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Christian Democratic Appeal

The Christian Democratic Appeal (Dutch: Christen-Democratisch Appèl, pronounced [krɪstə(n)deːmoːkraːtis ɑˈpɛl]; CDA) is a Christian-democratic[11][12][13] political party in the Netherlands. It was originally formed in 1977 from a confederation of the Catholic People's Party, the Anti-Revolutionary Party and the Christian Historical Union; it has participated in all but three cabinets since it became a unitary party.

Christian Democratic Appeal
Christen-Democratisch Appèl
AbbreviationCDA
LeaderWopke Hoekstra
ChairpersonHans Huibers
Leader in the CabinetWopke Hoekstra
Leader in the SenateBen Knapen
Leader in the House of RepresentativesPieter Heerma
Leader in the European ParliamentEsther de Lange
Founded23 June 1973 (alliance)
11 October 1980 (party)
Merger ofCatholic People's Party
Anti-Revolutionary Party
Christian Historical Union
HeadquartersBuitenom 18,
The Hague
Youth wingChristian Democratic Youth Appeal
Think tankWetenschappelijk Instituut voor het CDA
Membership (2023) 31,916[1]
Ideology
Political positionCentre[5][6][7] to
centre-right[8][9][10][11]
European affiliationEuropean People's Party
International affiliationCentrist Democrat International
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party
Colours  Green
Senate
9 / 75
House of Representatives
14 / 150
Provincial councils
42 / 570
European Parliament
5 / 29
King's Commissioners
3 / 12
Website
www.cda.nl

Health Minister Hugo de Jonge served as Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal from July 2020 until his resignation the following December. Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra was then chosen as lijstrekker for the 2021 general election, becoming the de facto party leader.[14] After the 2017 general election, in which the party won 19 seats (third place), the CDA became a junior coalition partner in the Third Rutte cabinet with the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, Democrats 66 and Christian Union. The Fourth Rutte cabinet was formed upon the same coalition.

History

History before 1977

Since 1880 the sizeable Catholic and Protestant parties had worked together in the so-called Coalitie. They shared a common interest in public funding of religious schools. In 1888 they formed the first Christian-democratic government, led by the Anti-Revolutionary Æneas Baron Mackay. The cooperation was not without problems and in 1894 the more anti-Catholic and aristocratic conservatives left the Protestant Anti-Revolutionary Party, to found the Christian Historical Union (CHU). The main issues dividing Protestants and Catholics was the position of the Dutch Representation at the Holy See and the future of the Dutch Indies.

 
Piet Steenkamp, founder and chairman from 1973 until 1980.
 
Dries van Agt, CDA Leader from 1976 until 1982 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1977 until 1982.

By 1918, there were three major Christian Democratic parties in the Netherlands—the General League of Roman Catholic Caucuses, the Protestant Anti-Revolutionary Party and the Protestant Christian Historical Union. The General League evolved into the Roman Catholic State Party by 1926, and the Catholic People's Party in 1945.

From 1918 to 1967, the three Christian Democratic parties had a majority in both houses of the States General, and at least two of them were included in every cabinet. The KVP and its antecedents had been in government without interruption since 1918.

In the sixties, Dutch society became more secularised and the pillars faded, and voters began to move away from the three Christian-democratic parties. In the 1963 general election the three parties held 51% of the vote, whilst in 1972 general election they held only 32%. This decline forced the three parties to work closer together. In 1967 the Group of Eighteen was formed: it was a think-tank of six prominent politicians per party that planned the future cooperation of the three parties. In 1968 the three political leaders of the parties (Norbert Schmelzer (KVP), Barend Biesheuvel (ARP) and Jur Mellema [nl] (CHU) made a public appearance, stating that the three parties would continue to work together.

This caused progressive forces within the three parties, especially the ARP and KVP, to regret their political affiliation. In 1968 they founded the Political Party of Radicals (PPR), a left-wing party that sought cooperation with the Labour Party (PvdA). Locally and provincially however the three parties had long cooperated well, in some areas they formed one Christian-democratic parliamentary party and proposed one list of candidates. In the 1971 general election, the three parties presented a common political program, which lay the foundation for the first Biesheuvel cabinet.

 
Ruud Lubbers, CDA Leader from 1982 until 1994 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1982 until 1994.
 
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, CDA Leader from 1997 until 2001.

After the disastrous elections of 1972 the cooperation was given new momentum. Piet Steenkamp, a member of the Senate for the KVP was appointed chairman of a council which was to lay the foundation for a federation of the three parties, and provide a common manifesto of principles. In 1973 this federation was officially formed, with Steenkamp as chairperson.

The cooperation was frustrated by the formation of the Den Uyl cabinet, established by the leader of the social-democratic PvdA and Prime Minister of the Netherlands Joop den Uyl. Den Uyl refused to allow members of the CHU in the cabinet that he would lead. This led to a situation where the CHU, ARP and KVP sat as a single faction in both houses of parliament, but only the KVP and ARP supplied ministers and junior ministers. The cabinet Den Uyl was riddled with political and personal conflicts. Another issue that split the three parties was the place that the Bible would take in the new party.

Period of prime ministerships, 1977–1994

In 1976, the three parties announced that they would field a single list at the 1977 general election under the name Christian Democratic Appeal (Christen Democratisch Appèl). The KVP minister of Justice, Dries van Agt, was the top candidate. In the election campaign he made clear the CDA was a centrist party, that would not lean to the left or to the right. The three parties were able to stabilise their proportion of the vote.

The election result forced Van Agt to start talks with Den Uyl. Although Van Agt had been Deputy Prime Minister in the cabinet Den Uyl, the two had never gotten along well. The animosity between them frustrated the talks. After more than 300 days of negotiations, they finally officially failed, and Van Agt was able to negotiate a cabinet with the conservative-liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD). The first Van Agt cabinet had a very narrow majority. The unexpected cabinet with the VVD led to split within the newly founded CDA between more progressive and more conservative members. The progressives remained within the party, and were known as loyalists. On 11 October 1980, the three original parties ceased to exist and the CDA was founded as a unitary party. After the 1981 general election, the VVD and the CDA lost their majority, and the CDA was forced to cooperate with the PvdA. Den Uyl became deputy prime minister under van Agt. The second Van Agt cabinet was troubled by ideological and personal conflicts, and fell after one year.

After the 1982 general election, the new CDA leader, Ruud Lubbers (formerly of the KVP), formed a majority coalition with the VVD. The first Lubbers cabinet set an ambitious reform program in motion, which included budget cuts, reform of the old age and disability pensions and liberalisation of public services. Lubbers was reelected in 1986 and in 1989. In 1989 however, the CDA only garnered a minimal majority with the VVD, which they had also gradually fallen out with during the previous cabinet, leading the CDA to instead cooperate with the PvdA in the new government. In the third Lubbers cabinet, a CDA-PvdA coalition, the ambitious reform project was continued, with some adaptations and protests from the PvdA.

