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Dutch Prime Minister Wim Kok announces resignation of government
By Peter Reydt
22 May 1999
On Wednesday, Dutch Prime Minister Wim Kok announced the resignation
of his government. This had been a coalition comprised of the
Labour Party (PvdA), Liberal Party (VVD) and Democrats 66 (D66).
Kok informed Queen Beatrix that all efforts to solve the crisis
of his cabinet had failed. The coalition had only ruled for one
yearone of the shortest-lived Dutch governments since the
Second World War.
The resignation followed the loss, in the upper house of Parliament,
of a bill implementing constitutional changes. D66 had proposed
that voters should be able to veto legislation through referendums.
Under the new measures, a referendum could be called if 40,000
people signed a petition and another 600,000 then ratified this.
Issues of taxation and defence were to be excluded.
The Bill was a central plank of D66's election platform and
had been agreed by the other coalition parties following the elections
last year. D66, which holds 14 of the coalition's 97 seats in
the 150-member lower house, had already made clear that it would
leave the coalition if the legislation did not pass.
In the event, it was the vote of VVD Senator Hans Wiegel that
left the bill one short of the necessary two-thirds majority.
Wiegel, a former interior minister, argued that the Bill would
give the electorate too much control over government policy, specifically,
in the area of the European Union and international affairs. On
questions of foreign policy, the intervention of the people had
to be limited, he said.
Thom de Graaf, the D66 parliamentary party leader, reacted
by declaring, The coalition is beyond repair. D66
immediately resigned their three cabinet posts. A five-hour crisis
meeting of the remaining government members resolved nothing and
ministers from both parties resigned, leaving Kok no choice but
to quit himself. In his letter to the Queen, Kok said, In
view of the situation, the ministers ... decided to jointly resign.
In a televised address to Parliament broadcast later, he called
the collapse of the coalition a bitter pill and a terrible
loss.
Three options are now possible. Theoretically, Queen Beatrix
has the power to instruct ministers to try to form a new government.
On Thursday she began consulting speakers of both houses and the
parliamentary party leaders, but several of the latter had already
ruled out any possibility of keeping the outgoing coalition together.
A new government comprising just the VVD and Labour could be
formed instead. Even with D66's departure the two maintain a parliamentary
majority. However, they are reluctant to agree to a coalition
without D66. Ad Melkert, Labour House leader, said that his party
would not accept a continuation of a purple coalition
(comprised of red Labour and blue VVD),
without D66. That falls outside the scope of the mandate
given us by the electorate (in 1998), he said.
The most likely alternative is that fresh elections will be
called, but these cannot take place before September, leaving
the purple coalition as a caretaker government in
the meantime.
This crisis takes place in the midst of crucial political events,
most notably NATO's war against Yugoslavia, in which the Dutch
government has been participating, and the upcoming European elections.
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, leader of the Christian Democratic Appeal
(CDA), the leading opposition party, said, The Netherlands
is maybe not formally at war, but practically speaking it is at
war, and many will ask: Is this the right moment for a cabinet
crisis? I would answer no.
Alfred Pijpers, a senior lecturer in political science at Leiden
University, pointed out that the government's weakness would now
impact on international issues. In the event that NATO decided
to deploy ground troops in Kosovo, for example, Kok's caretaker
administration would find this very difficult to strongly endorse.
Coalition governments have ruled in the Netherlands for the
past 80 years, but Wednesday's events are the first time since
1907 that a vote in the upper house has caused a government to
fall.
See Also:
Holland
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