Local
parties make big gains in elections, turnout rises to 54%
March 19,
2026
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2026/03/local-parties-make-big-gains-in-elections-turnout-rises-to-54/
Local
parties were the clear winners in Wednesday’s local elections, taking more than
a third of the vote nationwide.
With most
results counted by early Thursday morning, turnout stood at just over 54%,
slightly higher than at the previous local elections four years ago. Counting
is still under way in Amsterdam and Hoorn.
Local
lists together received about 35.5% of the vote, up from 32.8% last time,
meaning around 2.6 million voters backed a local party. In many councils,
including The Hague, local parties are now the largest or second-largest group,
making it difficult to identify national party trends.
Local
parties performed particularly well in areas where the location of new refugee
centres was an issue. “Anti-refugee feeling gets a face,” said the Volkskrant
in its analysis.
The far
right PVV became the biggest party in Pekela in Groningen, and in Terneuzen
where a refugee centre was the biggest campaign talking point.
One of
the local party biggest victories was in The Hague, where Richard de Mos’s Hart
voor Den Haag increased its share of the vote from nine to 16 seats on the
45-seat council. The result makes it likely the party will take part in the
next coalition after being excluded last time.
Far right
party Forum voor Democratie also made gains, winning seats in most of the 104
councils where it had candidates.
Among
national parties, the coalition performed broadly in line with the previous
election. D66 won about 9% of the vote and gained seats overall, while the VVD
and CDA recorded relatively stable results.
The
GroenLinks-PvdA combination lost votes nationwide but remained the largest
party in most of the biggest cities, including Rotterdam, where it finished
just ahead of populist local party Leefbaar Rotterdam.
Party
leader Jesse Klaver said he was “very proud” that the party had held its ground
in urban areas after a disappointing general election.

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