Opposition to Labour, 1994–2002

The 1994 general election was fraught with problems for the CDA: personal conflicts between retiring prime minister Lubbers and lijsttrekker Elco Brinkman, a lack of support for the reforms of old age and disability pensions, and the perceived arrogance of the CDA caused a dramatic defeat at the polls. A new coalition was formed between PvdA and the liberal parties VVD and Democrats 66 (D66), consigning the CDA to opposition for the first time ever. It was also the first government without any Christian Democratic ministers since 1918. The party was marred by subsequent internal battles over leadership. The party also reflected on its principals: the party began to orient itself more toward communitarian ideals.

Balkenende cabinets, 2002–2010

During the tumultuous 2002 general election, which saw the murder of right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn, many people voted for the CDA, hoping that it could bring some stability to Dutch politics. The CDA led the first Balkenende cabinet, which included the VVD and the Pim Fortuyn List (LPF). This cabinet fell due to internal struggles within the LPF. After the 2003 general election, the Christian Democrats were forced to begin cabinet negotiations with the PvdA. Personal animosity between Balkenende and the leader of the PvdA, Wouter Bos, frustrated these negotiations. Balkenende eventually formed a coalition with the VVD and D66. The coalition proposed an ambitious program of reforms, including more restrictive immigration laws, democratisation of political institutions and reforms of the system of social security and labour laws.

 
Jan Peter Balkenende, CDA Leader from 2001 until 2010 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 2002 until 2010.
 
Wopke Hoekstra, CDA Leader since December 2020.

After the 2006 general election the CDA changed their course radically: they formed a new fourth cabinet Balkenende still led by Balkenende, but now with the PvdA and the Christian Union (CU). The cabinet was more progressive, entailing increased government spending.[15][unreliable source?]

Partner in Rutte cabinets, 2010–present

In the 2010 general election the CDA lost half of its seats and came in fourth place after VVD, PvdA and the Party for Freedom (PVV). Balkenende announced his resignation and stayed prime minister until the formation and inauguration of the Rutte cabinet.

After the fall of the short-lived first Rutte cabinet in 2012, in which the CDA participated as junior coalition partners to the VVD, the party announced a leadership election. On 18 May 2012 the party announced that the leadership elections were won by Sybrand van Haersma Buma. He received more than 50 percent of the votes. The popular Mona Keijzer, the rising star within the party, received 26% of the votes and announced that she would closely collaborate with Van Haersma Buma during the election campaign prior to the Dutch general election on 12 September 2012. In that election, the CDA suffered considerable losses, falling to 13 seats. The party was excluded from the second Rutte cabinet—only the second time in its history that the party has not been in government. At the municipal elections of 19 March 2014 the CDA won 18% of all the votes and remained the largest party in Dutch municipalities.[16]

In the 2017 general election, the CDA gained six seats to become the third largest party.[17] It continued to remain in government as part of the third Rutte cabinet, with the VVD, D66 and CU.

On 19 March 2021, chairman Rutger Ploum resigned after the party looked to have lost 4 out 19 seats in the 2021 general election.[18]

Ideology

The CDA is a Christian democratic party, but Christian values are seen as only one source of inspiration for individual members of the States General. The party also has Jewish, Muslim and Hindu members of parliament and favours the integration of minorities into Dutch culture.

The party has four main ideals: stewardship, solidarity, shared responsibility and public justice. Shared responsibility refers to the way society should be organised: not one organisation should control all society, instead the state, the market, and social institutions, like churches and unions should work together. This is called sphere sovereignty, a core concept of Neo-Calvinist political philosophy. Furthermore, this refers to the way the state should be organised. Not one level of the state should have total control; instead, responsibility should be shared between local, provincial, national and European governments. This is called subsidiarity in Catholic political thought. With stewardship the Christian Democrats refer to the way the planet ought to be treated: the Earth is a gift from God. Therefore, we should try to preserve our environment.[19]

Practically, this means the CDA is a centre party. However, the party has a considerable centre-left wing, that supports eco-friendly politics, a strong pro-European policy and favours centre-left coalitions. The position of the centre-left group within the party has been weakened since the party's participation in the centre-right minority cabinet with the VVD (the first Rutte cabinet), a cabinet that strongly depended on the parliamentary support of the far-right Party for Freedom (PVV). CDA politicians that can be considered centrist or centre-left: Jack Biskop (MP), Ad Koppejan (MP), Kathleen Ferrier (MP; daughter of the late Johan Ferrier, president of Suriname 1975–1980), Dries van Agt (former Prime Minister), Ruud Lubbers (former Prime Minister) and Herman Wijffels (former chairman of the Social Economic Council, former informateur).

In the past Maxime Verhagen, then informal leader of the CDA and deputy Prime Minister, strongly denied the claim that the CDA is a right-wing party. Verhagen made it clear to the media that his party is a centrist and moderate party and that the CDA participates in a centre-right coalition (with the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) as the right-wing component and the CDA as the centrist component).[20] However, his former colleague in the cabinet, minister of Defence Hans Hillen, was a strong proponent of a conservative CDA.

New party course

At a congress on 21 January 2012 the party adopted a centrist course, dubbed by former minister of Social Affairs Aart-Jan de Geus as "radical centrist" ("het radicale midden").[21] The party explicitly abandoned its former center-right course. Despite this, the party continued its coalition with the centre-right VVD of Prime Minister Mark Rutte and the Party for Freedom of Geert Wilders until the government collapsed later in the year. The so-called Strategic Council, which was formed in 2011 and headed by former minister Aart-Jan de Geus, that worked on a report to redifine the party course, advised the following:

In 2014, Leader Van Haersma Buma announced that the party is now officially in favour of directly elected mayors,[22] although a large majority of its members are opposed to elected mayors.[23]

Electoral results

 
Pieter Heerma, Leader in the House of Representatives since 2022.
 
Esther de Lange, Leader in the European Parliament since 2019.

House of Representatives

Election Lijsttrekker Votes % Seats +/– Government
1977 Dries van Agt 2,653,416 31.9 (#2)
49 / 150
  1 Coalition
1981 2,677,259 30.8 (#1)
48 / 150
  1 Coalition
1982 2,420,441 29.4 (#2)
45 / 150
  3 Coalition
1986 Ruud Lubbers 3,172,918 34.6 (#1)
54 / 150
  9 Coalition
1989 3,140,502 35.3 (#1)
54 / 150
  Coalition
1994 Elco Brinkman 1,996,418 22.2 (#2)
34 / 150
  20 Opposition
1998 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 1,581,053 18.4 (#3)
29 / 150
  5 Opposition
2002 Jan Peter Balkenende 2,653,723 27.9 (#1)
43 / 150
  14 Coalition
2003 2,763,480 28.6 (#1)
44 / 150
  1 Coalition
2006 2,608,573 26.5 (#1)
41 / 150
  3 Coalition
2010 1,281,886 13.6 (#4)
21 / 150
  20 Coalition
2012 Sybrand Buma 801,620 8.5 (#5)
13 / 150
  8 Opposition
2017 1,301,796 12.4 (#3)
19 / 150
  6 Coalition
2021 Wopke Hoekstra 989,385 9.5 (#4)
15 / 150
  4 Coalition

Senate

Election Votes Weight % Seats +/–
1977*
24 / 75
  5
1980
27 / 75
  3
1981
28 / 75
  1
1983
26 / 75
  2
1986
26 / 75
 
1987
26 / 75
 
1991
27 / 75
  1
1995
19 / 75
  8
1999
20 / 75
  1
2003 46,848 29.0 (#1)
23 / 75
  3
2007 43,501 26.7 (#1)
21 / 75
  2
2011 86 24,260 14.6 (#3)
11 / 75
  10
2015 89 25,145 14.9 (#2)
12 / 75
  1
2019 76 19,756 11.4 (#3)
9 / 75
  3
  • 11 seats as a stand-alone party.

