut Klaver’s party out of the cabinet.
Opinion
polls since the election have shown support for the PVV falling off sharply
since the election. A Maurice de Hond survey published at the weekend, before
the split was announced, found Wilders’s party would win just 17 seats.
The main
beneficiary was FVD, which is predicted to double its contingent to 14 seats,
while JA21 would win 11, a gain of two. The total for the far-right block was
unchanged at 42 seats or 29% of the electorate.

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