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2006 Dutch general election

General elections were held in the Netherlands on 22 November 2006 following the fall of the Second Balkenende cabinet. The elections proved relatively successful for the governing Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) which remained the largest party with 41 seats, a loss of only three seats. The largest increase in seats was for the Socialist Party (SP), which went from nine to 25 seats. The main opposition party, the social-democratic Labour Party (PvdA) lost nine of its 42 seats, while the right-liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) and the progressive liberal Democrats 66 lost a considerable portion of their seats, six of 28 and three of six, respectively. New parties, such as the right-wing Party for Freedom (PVV) of former VVD MP Geert Wilders and the animal rights party Party for the Animals (PvdD) were also successful, with the PVV winning nine seats and the PvdD winning two, thereby becoming the first animal rights group to enter a European parliament.[1]

2006 Dutch general election

← 2003 22 November 2006 2010 →

All 150 seats in the House of Representatives
76 seats needed for a majority
Turnout80.4% ( 0.4 pp)
Party Leader % Seats +/–
CDA Jan Peter Balkenende 26.5% 41 -3
PvdA Wouter Bos 21.2% 33 -9
SP Jan Marijnissen 16.6% 25 +16
VVD Mark Rutte 14.7% 22 -6
PVV Geert Wilders 5.9% 9 New
GL Femke Halsema 4.6% 7 -1
CU André Rouvoet 4.0% 6 +3
D66 Alexander Pechtold 2.0% 3 -3
PvdD Marianne Thieme 2.0% 2 New
SGP Bas van der Vlies 1.6% 2 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Strongest political party by municipality

The government formation talks led to the installation of the Christian-social fourth Balkenende cabinet, composed of the CDA, PvdA and ChristianUnion on 22 February 2007.

Background

Internal elections

In the month before the fall of the cabinet two parties held internal elections on who would lead their parties in the next elections, which were scheduled for 2007. In the internal election of the conservative-liberal VVD the more liberal State Secretary for Science and Higher education Mark Rutte beat the more conservative Minister without portfolio for Immigration and Integration Rita Verdonk. In the internal election of the progressive liberal D66 the more radical democratic minister without portfolio for government reform Alexander Pechtold beat the more social-liberal chair of the parliamentary party Lousewies van der Laan.

Fall of the Cabinet

The next Dutch general election was originally scheduled for 15 May 2007 as the parliament was to be dissolved on 2 April 2007. However, it was announced that elections would be held on 22 November 2006,[2] as Prime Minister, Jan Peter Balkenende, offered the resignation of the cabinet on 30 June 2006 after one of the coalition partners, D66, withdrew their support from the cabinet the day before over Rita Verdonk's treatment of the Ayaan Hirsi Ali case.[3][4] A new cabinet continued for five months as a care taker cabinet until the elections. The opposition had pressed for speedy elections because they were on a winning streak. The late date for the elections probably worked to the advantage of the CDA because in those five months the economy improved and in the past the biggest coalition partner had always come out as the biggest party if the economy blooms. A major issue in the campaigns was whether this improving economy was because of or in spite of the right-wing government.

Splintered Fortuynists

After the fall of the cabinet several new small right-wing and conservative parties announced that they would run. Most of these parties either came out of the remains of Pim Fortuyn's populist Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) or the conservative-liberal VVD and were inspired by Fortuyn's ideas. In the period before the elections the small right was characterized by a chaos of secessions, new formations and party switches. Former Rotterdam alderman Marco Pastors and member of parliament for the LPF Joost Eerdmans formed Eén NL which emulated Fortuyn's policies. The right-wing Party for the Netherlands was led by former LPF minister Hilbrand Nawijn. Former VVD MP Geert Wilders recruited people for his new Party for Freedom, which would take part in the 2006 elections. Nawijn and Wilders had become independent in parliament at that time before the election, while Eerdmans has formed the "Group Eerdmans-Van Schijndel" along with former VVD MP Anton van Schijndel. Two other LPF politicians had formed one man fractions but they have not formed their own party: Gerard van As, former leader of the LPF, and Gonny van Oudenallen, also former LPF. Margot Kraneveldt left the LPF, returned her seat to the party and joined the social-democratic PvdA. Meanwhile, the LPF announced that it would also run the next elections, under the name "List 5 Fortuyn". The party was led by Olaf Stuger, who served as member of parliament in the period 2002–2003 and returned to parliament in 2006, to replace Gerard van As.

Exodus of prominent politicians

Several prominent politicians announced they would step down before the elections. Some commentators spoke of a large exodus.[5] Within the liberal VVD former chair of the parliamentary party Jozias van Aartsen announced he would retire, as did his vice-chair Bibi de Vries, Frans Weisglas the current speaker of parliament, and ministers Hans Hoogervorst, Sybilla Dekker, state secretary Melanie Schultz van Haegen and Henk van Hoof. Within the CDA, ministers Cees Veerman and Karla Peijs announced they would not return, as did state secretary Clemence Ross. Both D66's current chairperson Lousewies van der Laan and her predecessor Boris Dittrich also announced they would not return.

Turkish-Dutch candidates and the Armenian genocide

On 26 September 2006, a candidate for the Labour Party, Erdinç Saçan, was removed by his party, because he would not hold to the party stance that the Armenian genocide was caused by the Young Turks.[6] That same evening, the CDA announced that two of their candidates, Ayhan Tonca and Osman Elmaci, have been removed as well, because of the same issue.[7] Both parties agreed that all their members should openly conform to the party's point of view on this sensitive human rights issue. The sensitivity over these issues was underlined when the speaker of the Turkish parliament, Bülent Arınç, in response threatened the Netherlands with diplomatic action over this incident.[8] Namik Tan, spokesperson for the Turkish Department of Foreign Affairs said that "we are deeply worried about the one-sided approach of our ally Netherlands’ political parties on the so-called Armenian genocide as this puts a limit on the freedom of expression."[9] Labour Party leader Wouter Bos later said that the term genocide is used too easily, and that he rather speak of the "Armenian Question."[10]

News of possible mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners in 2003

De Volkskrant newspaper published a story just a week before the election saying that Dutch soldiers "tortured" Iraqi prisoners in Iraq, back in 2003.[11][12] Defense minister Henk Kamp ordered an immediate (re-)investigation into the matter, but said that earlier information about this case did not result in the military police and Dutch public prosecutors to start a criminal investigation.[13][14] Left-wing parties, such as the Labour Party (PvdA), which demanded an immediate parliamentary investigation were later rebuked by military commander Dick Berlijn, who stated that the left-wing opposition tarnished the reputation of the Dutch Department of Defense by their incriminating language, while nothing happened in Iraq.[15] Mark Rutte, leader of the VVD, even went as far as to say that this Iraq story was a manipulation in order to influence the elections.[16] In an open letter to De Volkskrant on the day of the Dutch elections, defense minister Kamp said the news about possible mistreatment was deceptive, and that the editor of De Volkskrant should feel being misused by the sources for this story.[17] The Department of Defense in the meantime is demanding a rectification of the story published by De Volkskrant.[18]

A Dutch magazine, Elsevier, later (January 2007) reported that the no.5 candidate of the Labour Party (PvdA), Ton Heerts, "advised" the Volkskrant on how to report on the story.[19]

Voting tools

Several organisations launched a voting tool which helped voters to decide between the multitude of parties. The Institute for Public and Politics (IPP), a government agency, had the "Stemwijzer" (the "Voting-pointer"). The Stemwijzer consisted out of thirty propositions like "Citizens should elect the Prime Minister." and voters could show their support for these propositions by clicking either "agree", "don't agree" or "don't know". The Stemwijzer than showed to which extent the voters agreed with each party, showing them from most to least similarity in answers, advising the voter to vote for the party which agreed with them most.[20] The Stemwijzer had also been made for General, European, Provincial and Municipal elections since 1989.