European Parliament

Election List Votes % Seats +/– Notes
1979 List 2,017,743 35.60 (#1)
10 / 25
New [24]
1984 List 1,590,218 30.02 (#2)
8 / 25
  2 [25]
1989 List 1,813,035 34.60 (#1)
10 / 25
  2 [26]
1994 List 1,271,840 30.77 (#1)
10 / 31
  [27]
1999 List 951,898 26.94 (#1)
9 / 31
  1 [28]
2004 List 1,164,431 24.43 (#1)
7 / 27
  2 [29]
2009 List 913,233 20.05 (#1)
5 / 25
  2
5 / 26
  [30]
2014 List 721,766 15.18 (#2)
5 / 26
  [31]
2019 List 669,555 12.18 (#3)
4 / 26
  1
5 / 29
  1 [32]

Representation

Members of the Fourth Rutte cabinet

Ministers Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s) Assumed office
  Wopke Hoekstra
(born 1975)
Second Deputy
Prime Minister
Foreign Affairs 10 January 2022
Minister
  Hanke
Bruins Slot

(born 1977)
Minister Interior and
Kingdom Relations
10 January 2022
  Karien
van Gennip

(born 1968)
Minister Social Affairs and
Employment
10 January 2022
Minister without portfolio Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s) Assumed office
  Hugo de Jonge
(born 1977)
Minister Interior and
Kingdom Relations
Public Housing
Spatial Planning
10 January 2022
State Secretaries Title/Ministry/Portfolio(s) Assumed office
  Marnix van Rij
(born 1960)
State Secretary Finance Fiscal Policy
Tax
Governmental
Budget
10 January 2022
  Vivianne
Heijnen

(born 1982)
State Secretary Infrastructure and
Water Management
Aviation
Water
Management

Weather
Forecasting
10 January 2022

Members of the House of Representatives

Current members

Current members of the House of Representatives since the 2021 election:[33]

Pieter Omtzigt exited the party on 12 June 2021.

Predecessors' seats

Seats in the House of Representatives:

1956
77 / 150
(KVP 49, ARP 15, CHU 13)
1959
75 / 150
(KVP 49, ARP 14, CHU 12)
1963
76 / 150
(KVP 50, ARP 13, CHU 13)
1967
70 / 150
(KVP 43, ARP 15, CHU 12)
1971
58 / 150
(KVP 35, ARP 13, CHU 10)
1972
48 / 150
(KVP 27, ARP 14, CHU 7)
1977
49 / 150
(CDA)

Members of the Senate

Current members

Current members of the Senate since the 2019 election:

Predecessors' seats

Seats in the Senate:

1956–
41 / 150
(KVP 25, ARP 8, CHU 8)
1959–
42 / 150
(KVP 26, ARP 8, CHU 8)
1963–
40 / 150
(KVP 26, ARP 7, CHU 7)
1966–
39 / 150
(KVP 25, ARP 7, CHU 7)
1969–
39 / 150
(KVP 24, ARP 7, CHU 8)
1971–
36 / 150
(KVP 22, ARP 7, CHU 7)
1974–
29 / 150
(KVP 16, ARP 6, CHU 7)
1977–
24 / 150
(CDA)

Members of the European Parliament

The CDA has been a member of the European People's Party (EPP) since its founding in 1976;[34] CDA MEPs sit in the EPP group.

Current members

Current members of the European Parliament since the 2019 election:

4 seats:

  1. Esther de Lange (top candidate)
  2. Annie Schreijer-Pierik
  3. Jeroen Lenaers
  4. Tom Berendsen

Local and provincial government

By far, the CDA has the most members of municipal and provincial councils in the Netherlands. Furthermore, it cooperates in most municipal and provincial governments.

Electorate

The CDA is mainly supported by religious voters, both Catholics and Protestants. These tend to live in rural areas and tend to be elderly. In some periods, however, the CDA has functioned as a centrist party, attracting people from all classes and religions.

Geographically, the CDA is particularly strong in the provinces of North Brabant, Limburg and Overijssel and in the Veluwe and the Westland areas. In the 2006 elections the CDA received the highest percentage of votes in the municipality of Tubbergen, Overijssel (66,59% of the vote). The CDA is weaker in the four major cities (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and Utrecht) and in Groningen and Drenthe.

Organisation

Leadership

Linked organisations

The youth movement of the CDA is the Christian Democratic Youth Appeal (CDJA). The CDA publishes a monthly magazine, and its scientific bureau publishes the Christian Democratic Explorations (Christen-Democratische Verkenningen).

As an effect of pillarisation, the CDA still has many personal and ideological ties with religious organisations, such as the broadcasting societies KRO and NCRV, the newspaper Trouw, the employers organisations NCW and the union CNV.

The CDA participates in the Netherlands Institute for Multiparty Democracy, a democracy assistance organisation of seven Dutch political parties.

International organisations

The CDA is a member of the European People's Party[40] and the Centrist Democrat International.[41]

See also

Further reading

  • Bosmans, Jac (2004). Michael Gehler; Wolfram Kaiser (eds.). The Primacy of Domestic Politics: Christian Democracy in the Netherlands. Christian Democracy in Europe since 1945. Routledge. pp. 47–58. ISBN 0-7146-5662-3.
  • Lucardie, Paul (2004). Steven Van Hecke; Emmanuel Gerard (eds.). Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained? Christian Democracy in the Netherlands. Christian Democratic Parties in Europe Since the End of the Cold War. Leuven University Press. pp. 159–177. ISBN 90-5867-377-4.

