The Netherlands heads to the polls in a closely fought election, with far-right leader Geert Wilders aiming for a second consecutive victory. Immigration and housing dominate the campaign, while mainstream parties vow not to join Wilders’ coalition amid deep political divisions
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The Dutch election campaign was on the home stretch Tuesday, a day before the country goes to the polls in a knife-edge vote with anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders seeking a second straight victory for his far-right Party for Freedom. The campaign has largely focused on two main issues that also resonate throughout Europe ' how to rein in the number of migrants and tackling a crisis of housing affordability and availability. Issues such as the climate and defence spending have taken a back seat.
Polls suggest that Wilders' party, which is calling for a total halt to asylum-seekers entering the Netherlands, remains on track to be the largest bloc in the 150-seat House of Representatives, but other more moderate parties are closing the gap. Christian Democrat leader Henri Bontenbal, who is tipped as a possible prime minister, said that the vote also is about who will be prime minister for the next four-year term.
'In the end, it is about the question of who is going to lead the next coalition, what kind of politics are we going to see in the coming years,' he said on national broadcaster NOS. 'We have seen a lot of chaos and I think the Netherlands now hankers for something different.' Polls open across the country at 7:30 am (0630 GMT) on Wednesday and close at 9 pm (2000 GMT). Broadcasters publish an exit poll as soon as voting ends and update it a half-hour later.
After years in opposition, Wilders' victory in the last election meant his party was the largest in the outgoing four-party coalition, but he torpedoed the administration after failing to push through all of what he called Europe's toughest asylum and immigration policies.
He withdrew his party's ministers in June, triggering the fourth general election in a decade and ensuring that the administration led by Prime Minister Dick Schoof will go down in history as one of the shortest-lived Dutch governments at just 11 months. It could take months to form the next coalition after Wednesday's vote. The Dutch system of proportional representation ensures coalitions, and with divisions deep across the political spectrum, tough negotiations lie ahead.
Mainstream parties argue that Wilders' decision to bring down the government show that he can't be trusted as a coalition partner and have ruled out working with Wilders in a new government. Wilders urged his supporters to give him enough votes so that other parties will have to sit down with him for coalition negotiations.
"I hope people will vote with their hearts and with their minds so that at the end of the day my party will become the biggest and then we will deal with all the other parties,' he said at a weekend campaign event. King Willem-Alexander called last month for a return to the Dutch culture of compromise amid polarisation that has brought about the fourth general election in less than a decade. His appeal came in a speech written by the government.
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