Kieskompas (Electoral Compass) was launched by the newspaper Trouw in cooperation with the VU University Amsterdam in order to compete with the Stemwijzer. This system was supposed to give considerably more information. Here voters could show their support for thirty six propositions on a five-point scale. Next they show whether they thought the current cabinet had performed well. Finally Kieskompas showed users their attitude towards party leaders as competent and trustworthy. The voters were shown a two-axis system (similar to a Nolan Chart) and their own position as well as the position of each party in this chart. It stated which party was the closest to them and which party the farthest. It also gave them the possibility to see which coalition best matched their political preferences.[21]

Other voting tools where the "Wie Kies Jij?" (the "Who do You Vote for") of the IPP which helped find the perfect candidate by his/her age, sex, dietary habits and political experience[22] and the Stomwijzer (the "Stupid Pointer") which mocked the StemWijzer, but still gave reasonable voting advice[23]

De Stemming 2006

Comedian Freek de Jonge performed an 'election show' ('verkiezingsconference') on public television on the night before the elections. It was called "De Stemming 2006" (an ambiguous name which means both "The Vote 2006" and "The Mood 2006") In his ironic comedy show, which was totally focused on the elections, he ridiculed the candidates, making such a show a uniquely Dutch phenomenon. When asked whether this show would influence the upcoming elections de Jonge stated he would make a fool out of everyone, not favoring a single person. This was the second time he did such a show. The first one was in 2003, when it was the thirty-third best watched TV-programme in the Netherlands that year.[24] This year, the show was watched by 2,016,000 viewers.[25]

Campaign

The main issue at stake during the elections was the economic performance of the centre-right Second Balkenende cabinet – which consisted of the Christian-democratic CDA, the conservative liberal VVD and the progressive liberal D66 – as well as the composition of the new government and the future of the Dutch economy. Other issues were integration and the environment.

Power question

The most important question of the elections was which party would become the largest, the governing Christian-democratic CDA or the main opposition party, the social-democratic PvdA. This was similar to the situation of the elections of 2003. The largest party will have the initiative in the cabinet formation talks. Furthermore, if it becomes part of the cabinet, the largest party supplies the prime minister. The media have framed the elections as a 'Clash of the Titans' between prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende (CDA) and candidate prime minister Wouter Bos (PvdA).

Both parties had consciously kept their options open and expressed a preference for the composition of a new cabinet. The other parties did express clear preferences: the VVD wanted to continue to govern with the CDA, while the Socialist Party and the GreenLeft (GL) wanted to form a leftist coalition, the so-called Left-wing Spring. Broadly speaking, it appeared that there were three options: a continuation of the third Balkendende cabinet with CDA and VVD, a left-wing coalition of PvdA, SP and GL or a centre-left coalition of PvdA and CDA.

In 2004 and 2005, the polls indeed indicated that the united left could gain a majority in the House of Representatives. The polls predicted two head-to-head races. One between the PvdA and ruling CDA and another between the left-wing bloc (PvdA, SP, GreenLeft) and the right-wing bloc (CDA, VVD) with neither gaining a majority. Early November polls however showed that the CDA was gaining on and surpassing the PvdA. Mid-November polls indicated that the PvdA was bleeding votes to the SP while the CDA remained more or less stable. The left- and right-wing blocks remained in an equilibrium with neither side gaining enough votes for an overall majority. Small centrist parties such as the ChristianUnion could play a decisive role.

Social-economic issues

The debates were dominated by social-economic questions and especially the performance of the Balkenende cabinets.

In the last four years the three Balkenende cabinets had implemented an ambitious program of social-economic reforms, including tax cuts, reforms to the social welfare system and investments in education. Their aim was to jump start the Dutch economy. Initially there was great public dissatisfaction with this policy, with large demonstrations in 2003, 2004 and 2005 by the main labour union FNV and the three main opposition parties. They criticised the government for taking these measures at the wrong point in time, during a recession, and they claimed that the government made the poor and socially weaker pay for the economic recovery. A major focus of this debate was on the fact that more than 10% of the people were said to live in poverty, as exemplified by the rising number of 'voedselbanken' (give-away shops for food). As the economy began to perform better in 2006 the public dissatisfaction decreased.

There were roughly three positions on the future of the Dutch economy. The CDA claimed that the reforms were finished and that the following cabinet would not have to take any serious measures. The VVD wanted to continue reforming to increase the performance of the Dutch economy. They wanted to continue to cut taxes and reduce bureaucracy. The opposition parties PvdA, SP, GL, joined by the ChristianUnion wanted to revert some of the measures and pay more attention to the public sector, especially to the health care-sector and the poor. The PvdA and the GreenLeft however also announced that they wanted to reform part of the economy and welfare system. For instance several months before the elections, Wouter Bos, the leader of Labour Party, announced that he wanted to tax the elderly pension in such a way that rich elderly would pay more taxes on their pensions than poor elderly. The Dutch pension system consists of government supplied (AOW) and mandatory self-saved pensions. It is the latter portion Bos wanted to tax progressively. The proposal led to considerable controversy, both outside and within Bos' own party. Former minister and de Volkskrant columnist Marcel van Dam wrote a critical column on 22 June concerning Bos' proposal.[26] The second man of the Christian Democratic Appeal Maxime Verhagen used soundbites from the proposal continually to emphasise that the PvdA was an unreliable partner for the elderly.[27] Bos later moderated his plans: only new cases would pay taxes over their pension.[28]

Immigration and integration

Immigration and integration, which had dominated the 2002 and 2003 elections, were clearly less important during these elections.

The focus was on the policy of Rita Verdonk, minister of immigration and integration, who had reduced the influx of immigrants and implemented mandatory integration courses for migrants. Verdonk's attitudes toward immigrants were again in the spotlight after her treatment of the crisis around the naturalisation of Dutch MP Ayaan Hirsi Ali caused the cabinet to fall.

In the debates one issue was especially important: the treatment of 26,000 asylum seekers which had been in legal procedures for over five years. The left-wing opposition parties PvdA, SP, GL and CU, joined by former coalition-partner D66 wanted a general pardon for this group, granting them all a residence permit. The CDA, VVD and the smaller right-wing parties of Geert Wilders and Marco Pastors opposed such a permit because it would attract illegal immigrants. Minister Verdonk claimed that she had actually already taken care of these 26,000 asylum seekers, sending many back to their own country and granting many a residence permit.

A minor issue was the ban on burqas and other face-covering clothing in public which minister Verdonk announced on 17 November 2006.[29] The opposition Labour Party, called the law an "election ploy", and a Muslim leader described it as "a big law for a small problem."[29]

Several right-wing parties, such as One NL and Party for Freedom, had campaigned extensively on the issue of immigration and integration. Wilders of the Party for Freedom wanted a halt of immigration from non-Western countries, abolish double citizenship, and stop the building of new mosques. Wilders said that the "Islamisation of the Netherlands" is a "tsunami" that needed to be stopped, "because it threatens our culture."[30]

The environment

The environment finally also became a secondary issue during the elections.

The first attention to environmental issues was attracted by Greenpeace who interfered in the CDA party congress on 30 September 2006. During a speech of parliamentary chairman Maxime Verhagen, activists of Greenpeace rolled down a large sign saying "CDA chooses for 240,000 years of nuclear waste," referring to the news a day earlier that the CDA junior minister of the environment Pieter van Geel is open to new possibilities for nuclear energy in the Netherlands.[31] Four activists were apprehended by the police afterwards.[31][32][33]

Other important events increasing the attention on environmental issues were the Stern report of the United Kingdom government and the visit of Al Gore to Amsterdam promoting his movie An Inconvenient Truth.

The GreenLeft focused on this issue during its campaigns and sponsored ads which read: "Who votes strategically when the polar caps are melting?"[34] The Party for the Animals had campaigned on one issue closely related to environmental problems: the position of animals in Dutch society and especially in agriculture.

Voting issues

Voting machine controversy

 
In some municipalities voting was done using the old red pencil / paper method.

A report by action group Wij vertrouwen stemcomputers niet (We don't trust voting computers) detailed serious security flaws in the Nedap voting machines used by 90% of the voters in the election.[citation needed] The report alleged it was easy to open the voting machine casing. The inner casing around the electronics was only protected by a very simple lock. Thus replacements of software and even hardware were relatively easily possible (by a simple memory chip swap, meaning that the memory that holds the voting data is not encrypted). Another machine is made by SDU and called "NewVote". It is based on a PC and uses a touchscreen instead of buttons. Only ten small districts still use paper and pencil.[citation needed]

Wij vertrouwen stemcomputers niet has threatened to bring minister Atzo Nicolaï to court since they are not convinced by his assurances that there will be no fraud in the upcoming election.[35] In response to the allegations, Nicolaï introduced new security measures for the voting machines.[36] Currently Nedap is checking all its machines for tampering, is installing new chips and software that is less easily hacked, and seals the machines with a unique metal seal.[37] Based on inspections, on 30 October the government decided that there was a problem with SDU voting machines because within a radius of 10 metres the machines could be wirelessly monitored, so that these machines could not guarantee anonymity of voting to a sufficient degree.[38] These machines, which are in use in 35 municipalities, including Amsterdam, have to be improved or replaced with an alternative before the elections.[39] Many municipalities, including Amsterdam, decided to switch to the traditional paper and red pencil method of voting instead of the SDU machines.[38] Machines made by Nedap are still in use.