References

  1. ^ "Christen Democratisch Appèl (CDA)". Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (in Dutch). 27 July 2021. Retrieved 24 February 2023.
  2. ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2021). "Netherlands". Parties and Elections in Europe. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  3. ^ Paul Lucardie; Hans-Martien Tennapel (1996). "Between Confessionalism and Liberal-Conservatism: the Christian Democratic Parties of Belgium and the Netherlands". In David Hanley (ed.). Christian Democracy in Europe. A&C Black. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-85567-382-3.
  4. ^ Paul Lucardie (2004). "Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained? Christian Democracy in the Netherlands". In Steven Van Hecke; Emmanuel Gerard (eds.). Christian Democratic Parties in Europe Since the End of the Cold War. Leuven University Press. pp. 169–170. ISBN 978-90-5867-377-0.
  5. ^ . Kieskompas. Kieskompas. Archived from the original on 1 April 2021. Retrieved 1 April 2021.. Freedom in the World 2003. Freedom House. Archived from the original on 29 June 2019. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  6. ^ Bremmer, Ian (13 September 2012). "Going Dutch: The Netherlands' election results roll in". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 29 June 2019.
  7. ^ Delcker, Janosch (18 February 2018). "Risk of bioweapon attack growing, Dutch defense minister says". POLITICO. Munich. Retrieved 5 May 2020. Bijlevel, a member of the centrist Christian Democratic Appeal party, said that the technology for creating biological weapons had advanced dramatically in recent years, while at the same time "the international community continues to underestimate this risk".
  8. ^ Weaver, Matthew (16 March 2017). "Dutch elections: Rutte starts coalition talks after beating Wilders into second – as it happened". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
  9. ^ Syuzanna Vasilyan (2009). "The integration crisis in the Netherlands: the causes and the new policy measures". In Ditta Dolejšiová; Miguel Angel García López (eds.). European Citizenship in the Process of Construction: Challenges for Citizenship, Citizenship Education and Democratic Practice in Europe. Council of Europe. p. 73. ISBN 978-92-871-6478-0.
  10. ^ Hans Vollaard; Gerrit Voerman; Nelleke van de Walle (2015). "The Netherlands". In Donatella M. Viola (ed.). Routledge Handbook of European Elections. Routledge. p. 171. ISBN 978-1-317-50363-7.
  11. ^ a b Kees Van Kerbergen; André Krouwel (2013). "A double-edged sword! The Dutch centre-right and the 'foreigners issue'". In Tim Bale (ed.). Immigration and Integration Policy in Europe: Why Politics – and the Centre-Right – Matter. Routledge. pp. 91–92. ISBN 978-1-317-96827-6.
  12. ^ Wijbrandt H. Van Schuur; Gerrit Voerman (2010). "Democracy in Retreat? Decline in political party membership: the case of the Netherlands". In Barbara Wejnert (ed.). Democratic Paths and Trends. Emerald Group Publishing. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-85724-091-0. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
  13. ^ Christopher Anderson (1995). Blaming the Government: Citizens and the Economy in Five European Democracies. M.E. Sharpe. p. 64. ISBN 978-1-56324-448-3. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  14. ^ "Wopke Hoekstra wordt lijsttrekker van het CDA" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Omroep Stichting. 11 December 2020. Retrieved 11 December 2020.
  15. ^ "Google Groups".
  16. ^ "CDA grootste na 80 procent stemmen geteld". 20 March 2014.
  17. ^ Kiesraad (21 March 2017). "Kerngegevens Tweede Kamerverkiezing 2017 - Rapport - Kiesraad.nl". kiesraad.nl.
  18. ^ "CDA-partijvoorzitter Ploum stapt op na verkiezingsnederlaag". NOS.nl (in Dutch). 19 March 2021. Retrieved 19 March 2021.
  19. ^ "Uitgangspunten". CDA (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 December 2010. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
  21. ^ "CDA moet kiezer weer raken met keuze voor radicale midden".
  22. ^ "CDA voor gekozen burgemeester". February 2014.
  23. ^ "Veel steun gekozen burgemeester". 14 March 2014.
  24. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 7 juni 1979" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  25. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 14 juni 1984" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  26. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 15 juni 1989" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  27. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 9 juni 1994" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  28. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 10 juni 1999" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  29. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 10 juni 2004" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  30. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 4 juni 2009" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  31. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 22 mei 2014" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  32. ^ "Kiesraad: Europees Parlement 23 mei 2019" (in Dutch). Kiesraad. 4 June 2019. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  33. ^ (Dutch) Tweede Kamerleden van het CDA on cda.nl
  34. ^ Thomas Jansen; Steven Van Hecke (2011). At Europe's Service: The Origins and Evolution of the European People's Party. Springer. p. 51. ISBN 978-3-642-19413-9.
  35. ^ "Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA)". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  36. ^ "Partijvoorzitters CDA". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  37. ^ "Eerste Kamerfractie Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA)". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  38. ^ "Tweede Kamerfractie Christen Democratisch Appel (CDA)". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  39. ^ "Lijsttrekkers CDA". Parlement & Politiek (in Dutch). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  40. ^ "European People's Party". Archived from the original on 13 February 2013.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 March 2012. Retrieved 6 June 2012.

External links

  •   Media related to Christen Democratisch Appèl at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • Documentation Centre Dutch Political Parties about CDA (in Dutch)

