Dutch PM Rutte on course for big victory over far-right Wilders
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the VVD Liberal party appears before his supporters in The Hague, Netherlands, March 15, 2017. [Photo/Agencies] |
"It appears that the VVD will be the biggest party in the Netherlands for the third time in a row," a beaming Rutte told cheering supporters at a post-election party in The Hague.
"Tonight we'll celebrate a little."
Rutte received congratulatory messages from European leaders and spoke with some by telephone.
"It is also an evening in which the Netherlands, after Brexit, after the American elections, said 'stop' to the wrong kind of populism," he said.
Wilders said he had not achieved the electoral victory he had hoped for and was ready to offer tough opposition.
"I would rather have been the largest party.... but we are not a party that has lost. We gained seats. That's a result to be proud of," Wilder told journalists.
With 55 percent of votes counted, Rutte's VVD Party was projected to win 32 of parliament's 150 seats, down from 41 at the last vote in 2012. Wilders was in a three-way tie for second on 19 seats with the Christian Democrat CDA and centrist Democrats 66, data provided by the ANP news agency showed.
At 81 percent, turnout was the highest in 30 years in an election that was a test of whether the Dutch wanted to end decades of liberalism and choose a nationalist, anti-immigrant path by voting for Wilders and his promise to "de-Islamicise"the Netherlands and quit the European Union.
- Turkey slams EU for backing Netherlands as tensions escalate
- Rotterdam, the Netherlands
- Netherlands posts biggest decline in unemployment in 10 years
- Netherlands, Belgium sign border adjustment treaty, exchange land
- China cultural center inaugurated in Den Haag, the Netherlands
- Exhibition to honor Tang Xianzu, Shakespeare opens in the Netherlands