Experiments

Two experiments were conducted during these elections:

"Stemmen in een Willekeurig Stemlokaal" (SWS) ('voting in a random polling-booth') Because a lot of people could not vote because of problems caused by this experiment a group of citizens started procedures to nullify the results in all 311 area's where the experiment was conducted.

Another experiment is "Kiezen Op Afstand" (KOA) ('remote voting'), also called the experiment with internetstemmen (internet voting).[40]

In an experiment in Breukelen, a voting machine was placed in a petrol station. However, non-Breukelen citizens had to convert their 'voting pass' ('stempas') to an 'elector's pass' ('kiezerspas').

Public debates

More than during previous elections, there was a strong focus on the leaders, especially Bos of PvdA and Balkenende of CDA, regarding who of the two might become prime minister. This irritated not only other parties but also analysts who complained that elections should be about issues and parties, not about who becomes prime minister.

Radio debate

The first public election debate between the leaders of the seven largest parties was held on 29 October 2006, on public radio. Mark Rutte, whose VVD is junior partner in the third Balkenende cabinet of CDA prime-minister Jan Peter Balkenende, was worried that the CDA will choose for a coalition with the PvdA after the elections, as this, at the time of the debate, was the only two-party coalition possible according to polls. Balkenende, however, kept his options open, and did not rule out a coalition with the PvdA. The PvdA's Wouter Bos stated that he will not become a deputy prime-minister in case Balkenende leads a CDA-PvdA coalition. He will then remain as chairman of the parliamentary party.[41]

RTL 4 debate

This debate took place on 3 November 2006 and was televised by RTL4. Participants were Jan Peter Balkenende and Wouter Bos. Balkenende focused on his achievements the last four years, stating "We are much better off than four years ago. We were behind in Europe and now we're ahead but our work is not yet done."[42] Bos felt that under Balkenende the gap between rich and poor had grown, stating "What have you asked of the wealthiest? Everybody has been asked to dig into their pockets to contribute to the economy."[42] In an opinion poll conducted by TNS-Nipo following the televised debate, 50 percent of respondents thought Wouter Bos won the debate, against 46 percent for Jan Peter Balkenende.[43]

NOS Jeugdjournaal debate

This debate was broadcast on 11 November 2006 and was televised by the Jeugdjournaal (YouthNews) of the NOS. The debate was aimed at children from 8 to 14 years of age. Participants were top-candidates from the four parties leading the polls: Jan Peter Balkenende (CDA), Wouter Bos (PvdA), Mark Rutte (VVD) and Jan Marijnissen (SP).[44] A poll among the young watchers after the debate showed that the Dutch children preferred Wouter Bos as the next prime minister (46%), before Marijnissen (26%), Balkenende (22%) and Mark Rutte (6%).[45]

EenVandaag debate

This debate took place on 15 November 2006 and was organised by EenVandaag. Participants were Jan-Peter Balkenende, Wouter Bos, Mark Rutte, Jan Marijnissen, Femke Halsema and André Rouvoet.[46] According to an opinion poll following the debate, Jan Marijnissen won the debate.[47]

NOS debates

Summary

Dutch general election debates, 2006
Date Organisers     P  Present    NI  Non-invitee   A  Absent invitee  Note
Marijnissen Thieme Halsema Bos Pechtold Rutte Rouvoet Balkenende Vlies Pastors Wilders Stuger
28 October Radio 1 P NI P P P P NI P NI NI P NI [41]
3 November RTL 4 NI NI NI P NI NI NI P NI NI NI NI [42][43]
11 November Jeugdjournaal P NI NI P NI P NI P NI NI NI NI [44][45]
15 November EenVandaag P NI P P NI P P P NI NI NI NI [46][47]
21 November NOS NI P NI NI P NI NI NI P P P P [48]
P NI P P NI P P P NI NI NI NI

Opinion polls

In the Netherlands there are three agencies that conduct frequent polls throughout the year (usually weekly). There is usually a small difference which may be due to different sampling and surveying methods applied. From 1 November the 'Politieke Barometer' started with two polls each week, and from 13 November they increased the frequency to daily polls.

The last polls prior to the election of the Politieke Barometer,[49] the poll by NOVA and Interview-NSS, the TNS-NIPO polls by RTL4,[50] and the poll by Maurice de Honds' peil.nl[51] yield the following results:

The day before the elections, about one third of the electorate had not yet made up their minds, resulting in polls giving strongly varying results. For this reason campaigning continued on election day itself. An aspect of this was tactical voting, with SP telling PvdA voters that a strong SP would force PvdA to form a left-wing coalition, VVD saying something similar to CDA voters concerning a right-wing coalition, PvdA and CDA saying they need to be strong to prevent the other party from forming or dominating a coalition and ChristenUnie saying it has the best cards to participate in any coalition. Shortly before the elections, PvdA leader Bos showed himself more interested in the much talked about left-wing coalition of PvdA, SP and GroenLinks (possibly with ChristenUnie), which he had refused to talk about for months. Many suspected he changed his mind to stop the exodus of PvdA voters to SP. During the municipal elections earlier that year PvdA grew strong and after that they even grew to 60 seats in the polls, but after March a gradual decline had set in, almost halving the size of PvdA in the polls.

Polling firm Date CDA PvdA VVD SP Fortuyn GL D66 CU SGP PVV PvdD EénNL Lead
Politieke Barometer 21 Nov 2006 41 37 23 23 1 7 3 6 2 4 2 1 4
Peil.nl[permanent dead link] 21 Nov 2006 42 38 22 23 0 8 2 6 2 5 1 1 4
TNS-NIPO 20 Nov 2006 41 31 22 32 0 6 1 8 2 6 2 0 9
2003 election 22 January 2003 44 42 28 9 8 8 6 3 2 - - - 2
a Fortuyn is here compared with its immediate predecessor LPF
b PVV is here presented as a new party, as it did not participate in the 2003 elections. It is however a continuation of Groep Wilders, an independent MP during part of the last term, after he split off from VVD

Results

 
Largest party per municipality:. In the Dutch system this is of limited importance as it operates a proportional system.
  CDA
  PvdA
  SP
  VVD

In order to increase their changes of obtaining the remainder seats, two combined lists were formed – one by the Socialist Party and the GreenLeft (which gained one remainder seat) and one by ChristianUnion and the SGP. Other remainder seats were allocated to the CDA (2), the PvdA (2), D66 (1) and the PVV (1).

The number two candidate on the VVD list, Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk received more preference votes (620,555) than list leader Mark Rutte (553,200). This was attributed to her greater national profile.[52] The number six candidate on the D66 list, Fatma Koşer Kaya received the second highest number preferences (34,564), second only to list leader Alexander Pechtold (95,937). This was a result of the CDA and PvdA removing candidates of Turkish origin from their lists because of their position on the Armenian genocide, which led to the Turks Forum advised voters of Turkish origin to vote for Koşer Kaya, who is of Turkish origin, although her position on the genocide was ambiguous.[53] Any individual candidate reaching the quota (16,397 votes in this election) is elected, resulting in Koşer Kaya being elected and taking one of the three seats won by D66.

