Senate
rejects bill to criminalise living in NL without papers
April 21,
2026
https://www.dutchnews.nl/2026/04/senate-rejects-law-to-criminalise-living-in-nl-without-papers/
Senators
have voted down a controversial asylum bill that would have made it a criminal
offence to stay in the Netherlands without papers.
The vote
in the upper house had been expected to go to the wire after the far-right PVV,
which drafted the law during the last government term, said it would block the
bill.
PVV
senators objected to an amendment by justice minister David van Weel stating
that people who gave support to undocumented migrants, such as food and
shelter, would not face criminal charges.
The
clause was inserted to secure the support of the Christian Democrat (CDA) and
orthodox-protestant SGP parties, who said the law would otherwise criminalise
acts of charity.
A
separate vote to include the amendment was defeated by a single vote in the
75-seat upper house, at which point the CDA and SGP withdrew their support for
the bill. The bill itself was defeated by 44 votes to 31.
Asylum
minister Bart van den Brink accused the PVV of “political sabotage” by voting
against its own bill, while PVV senator Alexander van Hattem directed the blame
at D66.
In a
heated exchange with reporters after the vote, Van Hattem said the largest
party in the coalition had “failed to take responsibility” after its senate
group voted against the bill even though D66 prime minister Rob Jetten wanted
it to pass.
Van den
Brink said he would bring forward a new bill to tighten up the asylum system.
“I will restore the things that were not approved,” he said.
Some
measures in the bill are included in the European Union’s pact on migration,
which comes into force in June, such as abolishing the penalties the
immigration service IND has to pay if it takes too long to decide on an asylum
claim.
Tensions
in coalition
But the
vote will cause tensions in the coalition between D66, which supported the bill
reluctantly to ease the strain on the asylum system, and the right-wing liberal
VVD, which wants to see much stricter rules and a drop in refugee numbers.
A second
law, establishing a two-tier asylum system, was passed by four votes in the
Senate, meaning new asylum seekers will fall into one of two categories.
Those who
face persecution for personal reasons, such as their political beliefs or
sexual orientation, will stand a better chance of being granted asylum than
those fleeing war, a political crisis or natural disaster.
A similar
system was abolished in 2001 because it led to large numbers of appeals by
refugees who wanted to upgrade their status.

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