christian, democratic, appeal, dutch, christen, democratisch, appèl, pronounced, krɪstə, deːmoːkraːtis, ɑˈpɛl, christian, democratic, political, party, netherlands, originally, formed, 1977, from, confederation, catholic, people, party, anti, revolutionary, pa. The Christian Democratic Appeal Dutch Christen Democratisch Appel pronounced krɪste n deːmoːkraːtis ɑˈpɛl CDA is a Christian democratic 11 12 13 political party in the Netherlands It was originally formed in 1977 from a confederation of the Catholic People s Party the Anti Revolutionary Party and the Christian Historical Union it has participated in all but three cabinets since it became a unitary party Christian Democratic Appeal Christen Democratisch AppelAbbreviationCDALeaderWopke HoekstraChairpersonHans HuibersLeader in the CabinetWopke HoekstraLeader in the SenateBen KnapenLeader in the House of RepresentativesPieter HeermaLeader in the European ParliamentEsther de LangeFounded23 June 1973 alliance 11 October 1980 party Merger ofCatholic People s PartyAnti Revolutionary PartyChristian Historical UnionHeadquartersBuitenom 18 The HagueYouth wingChristian Democratic Youth AppealThink tankWetenschappelijk Instituut voor het CDAMembership 2023 31 916 1 IdeologyChristian democracy 2 Social conservatism 3 4 Political positionCentre 5 6 7 tocentre right 8 9 10 11 European affiliationEuropean People s PartyInternational affiliationCentrist Democrat InternationalEuropean Parliament groupEuropean People s PartyColours GreenSenate9 75House of Representatives14 150Provincial councils42 570European Parliament5 29King s Commissioners3 12Websitewww wbr cda wbr nlPolitics of NetherlandsPolitical partiesElectionsHealth Minister Hugo de Jonge served as Leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal from July 2020 until his resignation the following December Finance Minister Wopke Hoekstra was then chosen as lijstrekker for the 2021 general election becoming the de facto party leader 14 After the 2017 general election in which the party won 19 seats third place the CDA became a junior coalition partner in the Third Rutte cabinet with the People s Party for Freedom and Democracy Democrats 66 and Christian Union The Fourth Rutte cabinet was formed upon the same coalition Contents 1 History 1 1 History before 1977 1 2 Period of prime ministerships 1977 1994 1 3 Opposition to Labour 1994 2002 1 4 Balkenende cabinets 2002 2010 1 5 Partner in Rutte cabinets 2010 present 2 Ideology 2 1 New party course 3 Electoral results 3 1 House of Representatives 3 2 Senate 3 3 European Parliament 4 Representation 4 1 Members of the Fourth Rutte cabinet 4 2 Members of the House of Representatives 4 2 1 Current members 4 2 2 Predecessors seats 4 3 Members of the Senate 4 3 1 Current members 4 3 2 Predecessors seats 4 4 Members of the European Parliament 4 4 1 Current members 4 5 Local and provincial government 5 Electorate 6 Organisation 6 1 Leadership 6 2 Linked organisations 6 3 International organisations 7 See also 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditHistory before 1977 Edit Since 1880 the sizeable Catholic and Protestant parties had worked together in the so called Coalitie They shared a common interest in public funding of religious schools In 1888 they formed the first Christian democratic government led by the Anti Revolutionary AEneas Baron Mackay The cooperation was not without problems and in 1894 the more anti Catholic and aristocratic conservatives left the Protestant Anti Revolutionary Party to found the Christian Historical Union CHU The main issues dividing Protestants and Catholics was the position of the Dutch Representation at the Holy See and the future of the Dutch Indies Piet Steenkamp founder and chairman from 1973 until 1980 Dries van Agt CDA Leader from 1976 until 1982 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1977 until 1982 By 1918 there were three major Christian Democratic parties in the Netherlands the General League of Roman Catholic Caucuses the Protestant Anti Revolutionary Party and the Protestant Christian Historical Union The General League evolved into the Roman Catholic State Party by 1926 and the Catholic People s Party in 1945 From 1918 to 1967 the three Christian Democratic parties had a majority in both houses of the States General and at least two of them were included in every cabinet The KVP and its antecedents had been in government without interruption since 1918 In the sixties Dutch society became more secularised and the pillars faded and voters began to move away from the three Christian democratic parties In the 1963 general election the three parties held 51 of the vote whilst in 1972 general election they held only 32 This decline forced the three parties to work closer together In 1967 the Group of Eighteen was formed it was a think tank of six prominent politicians per party that planned the future cooperation of the three parties In 1968 the three political leaders of the parties Norbert Schmelzer KVP Barend Biesheuvel ARP and Jur Mellema nl CHU made a public appearance stating that the three parties would continue to work together This caused progressive forces within the three parties especially the ARP and KVP to regret their political affiliation In 1968 they founded the Political Party of Radicals PPR a left wing party that sought cooperation with the Labour Party PvdA Locally and provincially however the three parties had long cooperated well in some areas they formed one Christian democratic parliamentary party and proposed one list of candidates In the 1971 general election the three parties presented a common political program which lay the foundation for the first Biesheuvel cabinet Ruud Lubbers CDA Leader from 1982 until 1994 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 1982 until 1994 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer CDA Leader from 1997 until 2001 After the disastrous elections of 1972 the cooperation was given new momentum Piet Steenkamp a member of the Senate for the KVP was appointed chairman of a council which was to lay the foundation for a federation of the three parties and provide a common manifesto of principles In 1973 this federation was officially formed with Steenkamp as chairperson The cooperation was frustrated by the formation of the Den Uyl cabinet established by the leader of the social democratic PvdA and Prime Minister of the Netherlands Joop den Uyl Den Uyl refused to allow members of the CHU in the cabinet that he would lead This led to a situation where the CHU ARP and KVP sat as a single faction in both houses of parliament but only the KVP and ARP supplied ministers and junior ministers The cabinet Den Uyl was riddled with political and personal conflicts Another issue that split the three parties was the place that the Bible would take in the new party Period of prime ministerships 1977 1994 Edit In 1976 the three parties announced that they would field a single list at the 1977 general election under the name Christian Democratic Appeal Christen Democratisch Appel The KVP minister of Justice Dries van Agt was the top candidate In the election campaign he made clear the CDA was a centrist party that would not lean to the left or to the right The three parties were able to stabilise their proportion of the vote The election result forced Van Agt to start talks with Den Uyl Although Van Agt had been Deputy Prime Minister in the cabinet Den Uyl the two had never gotten along well The animosity between them frustrated the talks After more than 300 days of negotiations they finally officially failed and Van Agt was able to negotiate a cabinet with the conservative liberal People s Party for Freedom and Democracy VVD The first Van Agt cabinet had a very narrow majority The unexpected cabinet with the VVD led to split within the newly founded CDA between more progressive and more conservative members The progressives remained within