 
PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Christian Democratic Appeal2,608,57326.5141−3
Labour Party2,085,07721.1933−9
Socialist Party1,630,80316.5825+16
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy1,443,31214.6722–6
Party for Freedom579,4905.899New
GroenLinks453,0544.607−1
Christian Union390,9693.976+3
Democrats 66193,2321.963−3
Party for the Animals179,9881.832+2
Reformed Political Party153,2661.5620
One NL62,8290.640New
List 5 Fortuyn20,9560.210–8
United Seniors Party12,5220.130New
Ad Bos Collective5,1490.050New
Party for the Netherlands5,0100.050New
Islam Democrats4,3390.040New
Netherlands Transparent2,3180.020New
Green Free! Internet Party2,2970.020New
Liberal Democratic Party2,2760.020New
Poortman List2,1810.020New
Continuous Direct Democracy Party5590.010New
LRVP - hetZeteltje1850.000New
Solid Multicultural Party1840.000New
Tamara's Open Party1140.000New
Total9,838,683100.001500
Valid votes9,838,68399.83
Invalid/blank votes16,3150.17
Total votes9,854,998100.00
Registered voters/turnout12,264,50380.35
Source: Nohlen & Stöver,[54] European Elections Database

By province

Results by province[55]
Province CDA PvdA SP VVD PVV GL CU D66 PvdD SGP Others
  Drenthe 22.5 30.7 15.9 14.3 4.0 3.8 5.1 1.3 1.4 0.3 0.7
  Flevoland 23.8 20.8 15.1 16.8 6.8 3.7 5.9 1.6 2.1 2.1 1.3
  Friesland 28.1 27.5 17.1 10.6 3.3 3.8 6.1 1.1 1.3 0.4 0.7
  Gelderland 29.3 20.3 16.1 13.5 4.4 4.4 4.8 1.8 1.6 3.0 0.8
  Groningen 18.3 31.0 19.2 10.9 3.2 5.9 7.0 1.9 1.6 0.3 0.7
  Limburg 28.6 20.3 20.6 10.8 11.5 3.4 1.2 1.1 1.5 0.1 0.9
  North Brabant 31.8 17.8 20.4 14.5 6.2 3.4 1.5 1.6 1.4 0.4 1.0
  North Holland 21.0 22.2 16.8 18.2 5.5 7.0 2.3 2.7 2.7 0.2 1.4
  Overijssel 33.0 21.1 14.8 11.1 4.0 3.4 6.9 1.6 1.1 2.2 0.8
  South Holland 24.1 20.5 14.3 16.1 7.2 4.3 4.4 2.3 2.1 2.5 2.2
  Utrecht 26.8 18.7 13.2 16.7 5.1 6.5 5.5 2.7 1.9 2.0 0.9
  Zeeland 28.0 18.2 15.5 12.9 5.6 2.9 5.1 1.1 2.0 7.8 0.9

Reactions

In the final debate between the leaders of the major parties (CDA, PvdA, SP, VVD, PVV, GL and CU) it was pointed out that the seated government lost 9 seats and the left wing parties (PvdA, SP, GL, PvdD) won 8 seats, which was interpreted as a signal from the voters that government policy should be more social. On the right, the PVV gained 9 seats, but other parties are silent about a possible coalition with the PVV. In the debate between party leaders – after the election was over – the question was raised if any of the leaders would want a coalition with the PVV. All kept quiet. When Wilders called this a "cordon sanitaire," VVD leader Rutte responded fiercely, saying that "there is no cordon sanitaire." Rutte believes the PVV is a "one-issue party," but also pointed out that he did not exclude the PVV as coalition partner.[56]

When asked about the possibility of a CDA-PvdA-CU coalition, PvdA leader Bos responded that during the campaign the differences between CDA and PvdA have turned out to be rather big and that the big winner SP also deserves a place at the negotiating table. SP leader Marijnissen responded to this that the SP had never excluded CDA as a coalition partner, but that the CDA of the previous cabinet is not one with which the SP can enter a coalition. That, combined with the program of the CDA and the list of CDA MPs would constitute many 'road bumps' and 'bears on the road', and said he did not really want to start a coalition with this CDA program and this CDA MP list. Prime minister Balkenende responded that the CDA he wanted does not exist and that he has to enter talks with the CDA as it is now.[57]

Aftermath

Since no party held an absolute majority in the House of Representatives, the formation of a coalition government, consisting of parties who together have enough seats to propose laws that can count on a majority in the House of Representatives was necessary. This is most commonly achieved by building a coalition that has a majority; although a minority cabinet that arranges ad hoc majorities for its proposals is possible. With the 2006 results a majority coalition required at least three parties.

Initially, negotiations for a cabinet of CDA, PvdA and SP were started, but the parties seemed unwilling to form this cabinet. Later on, negotiations for a CDA-PvdA-ChristenUnie cabinet were started. This resulted in the formation of the Fourth cabinet Balkenende. It was installed by Queen Beatrix on 22 February 2007. In the meantime the Balkenende III cabinet continued as a caretaker cabinet, which is not supposed to make new policy.

See also

References

  1. ^ Dutch animal rights party wins 2 seats in election, Reuters, 23 November 2006
  2. ^ "Former Dutch PM expects general election in November". People's Daily Online. Retrieved 7 July 2021.
  3. ^ . MSN Moneyline. 6 June 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-10-28.
  4. ^ . Expatica. 6 June 2006. Archived from the original on 11 September 2005. Retrieved 2 October 2006.
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  6. ^ (in Dutch) PvdA trekt kandidatuur Sacan in 2007-03-11 at the Wayback Machine, NOS, 26 September 2006
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  23. ^ (in Dutch). Ionica Smeets and Matthijs Braamhaar. 2006-11-25. Archived from the original on 2006-12-05. Retrieved 2006-11-26.
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  25. ^ "Stichting Kijkonderzoek". Stichting KijkOnderzoek.
  26. ^ (in Dutch) Van Dam, M. De bejaardenbelasting van Bos, De Volkskrant, 22 June 2006
  27. ^ (in Dutch) Van ‘bejaardenbelasting’ tot ‘regelrutter’, De Volkskrant, 29 September 2006
  28. ^ (in Dutch) ‘Opportunisme domineert het debat’, De Volkskrant, 1 September 2006
  29. ^ a b Seeking re-election, incumbent Dutch government promises to ban burqa, International Herald Tribune, 17 November 2006
  30. ^ "Wilders vreest 'tsunami' moslims" (in Dutch). Volkskrant. 2006-10-07.
  31. ^ a b (in Dutch) Van Geel: 'Kerncentrale kan, onder voorwaarden', Regering.nl, 29 September 2006
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  34. ^ (in Dutch) reproduction of the ad on the GreenLeft Campaign site[permanent dead link]
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  38. ^ a b (in Dutch) Stemcomputer of potlood?, EenVandaag, 31 October 2006
  39. ^ (in Dutch) Stemmachines in 35 gemeentes afgekeurd nu.nl, 30 October 2006
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  42. ^ a b c Netherlands – Balkenende might get new term 2006-10-15 at the Wayback Machine, Angus Reid Global Monitor
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  53. ^ "Fatma Koşer Kaya: ik wil de kiezers danken" (in Dutch). Volkskrant. 2006-11-27.
  54. ^ Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, pp1411-1415 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
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Further reading

  • van Holsteyn, Joop J. M. (November 2007). "The Dutch Parliamentary Elections of 2006". West European Politics. 30 (5): 1139–1147. doi:10.1080/01402380701617522. S2CID 219610511.

External links

  • Dutch Electoral Council
  • "We don't trust voting computers" action group
  • NSD: European Election Database – Netherlands publishes regional level election data (NUTS 1–3); allows for comparisons of election results, 1994–2010

2006, dutch, general, election, general, elections, were, held, netherlands, november, 2006, following, fall, second, balkenende, cabinet, elections, proved, relatively, successful, governing, christian, democratic, appeal, which, remained, largest, party, wit. General elections were held in the Netherlands on 22 November 2006 following the fall of the Second Balkenende cabinet The elections proved relatively successful for the governing Christian Democratic Appeal CDA which remained the largest party with 41 seats a loss of only three seats The largest increase in seats was for the Socialist Party SP which went from nine to 25 seats The main opposition party the social democratic Labour Party PvdA lost nine of its 42 seats while the right liberal People s Party for Freedom and Democracy VVD and the progressive liberal Democrats 66 lost a considerable portion of their seats six of 28 and three of six respectively New parties such as the right wing Party for Freedom PVV of former VVD MP Geert Wilders and the animal rights party Party for the Animals PvdD were also successful with the PVV winning nine seats and the PvdD winning two thereby becoming the first animal rights group to enter a European parliament 1 2006 Dutch general election 2003 22 November 2006 2010 All 150 seats in the House of Representatives76 seats needed for a majorityTurnout80 4 0 4 pp Party Leader Seats CDA Jan Peter Balkenende 26 5 41 3PvdA Wouter Bos 21 2 33 9SP Jan Marijnissen 16 6 25 16VVD Mark Rutte 14 7 22 6PVV Geert Wilders 5 9 9 NewGL Femke Halsema 4 6 7 1CU Andre Rouvoet 4 0 6 3D66 Alexander Pechtold 2 0 3 3PvdD Marianne Thieme 2 0 2 NewSGP Bas van der Vlies 1 6 2 0This lists parties that won seats See the complete results below Strongest political party by municipalityPrime Minister before Prime Minister afterJan Peter BalkenendeCDA Jan Peter BalkenendeCDAThe government formation talks led to the installation of the Christian social fourth Balkenende cabinet composed of the CDA PvdA and ChristianUnion on 22 February 2007 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Internal elections 1 2 Fall of the Cabinet 1 3 Splintered Fortuynists 1 4 Exodus of prominent politicians 1 5 Turkish Dutch candidates and the Armenian genocide 1 6 News of possible mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners in 2003 1 7 Voting tools 1 8 De Stemming 2006 2 Campaign 2 1 Power question 2 2 Social economic issues 2 3 Immigration and integration 2 4 The environment 3 Voting issues 3 1 Voting machine controversy 3 2 Experiments 4 Public debates 4 1 Radio debate 4 2 RTL 4 debate 4 3 NOS Jeugdjournaal debate 4 4 EenVandaag debate 4 5 NOS debates 4 5 1 Summary 5 Opinion polls 6 Results 6 1 By province 7 Reactions 8 Aftermath 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground EditInternal elections Edit In the month before the fall of the cabinet two parties held internal elections on who would lead their parties in the next elections which were scheduled for 2007 In the internal election of the conservative liberal VVD the more liberal State Secretary for Science and Higher education Mark Rutte beat the more conservative Minister without portfolio for Immigration and Integration Rita Verdonk In the internal election of the progressive liberal D66 the more radical democratic minister without portfolio for government reform Alexander Pechtold beat the more social liberal chair of the parliamentary party Lousewies van der Laan Fall of the Cabinet Edit The next Dutch general election was originally scheduled for 15 May 2007 as the parliament was to be dissolved on 2 April 2007 However it was announced that elections would be held on 22 November 2006 2 as Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende offered the resignation of the cabinet on 30 June 2006 after one of the coalition partners D66 withdrew their support from the cabinet the day before over Rita Verdonk s treatment of the Ayaan Hirsi Ali case 3 4 A new cabinet continued for five months as a care taker cabinet until the elections The opposition had pressed for speedy elections because they were on a winning streak The late date for the elections probably worked to the advantage of the CDA because in those five months the economy improved and in the past the biggest coalition partner had always come out as the biggest party if the economy blooms A major issue in the campaigns was whether this improving economy was because of or in spite of the right wing government Splintered Fortuynists Edit After the fall of the cabinet several new small right wing and conservative parties announced that they would run Most of these parties either came out of the remains of Pim Fortuyn s populist Pim Fortuyn List LPF or the conservative liberal VVD and were inspired by Fortuyn s ideas In the period before the elections the small right was characterized by a chaos of secessions new formations and party switches Former Rotterdam alderman Marco Pastors and member of parliament for the LPF Joost Eerdmans formed Een NL which emulated Fortuyn s policies The right wing Party for the Netherlands was led by former LPF minister Hilbrand Nawijn Former VVD MP Geert Wilders recruited people for his new Party for Freedom which would take part in the 2006 elections Nawijn and Wilders had become independent in parliament at that time before the election while Eerdmans has formed the Group Eerdmans Van Schijndel along with former VVD MP Anton van Schijndel Two other LPF politicians had formed one man fractions but they have not formed their own party Gerard van As former leader of the LPF and Gonny van Oudenallen also former LPF Margot Kraneveldt left the LPF returned her seat to the party and joined the social democratic PvdA Meanwhile the LPF announced that it would also run the next elections under the name List 5 Fortuyn The party was led by Olaf Stuger who served as member of parliament in the period 2002 2003 and returned to parliament in 2006 to replace Gerard van As Exodus of prominent politicians Edit Several prominent politicians announced they would step down before the elections Some commentators spoke of a large exodus 5 Within the liberal VVD former chair of the parliamentary party Jozias van Aartsen announced he would retire as did his vice chair Bibi de Vries Frans Weisglas the current speaker of parliament and ministers Hans Hoogervorst Sybilla Dekker state secretary Melanie Schultz van Haegen and Henk van Hoof Within the CDA ministers Cees Veerman and Karla Peijs announced they would not return as did state secretary Clemence Ross Both D66 s current chairperson Lousewies van der Laan and her predecessor Boris Dittrich also announced they would not return Turkish Dutch candidates and the Armenian genocide Edit On 26 September 2006 a candidate for the Labour Party Erdinc Sacan was removed by his party because he would not hold to the party stance that the Armenian genocide was caused by the Young Turks 6 That same evening the CDA announced that two of their candidates Ayhan Tonca and Osman Elmaci have been removed as well because of the same issue 7 Both parties agreed that all their members should openly conform to the party s point of view on this sensitive human rights issue The sensitivity over these issues was underlined when the speaker of the Turkish parliament Bulent Arinc in response threatened the Netherlands with diplomatic action over this incident 8 Namik Tan spokesperson for the Turkish Department of Foreign Affairs said that we are deeply worried about the one sided approach of our ally Netherlands political parties on the so called Armenian genocide as this puts a limit on the freedom of expression 9 Labour Party leader Wouter Bos later said that the term genocide is used too easily and that he rather speak of the Armenian Question 10 News of possible mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners in 2003 Edit De Volkskrant newspaper published a story just a week before the election saying that Dutch soldiers tortured Iraqi prisoners in Iraq back in 2003 11 12 Defense minister Henk Kamp ordered an immediate re investigation into the matter but said that earlier information about this case did not result in the military police and Dutch public prosecutors to start a criminal investigation 13 14 Left wing parties such as the Labour Party PvdA which demanded an immediate parliamentary investigation were later rebuked by military commander Dick Berlijn who stated that the left wing opposition tarnished the reputation of the Dutch Department of Defense by their incriminating language while nothing happened in Iraq 15 Mark Rutte leader of the VVD even went as far as to say that this Iraq story was a manipulation in order to influence the elections 16 In an open letter to De Volkskrant on the day of the Dutch elections defense minister Kamp said the news about possible mistreatment was deceptive and that the editor of De Volkskrant should feel being misused by the sources for this story 17 The Department of Defense in the meantime is demanding a rectification of the story published by De Volkskrant 18 A Dutch magazine Elsevier later January 2007 reported that the no 5 candidate of the Labour Party PvdA Ton Heerts advised the Volkskrant on how to report on the story 19 Voting tools Edit Several organisations launched a voting tool which helped voters to decide between the multitude of parties The Institute for Public and Politics IPP a government agency had the Stemwijzer the Voting pointer The Stemwijzer consisted out of thirty propositions like Citizens should elect the Prime Minister and voters could show their support for these propositions by clicking either agree don t agree or don t know The Stemwijzer than showed to which extent the voters agreed with each party showing them from most to least similarity in answers advising the voter to vote for the party which agreed with them most 20 The Stemwijzer had also been made