the party and were known as loyalists On 11 October 1980 the three original parties ceased to exist and the CDA was founded as a unitary party After the 1981 general election the VVD and the CDA lost their majority and the CDA was forced to cooperate with the PvdA Den Uyl became deputy prime minister under van Agt The second Van Agt cabinet was troubled by ideological and personal conflicts and fell after one year After the 1982 general election the new CDA leader Ruud Lubbers formerly of the KVP formed a majority coalition with the VVD The first Lubbers cabinet set an ambitious reform program in motion which included budget cuts reform of the old age and disability pensions and liberalisation of public services Lubbers was reelected in 1986 and in 1989 In 1989 however the CDA only garnered a minimal majority with the VVD which they had also gradually fallen out with during the previous cabinet leading the CDA to instead cooperate with the PvdA in the new government In the third Lubbers cabinet a CDA PvdA coalition the ambitious reform project was continued with some adaptations and protests from the PvdA Opposition to Labour 1994 2002 Edit The 1994 general election was fraught with problems for the CDA personal conflicts between retiring prime minister Lubbers and lijsttrekker Elco Brinkman a lack of support for the reforms of old age and disability pensions and the perceived arrogance of the CDA caused a dramatic defeat at the polls A new coalition was formed between PvdA and the liberal parties VVD and Democrats 66 D66 consigning the CDA to opposition for the first time ever It was also the first government without any Christian Democratic ministers since 1918 The party was marred by subsequent internal battles over leadership The party also reflected on its principals the party began to orient itself more toward communitarian ideals Balkenende cabinets 2002 2010 Edit During the tumultuous 2002 general election which saw the murder of right wing politician Pim Fortuyn many people voted for the CDA hoping that it could bring some stability to Dutch politics The CDA led the first Balkenende cabinet which included the VVD and the Pim Fortuyn List LPF This cabinet fell due to internal struggles within the LPF After the 2003 general election the Christian Democrats were forced to begin cabinet negotiations with the PvdA Personal animosity between Balkenende and the leader of the PvdA Wouter Bos frustrated these negotiations Balkenende eventually formed a coalition with the VVD and D66 The coalition proposed an ambitious program of reforms including more restrictive immigration laws democratisation of political institutions and reforms of the system of social security and labour laws Jan Peter Balkenende CDA Leader from 2001 until 2010 and Prime Minister of the Netherlands from 2002 until 2010 Wopke Hoekstra CDA Leader since December 2020 After the 2006 general election the CDA changed their course radically they formed a new fourth cabinet Balkenende still led by Balkenende but now with the PvdA and the Christian Union CU The cabinet was more progressive entailing increased government spending 15 unreliable source Partner in Rutte cabinets 2010 present Edit In the 2010 general election the CDA lost half of its seats and came in fourth place after VVD PvdA and the Party for Freedom PVV Balkenende announced his resignation and stayed prime minister until the formation and inauguration of the Rutte cabinet After the fall of the short lived first Rutte cabinet in 2012 in which the CDA participated as junior coalition partners to the VVD the party announced a leadership election On 18 May 2012 the party announced that the leadership elections were won by Sybrand van Haersma Buma He received more than 50 percent of the votes The popular Mona Keijzer the rising star within the party received 26 of the votes and announced that she would closely collaborate with Van Haersma Buma during the election campaign prior to the Dutch general election on 12 September 2012 In that election the CDA suffered considerable losses falling to 13 seats The party was excluded from the second Rutte cabinet only the second time in its history that the party has not been in government At the municipal elections of 19 March 2014 the CDA won 18 of all the votes and remained the largest party in Dutch municipalities 16 In the 2017 general election the CDA gained six seats to become the third largest party 17 It continued to remain in government as part of the third Rutte cabinet with the VVD D66 and CU On 19 March 2021 chairman Rutger Ploum resigned after the party looked to have lost 4 out 19 seats in the 2021 general election 18 Ideology EditThe CDA is a Christian democratic party but Christian values are seen as only one source of inspiration for individual members of the States General The party also has Jewish Muslim and Hindu members of parliament and favours the integration of minorities into Dutch culture The party has four main ideals stewardship solidarity shared responsibility and public justice Shared responsibility refers to the way society should be organised not one organisation should control all society instead the state the market and social institutions like churches and unions should work together This is called sphere sovereignty a core concept of Neo Calvinist political philosophy Furthermore this refers to the way the state should be organised Not one level of the state should have total control instead responsibility should be shared between local provincial national and European governments This is called subsidiarity in Catholic political thought With stewardship the Christian Democrats refer to the way the planet ought to be treated the Earth is a gift from God Therefore we should try to preserve our environment 19 Practically this means the CDA is a centre party However the party has a considerable centre left wing that supports eco friendly politics a strong pro European policy and favours centre left coalitions The position of the centre left group within the party has been weakened since the party s participation in the centre right minority cabinet with the VVD the first Rutte cabinet a cabinet that strongly depended on the parliamentary support of the far right Party for Freedom PVV CDA politicians that can be considered centrist or centre left Jack Biskop MP Ad Koppejan MP Kathleen Ferrier MP daughter of the late Johan Ferrier president of Suriname 1975 1980 Dries van Agt former Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers former Prime Minister and Herman Wijffels former chairman of the Social Economic Council former informateur In the past Maxime Verhagen then informal leader of the CDA and deputy Prime Minister strongly denied the claim that the CDA is a right wing party Verhagen made it clear to the media that his party is a centrist and moderate party and that the CDA participates in a centre right coalition with the People s Party for Freedom and Democracy VVD as the right wing component and the CDA as the centrist component 20 However his former colleague in the cabinet minister of Defence Hans Hillen was a strong proponent of a conservative CDA The state deficit should be repaid in one generation to cope with the effects of the aging population The toleration of soft drugs should come to an end and the practices of prostitution abortion and euthanasia should be more limited The party is a staunch proponent of European integration and Turkey s possible EU membership in the future The party wants to make schools and hospitals more responsible for their own policy instead of being regulated by the government New party course Edit At a congress on 21 January 2012 the party adopted a centrist course dubbed by former minister of Social Affairs Aart Jan de Geus as radical centrist het radicale midden 21 The party explicitly abandoned its former center right course Despite this the party continued