for General European Provincial and Municipal elections since 1989 Kieskompas Electoral Compass was launched by the newspaper Trouw in cooperation with the VU University Amsterdam in order to compete with the Stemwijzer This system was supposed to give considerably more information Here voters could show their support for thirty six propositions on a five point scale Next they show whether they thought the current cabinet had performed well Finally Kieskompas showed users their attitude towards party leaders as competent and trustworthy The voters were shown a two axis system similar to a Nolan Chart and their own position as well as the position of each party in this chart It stated which party was the closest to them and which party the farthest It also gave them the possibility to see which coalition best matched their political preferences 21 Other voting tools where the Wie Kies Jij the Who do You Vote for of the IPP which helped find the perfect candidate by his her age sex dietary habits and political experience 22 and the Stomwijzer the Stupid Pointer which mocked the StemWijzer but still gave reasonable voting advice 23 De Stemming 2006 Edit Comedian Freek de Jonge performed an election show verkiezingsconference on public television on the night before the elections It was called De Stemming 2006 an ambiguous name which means both The Vote 2006 and The Mood 2006 In his ironic comedy show which was totally focused on the elections he ridiculed the candidates making such a show a uniquely Dutch phenomenon When asked whether this show would influence the upcoming elections de Jonge stated he would make a fool out of everyone not favoring a single person This was the second time he did such a show The first one was in 2003 when it was the thirty third best watched TV programme in the Netherlands that year 24 This year the show was watched by 2 016 000 viewers 25 Campaign EditThe main issue at stake during the elections was the economic performance of the centre right Second Balkenende cabinet which consisted of the Christian democratic CDA the conservative liberal VVD and the progressive liberal D66 as well as the composition of the new government and the future of the Dutch economy Other issues were integration and the environment Power question Edit The most important question of the elections was which party would become the largest the governing Christian democratic CDA or the main opposition party the social democratic PvdA This was similar to the situation of the elections of 2003 The largest party will have the initiative in the cabinet formation talks Furthermore if it becomes part of the cabinet the largest party supplies the prime minister The media have framed the elections as a Clash of the Titans between prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende CDA and candidate prime minister Wouter Bos PvdA Both parties had consciously kept their options open and expressed a preference for the composition of a new cabinet The other parties did express clear preferences the VVD wanted to continue to govern with the CDA while the Socialist Party and the GreenLeft GL wanted to form a leftist coalition the so called Left wing Spring Broadly speaking it appeared that there were three options a continuation of the third Balkendende cabinet with CDA and VVD a left wing coalition of PvdA SP and GL or a centre left coalition of PvdA and CDA In 2004 and 2005 the polls indeed indicated that the united left could gain a majority in the House of Representatives The polls predicted two head to head races One between the PvdA and ruling CDA and another between the left wing bloc PvdA SP GreenLeft and the right wing bloc CDA VVD with neither gaining a majority Early November polls however showed that the CDA was gaining on and surpassing the PvdA Mid November polls indicated that the PvdA was bleeding votes to the SP while the CDA remained more or less stable The left and right wing blocks remained in an equilibrium with neither side gaining enough votes for an overall majority Small centrist parties such as the ChristianUnion could play a decisive role Social economic issues Edit The debates were dominated by social economic questions and especially the performance of the Balkenende cabinets In the last four years the three Balkenende cabinets had implemented an ambitious program of social economic reforms including tax cuts reforms to the social welfare system and investments in education Their aim was to jump start the Dutch economy Initially there was great public dissatisfaction with this policy with large demonstrations in 2003 2004 and 2005 by the main labour union FNV and the three main opposition parties They criticised the government for taking these measures at the wrong point in time during a recession and they claimed that the government made the poor and socially weaker pay for the economic recovery A major focus of this debate was on the fact that more than 10 of the people were said to live in poverty as exemplified by the rising number of voedselbanken give away shops for food As the economy began to perform better in 2006 the public dissatisfaction decreased There were roughly three positions on the future of the Dutch economy The CDA claimed that the reforms were finished and that the following cabinet would not have to take any serious measures The VVD wanted to continue reforming to increase the performance of the Dutch economy They wanted to continue to cut taxes and reduce bureaucracy The opposition parties PvdA SP GL joined by the ChristianUnion wanted to revert some of the measures and pay more attention to the public sector especially to the health care sector and the poor The PvdA and the GreenLeft however also announced that they wanted to reform part of the economy and welfare system For instance several months before the elections Wouter Bos the leader of Labour Party announced that he wanted to tax the elderly pension in such a way that rich elderly would pay more taxes on their pensions than poor elderly The Dutch pension system consists of government supplied AOW and mandatory self saved pensions It is the latter portion Bos wanted to tax progressively The proposal led to considerable controversy both outside and within Bos own party Former minister and de Volkskrant columnist Marcel van Dam wrote a critical column on 22 June concerning Bos proposal 26 The second man of the Christian Democratic Appeal Maxime Verhagen used soundbites from the proposal continually to emphasise that the PvdA was an unreliable partner for the elderly 27 Bos later moderated his plans only new cases would pay taxes over their pension 28 Immigration and integration Edit Immigration and integration which had dominated the 2002 and 2003 elections were clearly less important during these elections The focus was on the policy of Rita Verdonk minister of immigration and integration who had reduced the influx of immigrants and implemented mandatory integration courses for migrants Verdonk s attitudes toward immigrants were again in the spotlight after her treatment of the crisis around the naturalisation of Dutch MP Ayaan Hirsi Ali caused the cabinet to fall In the debates one issue was especially important the treatment of 26 000 asylum seekers which had been in legal procedures for over five years The left wing opposition parties PvdA SP GL and CU joined by former coalition partner D66 wanted a general pardon for this group granting them all a residence permit The CDA VVD and the smaller right wing parties of Geert Wilders and Marco Pastors opposed such a permit because it would attract illegal immigrants Minister Verdonk claimed that she had actually already taken care of these 26 000 asylum seekers sending many back to their own country and granting many a residence permit A minor issue was the ban on burqas and other face covering clothing in public which minister Verdonk announced on 17 November 2006 29 The opposition Labour Party called the law an election ploy and a Muslim leader described it as a big law for a small problem 29 Several right wing parties such as One NL and Party for Freedom had campaigned extensively on the issue of immigration and integration Wilders of the Party for Freedom wanted a halt of immigration from non Western countries abolish double citizenship and stop the building of new mosques Wilders said that the Islamisation of the Netherlands is a tsunami that needed to be stopped because it threatens our culture 30 The environment Edit The environment finally also became a secondary issue during the elections The first attention to environmental issues was attracted by Greenpeace who interfered in the CDA party congress on 30 September 2006 During a speech of parliamentary chairman Maxime Verhagen activists of Greenpeace rolled down a large sign saying CDA chooses for 240 000 years of nuclear waste referring to the news a day earlier that the CDA junior minister of the environment Pieter van Geel is open to new possibilities for nuclear energy in the Netherlands 31 Four activists were apprehended by the police afterwards 31 32 33 Other important events increasing the attention on environmental issues were the Stern report of the United Kingdom government and the visit of Al Gore to Amsterdam promoting his movie An Inconvenient Truth The GreenLeft focused on this issue during its campaigns and sponsored ads which read Who votes strategically when the polar caps are melting 34 The Party for the Animals had campaigned on one issue closely related to environmental problems the position of animals in Dutch society and especially in agriculture Voting issues EditVoting machine controversy Edit Main article Electronic voting by country Netherlands In some municipalities voting was done using the old red pencil paper method A report by action group Wij vertrouwen stemcomputers niet We don t trust voting computers detailed serious security flaws in the Nedap voting machines used by 90 of the voters in the election citation needed The report alleged it was easy to open the voting machine casing The inner casing around the electronics was only protected by a very simple lock Thus replacements of software and even hardware were relatively easily possible by a simple memory chip swap meaning that the memory that holds the voting data is not encrypted Another machine is made by SDU and called NewVote It is based on a PC and uses a touchscreen instead of buttons Only ten small districts still use paper and pencil citation needed Wij vertrouwen stemcomputers niet has threatened to bring minister Atzo Nicolai to court since they are not convinced by his assurances that there will be no fraud in the upcoming election 35 In response to the allegations Nicolai introduced new security measures for the voting machines 36 Currently Nedap is checking all its machines for tampering is installing new chips and software that is less easily hacked and seals the machines with a unique metal seal 37 Based on inspections on 30 October the government decided that there was a problem with SDU voting machines because within a radius of 10 metres the machines could be wirelessly monitored so that these machines could not guarantee anonymity of voting to a sufficient degree 38 These machines which are in use in 35 municipalities including Amsterdam have to be improved or replaced with an alternative before the elections 39 Many municipalities including Amsterdam decided to switch to the traditional paper and red pencil method of voting instead of the SDU machines 38 Machines made by Nedap are still in use Experiments Edit Two experiments were conducted during these elections Stemmen in een Willekeurig Stemlokaal SWS voting in a random polling booth Because a lot of people could not vote because of problems caused by this experiment a group of citizens started procedures to nullify the results in all 311 area s where the experiment was conducted Another experiment is Kiezen Op Afstand KOA remote voting also called the experiment with internetstemmen internet voting 40 In an experiment in Breukelen a voting machine was placed in a petrol station However non Breukelen citizens had to convert their voting pass stempas to an elector s pass kiezerspas Public debates EditMore than during previous elections there was a strong focus on the leaders especially Bos of PvdA and Balkenende of CDA regarding who of the two might become prime minister This irritated not only other parties but also analysts who complained that elections should be about issues and parties not about who becomes prime minister Radio debate Edit The first public election debate between the leaders of the seven largest parties was held on 29 October 2006 on public radio Mark Rutte whose VVD is junior partner in the third Balkenende cabinet of CDA prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende was worried that the CDA will choose for a coalition with the PvdA after the elections as this at the time of the debate was the only two party coalition possible according to polls Balkenende however kept his options open and did not rule out a coalition with the PvdA The PvdA s Wouter Bos stated that he will not become a deputy prime minister in case Balkenende leads a CDA PvdA coalition He will then remain as chairman of the parliamentary party 41 RTL 4 debate Edit This debate took place on 3 November 2006 and was televised by RTL4 Participants were Jan Peter Balkenende and Wouter Bos Balkenende focused on his achievements the last four years stating We are much better off than four years ago We were behind in Europe and now we re ahead but our work is not yet done 42 Bos felt that under Balkenende the gap between rich and poor had grown stating What have you asked of the wealthiest Everybody has been asked to dig into their pockets to contribute to the economy 42 In an opinion poll conducted by TNS Nipo following the televised debate 50 percent of respondents thought Wouter Bos won the debate against 46 percent for Jan Peter Balkenende 43 NOS Jeugdjournaal debate Edit This debate was broadcast on 11 November 2006 and was televised by the Jeugdjournaal YouthNews of the NOS The debate was aimed at children from 8 to 14 years of age Participants were top candidates from the four parties leading the polls Jan Peter Balkenende CDA Wouter Bos PvdA Mark Rutte VVD and Jan Marijnissen SP 44 A poll among the young watchers after the debate showed that the Dutch children preferred Wouter Bos as the next prime minister 46 before Marijnissen 26 Balkenende 22 and Mark Rutte 6 45 EenVandaag debate Edit This debate took place on 15 November 2006 and was organised by EenVandaag Participants were Jan Peter Balkenende Wouter Bos Mark Rutte Jan Marijnissen Femke Halsema and Andre Rouvoet 46 According to an opinion poll following the debate Jan Marijnissen won the debate 47 NOS debates Edit 21 November NOS two consecutive debates the first between the leaders of the smaller parties in the polls the second between leaders of the projected six largests parties 48 Alexander Pechtold D66 Bas van der Vlies SGP Olaf Stuger Pim Fortuyn List Marco Pastors One NL Geert Wilders PVV and Marianne Thieme Partij voor de Dieren at 19 05 Jan Peter Balkenende CDA Wouter Bos PvdA Mark Rutte VVD Jan Marijnissen SP Femke Halsema GreenLeft and Andre Rouvoet ChristenUnie at 20 30 Summary Edit Dutch general election debates 2006Date Organisers P Present NI Non invitee A Absent invitee NoteMarijnissen Thieme Halsema Bos Pechtold Rutte Rouvoet Balkenende Vlies Pastors Wilders Stuger28 October Radio 1 P NI P P P P NI P NI NI P NI 41 3 November RTL 4 NI NI NI P NI NI NI P NI NI NI NI 42 43 11 November Jeugdjournaal P NI NI P NI P NI P NI NI NI NI 44 45 15 November EenVandaag P NI P P NI P P P NI NI NI NI 46 47 21 November NOS NI P NI NI P NI NI NI P P P P 48 P NI P P NI P P P NI NI NI NIOpinion polls EditIn the Netherlands there are three agencies that conduct frequent polls throughout the year usually weekly There is usually a small difference which may be due to different sampling and surveying methods applied From 1 November the Politieke Barometer started with two polls each week and from 13 November they increased the frequency to daily polls The last polls prior to the election of the Politieke Barometer 49 the poll by NOVA and Interview NSS the TNS NIPO polls by RTL4 50 and the poll by Maurice de Honds peil nl 51 yield the following results The day before the elections about one third of the electorate had not yet made up their minds resulting in polls giving strongly varying results For this reason campaigning continued on election day itself An aspect of this was tactical voting with SP telling PvdA voters that a strong SP would force PvdA to form a left wing coalition VVD saying something similar to CDA voters concerning a right wing coalition PvdA and CDA saying they need to be strong to prevent the other party from forming or dominating a coalition and ChristenUnie saying it has the best cards to participate in any coalition Shortly before the elections PvdA leader Bos showed himself more interested in the much talked about left wing coalition of PvdA SP and GroenLinks possibly with ChristenUnie which he had refused to talk about for months Many suspected he changed his mind to stop the exodus of PvdA voters to SP During the municipal elections earlier that year PvdA grew strong and after that they even grew to 60 seats in the polls but after March a gradual decline had set in almost halving the size of PvdA in the polls Polling firm Date CDA PvdA VVD SP Fortuyn GL D66 CU SGP PVV PvdD EenNL LeadPolitieke Barometer 21 Nov 2006 41 37 23 23 1 7 3 6 2 4 2 1 4Peil nl permanent dead link 21 Nov 2006 42 38 22 23 0 8 2 6 2 5 1 1 4TNS NIPO 20 Nov 2006 41 31 22 32 0 6 1 8 2 6 2 0 92003 election 22 January 2003 44 42 28 9 8 8 6 3 2 2a Fortuyn is here compared with its immediate predecessor LPFb PVV is here presented as a new party as it did not participate in the 2003 elections It is however a continuation of Groep Wilders an independent MP during part of the last term after he split off from VVDResults Edit Largest party per municipality In the Dutch system this is of limited importance as it operates a proportional system CDA PvdA SP VVD In order to increase their changes of obtaining the remainder seats two combined lists were formed one by the Socialist Party and the GreenLeft which gained one remainder seat and one by ChristianUnion and the SGP Other remainder seats were allocated to the CDA 2 the PvdA 2 D66 1 and the PVV 1 The number two candidate on the VVD list Immigration Minister Rita Verdonk received more preference votes 620 555 than list leader Mark Rutte 553 200 This was attributed to her greater national profile 52 The number six candidate on the D66 list Fatma Koser Kaya received the second highest number preferences 34 564 second only to list leader Alexander Pechtold 95 937 This was a result of the CDA and PvdA removing candidates of Turkish origin from their lists because of their position on the Armenian genocide which led to the Turks Forum advised voters of Turkish origin to vote for Koser Kaya who is of Turkish origin although her position on the genocide was ambiguous 53 Any individual candidate reaching the quota 16 397 votes in this election is elected resulting in Koser Kaya being elected and taking one of the three seats won by D66 PartyVotes Seats Christian Democratic Appeal2 608 57326 5141 3Labour Party2 085 07721 1933 9Socialist Party1 630 80316 5825 16People s Party for Freedom and Democracy1 443 31214 6722 6Party for Freedom579 4905 899NewGroenLinks453 0544 607 1Christian Union390 9693 976 3Democrats 66193 2321 963 3Party for the Animals179 9881 832 2Reformed Political Party153 2661 5620One NL62 8290 640NewList 5 Fortuyn20 9560 210 8United Seniors Party12 5220 130NewAd Bos Collective5 1490 050NewParty