its coalition with the centre right VVD of Prime Minister Mark Rutte and the Party for Freedom of Geert Wilders until the government collapsed later in the year The so called Strategic Council which was formed in 2011 and headed by former minister Aart Jan de Geus that worked on a report to redifine the party course advised the following limiting the so called home mortgage interest deduction introduction of flat tax eco friendly policy ecotax a pro European policy a more friendly immigration policy equal chances for every person more investment in higher education and a modern social policy In 2014 Leader Van Haersma Buma announced that the party is now officially in favour of directly elected mayors 22 although a large majority of its members are opposed to elected mayors 23 Electoral results Edit Pieter Heerma Leader in the House of Representatives since 2022 Esther de Lange Leader in the European Parliament since 2019 House of Representatives Edit Election Lijsttrekker Votes Seats Government1977 Dries van Agt 2 653 416 31 9 2 49 150 1 Coalition1981 2 677 259 30 8 1 48 150 1 Coalition1982 2 420 441 29 4 2 45 150 3 Coalition1986 Ruud Lubbers 3 172 918 34 6 1 54 150 9 Coalition1989 3 140 502 35 3 1 54 150 Coalition1994 Elco Brinkman 1 996 418 22 2 2 34 150 20 Opposition1998 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 1 581 053 18 4 3 29 150 5 Opposition2002 Jan Peter Balkenende 2 653 723 27 9 1 43 150 14 Coalition2003 2 763 480 28 6 1 44 150 1 Coalition2006 2 608 573 26 5 1 41 150 3 Coalition2010 1 281 886 13 6 4 21 150 20 Coalition2012 Sybrand Buma 801 620 8 5 5 13 150 8 Opposition2017 1 301 796 12 4 3 19 150 6 Coalition2021 Wopke Hoekstra 989 385 9 5 4 15 150 4 CoalitionSenate Edit Election Votes Weight Seats 1977 24 75 51980 27 75 31981 28 75 11983 26 75 21986 26 75 1987 26 75 1991 27 75 11995 19 75 81999 20 75 12003 46 848 29 0 1 23 75 32007 43 501 26 7 1 21 75 22011 86 24 260 14 6 3 11 75 102015 89 25 145 14 9 2 12 75 12019 76 19 756 11 4 3 9 75 311 seats as a stand alone party European Parliament Edit Election List Votes Seats Notes1979 List 2 017 743 35 60 1 10 25 New 24 1984 List 1 590 218 30 02 2 8 25 2 25 1989 List 1 813 035 34 60 1 10 25 2 26 1994 List 1 271 840 30 77 1 10 31 27 1999 List 951 898 26 94 1 9 31 1 28 2004 List 1 164 431 24 43 1 7 27 2 29 2009 List 913 233 20 05 1 5 25 25 26 30 2014 List 721 766 15 18 2 5 26 31 2019 List 669 555 12 18 3 4 26 15 29 1 32 Representation EditMembers of the Fourth Rutte cabinet Edit Ministers Title Ministry Portfolio s Assumed office Wopke Hoekstra born 1975 Second Deputy Prime Minister Foreign Affairs 10 January 2022Minister Hanke Bruins Slot born 1977 Minister Interior and Kingdom Relations 10 January 2022 Karien van Gennip born 1968 Minister Social Affairs and Employment 10 January 2022Minister without portfolio Title Ministry Portfolio s Assumed office Hugo de Jonge born 1977 Minister Interior and Kingdom Relations Public Housing Spatial Planning 10 January 2022State Secretaries Title Ministry Portfolio s Assumed office Marnix van Rij born 1960 State Secretary Finance Fiscal Policy Tax Governmental Budget 10 January 2022 Vivianne Heijnen born 1982 State Secretary Infrastructure and Water Management Aviation Water Management Weather Forecasting 10 January 2022Members of the House of Representatives Edit Current members Edit Current members of the House of Representatives since the 2021 election 33 Pieter Heerma Parliamentary leader Rene Peters Jaco Geurts Inge van Dijk Raymond Knops Evert Jan Slootweg Agnes Mulder Mustafa Amhaouch Lucille Werner Joba van den Berg Jansen Hilde Palland Derk Boswijk Henri Bontenbal Pieter Omtzigt exited the party on 12 June 2021 Predecessors seats Edit Seats in the House of Representatives 1956 77 150 KVP 49 ARP 15 CHU 13 1959 75 150 KVP 49 ARP 14 CHU 12 1963 76 150 KVP 50 ARP 13 CHU 13 1967 70 150 KVP 43 ARP 15 CHU 12 1971 58 150 KVP 35 ARP 13 CHU 10 1972 48 150 KVP 27 ARP 14 CHU 7 1977 49 150 CDA Members of the Senate Edit Current members Edit Current members of the Senate since the 2019 election Niek Jan van Kesteren nl Parliamentary leader Joop Atsma Hugo Doornhof nl Peter Essers nl Ria Oomen Ruijten Greet Prins nl Theo Rietkerk nl Ton Rombouts nl Jonathan Soeharno Predecessors seats Edit Seats in the Senate 1956 41 150 KVP 25 ARP 8 CHU 8 1959 42 150 KVP 26 ARP 8 CHU 8 1963 40 150 KVP 26 ARP 7 CHU 7 1966 39 150 KVP 25 ARP 7 CHU 7 1969 39 150 KVP 24 ARP 7 CHU 8 1971 36 150 KVP 22 ARP 7 CHU 7 1974 29 150 KVP 16 ARP 6 CHU 7 1977 24 150 CDA Members of the European Parliament Edit The CDA has been a member of the European People s Party EPP since its founding in 1976 34 CDA MEPs sit in the EPP group Current members Edit Current members of the European Parliament since the 2019 election Further information 2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands Further information List of members of the European Parliament for the Netherlands 2019 24 See also Party lists in the 2019 European Parliament election in the Netherlands CDA European People s Party 4 seats Esther de Lange top candidate Annie Schreijer Pierik Jeroen Lenaers Tom BerendsenLocal and provincial government Edit By far the CDA has the most members of municipal and provincial councils in the Netherlands Furthermore it cooperates in most municipal and provincial governments Electorate EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The CDA is mainly supported by religious voters both Catholics and Protestants These tend to live in rural areas and tend to be elderly In some periods however the CDA has functioned as a centrist party attracting people from all classes and religions Geographically the CDA is particularly strong in the provinces of North Brabant Limburg and Overijssel and in the Veluwe and the Westland areas In the 2006 elections the CDA received the highest percentage of votes in the municipality of Tubbergen Overijssel 66 59 of the vote The CDA is weaker in the four major cities Amsterdam Rotterdam The Hague and Utrecht and in Groningen and Drenthe Organisation EditLeadership Edit Leaders 35 Dries van Agt 10 December 1976 25 October 1982 Ruud Lubbers 25 October 1982 29 January 1994 Elco Brinkman 29 January 1994 16 August 1994 Enneus Heerma 16 August 1994 27 March 1997 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 27 March 1997 1 October 2001 Dr Jan Peter Balkenende 1 October 2001 9 June 2010 Maxime Verhagen 9 June 2010 30 June 2012 Sybrand van Haersma Buma 30 June 2012 22 May 2019 Vacant 22 May 2019 15 July 2020 Hugo de Jonge 15 July 2020 10 December 2020 Wopke Hoekstra since 11 December 2020 Chairmen 36 Dr Piet Steenkamp 23 June 1973 11 October 1980 Piet Bukman 11 October 1980 14 July 1986 Wim van Velzen 31 January 1987 7 March 1994 Tineke Lodders 7 March 1994 4 February 1995 Hans Helgers 4 February 1995 27 February 1999 Marnix van Rij 27 February 1999 10 October 2001 Dr Bert de Vries 10 October 2001 2 November 2002 Marja van Bijsterveldt 2 November 2002 22 February 2007 Peter van Heeswijk 2 June 2007 10 June 2010 Dr Henk Bleker 10 June 2010 14 October 2010 Liesbeth Spies 1 November 2010 2 April 2011 Ruth Peetoom 2 April 2011 9 February 2019 Rutger Ploum 9 February 2019 19 March 2021 Marnix van Rij 3 April 2021 11 December 2021 Hans Huibers since 11 December 2021 Parliamentary leaders in the Senate 37 Dr Johan van Hulst 8 June 1977 10 June 1981 Dr Jan Christiaanse 10 June 1981 25 October 1988 Ad Kaland 25 October 1988 1 January 1994 Dr Luck van Leeuwen 1 January 1994 8 June 1999 Gerrit Braks 8 June 1999 2 October 2001 Yvonne Timmerman Buck 2 October 2001 17 June 2003 Jos Werner 1 July 2003 7 June 2011 Elco Brinkman 7 June 2011 11 June 2019 Dr Ben Knapen 11 June 2019 24 September 2021 Niek Jan van Kesteren since 28 September 2021 Parliamentary leaders in the House of Representatives 38 Dries van Agt 8 June 1977 19 December 1977 Willem Aantjes 19 December 1977 7 November 1978 Ruud Lubbers 7 November 1978 10 June 1981 Dries