for the Netherlands5 0100 050NewIslam Democrats4 3390 040NewNetherlands Transparent2 3180 020NewGreen Free Internet Party2 2970 020NewLiberal Democratic Party2 2760 020NewPoortman List2 1810 020NewContinuous Direct Democracy Party5590 010NewLRVP hetZeteltje1850 000NewSolid Multicultural Party1840 000NewTamara s Open Party1140 000NewTotal9 838 683100 001500Valid votes9 838 68399 83Invalid blank votes16 3150 17Total votes9 854 998100 00Registered voters turnout12 264 50380 35Source Nohlen amp Stover 54 European Elections DatabaseBy province Edit Results by province 55 Province CDA PvdA SP VVD PVV GL CU D66 PvdD SGP Others Drenthe 22 5 30 7 15 9 14 3 4 0 3 8 5 1 1 3 1 4 0 3 0 7 Flevoland 23 8 20 8 15 1 16 8 6 8 3 7 5 9 1 6 2 1 2 1 1 3 Friesland 28 1 27 5 17 1 10 6 3 3 3 8 6 1 1 1 1 3 0 4 0 7 Gelderland 29 3 20 3 16 1 13 5 4 4 4 4 4 8 1 8 1 6 3 0 0 8 Groningen 18 3 31 0 19 2 10 9 3 2 5 9 7 0 1 9 1 6 0 3 0 7 Limburg 28 6 20 3 20 6 10 8 11 5 3 4 1 2 1 1 1 5 0 1 0 9 North Brabant 31 8 17 8 20 4 14 5 6 2 3 4 1 5 1 6 1 4 0 4 1 0 North Holland 21 0 22 2 16 8 18 2 5 5 7 0 2 3 2 7 2 7 0 2 1 4 Overijssel 33 0 21 1 14 8 11 1 4 0 3 4 6 9 1 6 1 1 2 2 0 8 South Holland 24 1 20 5 14 3 16 1 7 2 4 3 4 4 2 3 2 1 2 5 2 2 Utrecht 26 8 18 7 13 2 16 7 5 1 6 5 5 5 2 7 1 9 2 0 0 9 Zeeland 28 0 18 2 15 5 12 9 5 6 2 9 5 1 1 1 2 0 7 8 0 9Reactions EditIn the final debate between the leaders of the major parties CDA PvdA SP VVD PVV GL and CU it was pointed out that the seated government lost 9 seats and the left wing parties PvdA SP GL PvdD won 8 seats which was interpreted as a signal from the voters that government policy should be more social On the right the PVV gained 9 seats but other parties are silent about a possible coalition with the PVV In the debate between party leaders after the election was over the question was raised if any of the leaders would want a coalition with the PVV All kept quiet When Wilders called this a cordon sanitaire VVD leader Rutte responded fiercely saying that there is no cordon sanitaire Rutte believes the PVV is a one issue party but also pointed out that he did not exclude the PVV as coalition partner 56 When asked about the possibility of a CDA PvdA CU coalition PvdA leader Bos responded that during the campaign the differences between CDA and PvdA have turned out to be rather big and that the big winner SP also deserves a place at the negotiating table SP leader Marijnissen responded to this that the SP had never excluded CDA as a coalition partner but that the CDA of the previous cabinet is not one with which the SP can enter a coalition That combined with the program of the CDA and the list of CDA MPs would constitute many road bumps and bears on the road and said he did not really want to start a coalition with this CDA program and this CDA MP list Prime minister Balkenende responded that the CDA he wanted does not exist and that he has to enter talks with the CDA as it is now 57 Aftermath EditMain articles 2006 2007 Dutch cabinet formation and Fourth cabinet Balkenende Since no party held an absolute majority in the House of Representatives the formation of a coalition government consisting of parties who together have enough seats to propose laws that can count on a majority in the House of Representatives was necessary This is most commonly achieved by building a coalition that has a majority although a minority cabinet that arranges ad hoc majorities for its proposals is possible With the 2006 results a majority coalition required at least three parties Initially negotiations for a cabinet of CDA PvdA and SP were started but the parties seemed unwilling to form this cabinet Later on negotiations for a CDA PvdA ChristenUnie cabinet were started This resulted in the formation of the Fourth cabinet Balkenende It was installed by Queen Beatrix on 22 February 2007 In the meantime the Balkenende III cabinet continued as a caretaker cabinet which is not supposed to make new policy See also EditList of members of the House of Representatives of the Netherlands 2006 2010References Edit Dutch animal rights party wins 2 seats in election Reuters 23 November 2006 Former Dutch PM expects general election in November People s Daily Online Retrieved 7 July 2021 Dutch coalition under threat in row over Hirsi Ali MSN Moneyline 6 June 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 28 D66 withdraws support from coalition confusion reigns Expatica 6 June 2006 Archived from the original on 11 September 2005 Retrieved 2 October 2006 in Dutch Ter Braak Bert De grote uittocht Parlement com 25 August 2006 in Dutch PvdA trekt kandidatuur Sacan in Archived 2007 03 11 at the Wayback Machine NOS 26 September 2006 in Dutch Turkse CDA ers weg om Armenie rel Archived 2007 03 11 at the Wayback Machine NOS 26 September 2006 in Dutch Genocide Turkije woedend op PvdA CDA Archived 2006 10 23 at the Wayback Machine Elsevier 29 September 2006 Alleged Armenian genocide not a historical reality Tan NTVMSNBC 28 September 2006 Bos term genocide te makkelijk gebruikt in Dutch De Volkskrant 2006 11 06 Dutch inquiry into Iraq abuses BBC News 2006 11 17 Nederlanders martelden Irakezen in Dutch De Volkskrant 2006 11 17 Defence minister denies abuse in Iraq Expatica 2006 11 17 Archived from the original on 2007 09 26 Retrieved 2006 11 22 OM Geen reden tot onderzoek naar verhoren in Dutch Trouw 2006 11 17 Berlijn haalt uit naar linkse oppositiepartijen in Dutch De Telegraaf 2006 11 19 Rutte informatie over Irak gemanipuleerd in Dutch Trouw 2006 11 20 Kamp Berichtgeving martelingen deugde niet in Dutch Elsevier 2006 11 22 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Defensie eist rectificatie Volkskrant in Dutch Elsevier 2006 11 22 Archived from the original on 2007 02 08 PvdA hielp Volkskrant bij martel primeur in Dutch Elsevier 2006 01 24 Archived from the original on 2007 01 26 StemWijzer home in Dutch Institute for Public and Politics 2006 11 25 A translation can be found here Kieskompas home in Dutch Trouw 2006 11 25 Wie Kies Jij home in Dutch Institute for Public and Politics 2006 11 25 StomWijzer home in Dutch Ionica Smeets and Matthijs Braamhaar 2006 11 25 Archived from the original on 2006 12 05 Retrieved 2006 11 26 Freek kraakt politici in Dutch NRC Handelsblad 2006 11 21 Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2006 11 22 Stichting Kijkonderzoek Stichting KijkOnderzoek in Dutch Van Dam M De bejaardenbelasting van Bos De Volkskrant 22 June 2006 in Dutch Van bejaardenbelasting tot regelrutter De Volkskrant 29 September 2006 in Dutch Opportunisme domineert het debat De Volkskrant 1 September 2006 a b Seeking re election incumbent Dutch government promises to ban burqa International Herald Tribune 17 November 2006 Wilders vreest tsunami moslims in Dutch Volkskrant 2006 10 07 a b in Dutch Van Geel Kerncentrale kan onder voorwaarden Regering nl 29 September 2006 in Dutch Greenpeace verstoort CDA congres met spandoekTrouw 30 September 2006 in Dutch Greenpeace verstoort toespraak VerhagenTrouw 30 September 2006 in Dutch reproduction of the ad on the GreenLeft Campaign site permanent dead link in Dutch Nicolai mogelijk voor rechter gedaagd EenVandaag 5 October 2006 in Dutch Stemcomputers krijgen nieuwe software permanent dead link Elsevier 12 October 2006 in Dutch Stemmachines in 35 gemeentes afgekeurd Volkskrant 30 October 2006 a b in Dutch Stemcomputer of potlood EenVandaag 31 October 2006 in Dutch Stemmachines in 35 gemeentes afgekeurd nu nl 30 October 2006 in Dutch Burger ziet internetstemmen zitten Archived 2007 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Hoogheemraadschap Rijnland 25 August 2004 a b Rutte vreest voor coalitie PvdA CDA in Dutch NOS 29 October 2006 Archived from the original on 6 November 2006 a b c Netherlands Balkenende might get new term Archived 2006 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Angus Reid Global Monitor a b in Dutch Enquete Bos winnaar van tv debat de Volkskrant 4 November 2006 a b Verkiezingsdebat in Dutch NOS Jeugdjournaal 7 November 2006 Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 a b Wouter scoort het best in Dutch NOS Jeugdjournaal 7 November 2006 Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 a b in Dutch Het grote lijsttrekkersdebat EenVandaag 15 November 2006 a b in Dutch Bos en Balkenende botsen hard in lijsttrekkersdebat de Volkskrant 15 November 2006 a b Kleine partijen botsen over integratie in Dutch NOS 21 November 2006 Archived from the original on 18 March 2007 Politieke Barometer week 42 20 oktober 2006 politiekebarometer nl Archived from the original on 2006 10 13 Parlementsverkiezingen 2006 rtl nl 1 October 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 01 https n34 noties nl peil nl permanent dead link Verdonk verslaat Rutte Koser Kaya verdringt Bakker in Dutch Volkskrant 2006 11 27 Fatma Koser Kaya ik wil de kiezers danken in Dutch Volkskrant 2006 11 27 Dieter Nohlen amp Philip Stover 2010 Elections in Europe A data handbook pp1411 1415 ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 Tweede Kamer 22 november 2006 Kiesraad in Dutch Retrieved 4 November 2021 Media in Dutch Trouw 2006 11 24 SP kabinet met CDA PvdA onderzoeken in Dutch NOS Nieuws 2006 11 23 Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Further reading Editvan Holsteyn Joop J M November 2007 The Dutch Parliamentary Elections of 2006 West European Politics 30 5 1139 1147 doi 10 1080 01402380701617522 S2CID 219610511 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dutch general elections 2006 Dutch Electoral Council We don t trust voting computers action group NSD European Election Database Netherlands publishes regional level election data NUTS 1 3 allows for comparisons of election results 1994 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2006 Dutch general election amp oldid 1082920171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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