van Agt 10 June 1981 24 August 1981 Ruud Lubbers 24 Augustus 1981 4 November 1982 Dr Bert de Vries 4 November 1982 3 June 1986 Ruud Lubbers 3 June 1986 14 July 1986 Dr Bert de Vries 14 July 1986 14 September 1989 Ruud Lubbers 14 September 1989 7 November 1989 Elco Brinkman 7 November 1989 16 August 1994 Enneus Heerma 16 Augustus 1994 27 March 1997 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 27 March 1997 1 October 2001 Dr Jan Peter Balkenende 1 October 2001 11 July 2002 Maxime Verhagen 11 July 2002 30 January 2003 Dr Jan Peter Balkenende 30 January 2003 21 May 2003 Maxime Verhagen 21 May 2003 30 November 2006 Dr Jan Peter Balkenende 30 November 2006 9 February 2007 Maxime Verhagen 9 February 2007 22 February 2007 Pieter van Geel 22 February 2007 17 June 2010 Maxime Verhagen 17 June 2010 14 October 2010 Sybrand van Haersma Buma 14 October 2010 21 May 2019 Pieter Heerma 21 May 2019 31 March 2021 Wopke Hoekstra 31 March 2021 10 January 2022 Pieter Heerma since 10 January 2022 Lijsttrekker General election 39 Dries van Agt 1977 1981 1982 Ruud Lubbers 1986 1989 Elco Brinkman 1994 Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 1998 Dr Jan Peter Balkenende 2002 2003 2006 2010 Sybrand van Haersma Buma 2012 2017 Wopke Hoekstra 2021Linked organisations Edit The youth movement of the CDA is the Christian Democratic Youth Appeal CDJA The CDA publishes a monthly magazine and its scientific bureau publishes the Christian Democratic Explorations Christen Democratische Verkenningen As an effect of pillarisation the CDA still has many personal and ideological ties with religious organisations such as the broadcasting societies KRO and NCRV the newspaper Trouw the employers organisations NCW and the union CNV The CDA participates in the Netherlands Institute for Multiparty Democracy a democracy assistance organisation of seven Dutch political parties International organisations Edit The CDA is a member of the European People s Party 40 and the Centrist Democrat International 41 See also EditAbraham KuyperFurther reading EditBosmans Jac 2004 Michael Gehler Wolfram Kaiser eds The Primacy of Domestic Politics Christian Democracy in the Netherlands Christian Democracy in Europe since 1945 Routledge pp 47 58 ISBN 0 7146 5662 3 Lucardie Paul 2004 Steven Van Hecke Emmanuel Gerard eds Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Christian Democracy in the Netherlands Christian Democratic Parties in Europe Since the End of the Cold War Leuven University Press pp 159 177 ISBN 90 5867 377 4 References Edit Christen Democratisch Appel CDA Rijksuniversiteit Groningen in Dutch 27 July 2021 Retrieved 24 February 2023 Nordsieck Wolfram 2021 Netherlands Parties and Elections in Europe Retrieved 21 March 2021 Paul Lucardie Hans Martien Tennapel 1996 Between Confessionalism and Liberal Conservatism the Christian Democratic Parties of Belgium and the Netherlands In David Hanley ed Christian Democracy in Europe A amp C Black p 64 ISBN 978 1 85567 382 3 Paul Lucardie 2004 Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Christian Democracy in the Netherlands In Steven Van Hecke Emmanuel Gerard eds Christian Democratic Parties in Europe Since the End of the Cold War Leuven University Press pp 169 170 ISBN 978 90 5867 377 0 Kieskompas Kieskompas Kieskompas Archived from the original on 1 April 2021 Retrieved 1 April 2021 Netherlands Freedom in the World 2003 Freedom House Archived from the original on 29 June 2019 Retrieved 29 June 2019 Bremmer Ian 13 September 2012 Going Dutch The Netherlands election results roll in Foreign Policy Retrieved 29 June 2019 Delcker Janosch 18 February 2018 Risk of bioweapon attack growing Dutch defense minister says POLITICO Munich Retrieved 5 May 2020 Bijlevel a member of the centrist Christian Democratic Appeal party said that the technology for creating biological weapons had advanced dramatically in recent years while at the same time the international community continues to underestimate this risk Weaver Matthew 16 March 2017 Dutch elections Rutte starts coalition talks after beating Wilders into second as it happened The Guardian Retrieved 30 March 2019 Syuzanna Vasilyan 2009 The integration crisis in the Netherlands the causes and the new policy measures In Ditta Dolejsiova Miguel Angel Garcia Lopez eds European Citizenship in the Process of Construction Challenges for Citizenship Citizenship Education and Democratic Practice in Europe Council of Europe p 73 ISBN 978 92 871 6478 0 Hans Vollaard Gerrit Voerman Nelleke van de Walle 2015 The Netherlands In Donatella M Viola ed Routledge Handbook of European Elections Routledge p 171 ISBN 978 1 317 50363 7 a b Kees Van Kerbergen Andre Krouwel 2013 A double edged sword The Dutch centre right and the foreigners issue In Tim Bale ed Immigration and Integration Policy in Europe Why Politics and the Centre Right Matter Routledge pp 91 92 ISBN 978 1 317 96827 6 Wijbrandt H Van Schuur Gerrit Voerman 2010 Democracy in Retreat Decline in political party membership the case of the Netherlands In Barbara Wejnert ed Democratic Paths and Trends Emerald Group Publishing p 28 ISBN 978 0 85724 091 0 Retrieved 20 August 2012 Christopher Anderson 1995 Blaming the Government Citizens and the Economy in Five European Democracies M E Sharpe p 64 ISBN 978 1 56324 448 3 Retrieved 21 August 2012 Wopke Hoekstra wordt lijsttrekker van het CDA in Dutch Nederlandse Omroep Stichting 11 December 2020 Retrieved 11 December 2020 Google Groups CDA grootste na 80 procent stemmen geteld 20 March 2014 Kiesraad 21 March 2017 Kerngegevens Tweede Kamerverkiezing 2017 Rapport Kiesraad nl kiesraad nl CDA partijvoorzitter Ploum stapt op na verkiezingsnederlaag NOS nl in Dutch 19 March 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2021 Uitgangspunten CDA in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 Weblog Tom Louwerse CDA middenpartij Niet volgens eigen kiezers Archived from the original on 28 December 2010 Retrieved 31 July 2011 CDA moet kiezer weer raken met keuze voor radicale midden CDA voor gekozen burgemeester February 2014 Veel steun gekozen burgemeester 14 March 2014 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 7 juni 1979 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 14 juni 1984 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 15 juni 1989 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 9 juni 1994 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 10 juni 1999 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 10 juni 2004 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 4 juni 2009 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 22 mei 2014 in Dutch Kiesraad Retrieved 19 June 2019 Kiesraad Europees Parlement 23 mei 2019 in Dutch Kiesraad 4 June 2019 Retrieved 19 June 2019 Dutch Tweede Kamerleden van het CDA on cda nl Thomas Jansen Steven Van Hecke 2011 At Europe s Service The Origins and Evolution of the European People s Party Springer p 51 ISBN 978 3 642 19413 9 Christen Democratisch Appel CDA Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 Partijvoorzitters CDA Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 Eerste Kamerfractie Christen Democratisch Appel CDA Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 Tweede Kamerfractie Christen Democratisch Appel CDA Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 Lijsttrekkers CDA Parlement amp Politiek in Dutch Retrieved 7 March 2018 European People s Party Archived from the original on 13 February 2013 Parties Archived from the original on 27 March 2012 Retrieved 6 June 2012 External links Edit Media related to Christen Democratisch Appel at Wikimedia Commons Official website Documentation Centre Dutch Political Parties about CDA in Dutch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christian Democratic Appeal amp oldid 1149575857, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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