People's Party for Freedom and Democracy
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie | |
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Abbreviation | VVD |
Leader | Mark Rutte |
Chairman | Henry Keizer |
Leader in the Senate | Annemarie Jorritsma |
Leader in the House of Representatives | Halbe Zijlstra |
Leader in the European Parliament | Hans van Baalen |
President of the Senate | Ankie Broekers-Knol |
Founded | 24 January 1948 |
Merger of | Freedom Party and Committee-Oud |
Headquarters | Thorbeckehuis Laan Copes van Cattenburch 52 The Hague |
Youth wing | Youth Organisation Freedom and Democracy |
Thinktank | Telders Foundation |
Ideology | Conservative liberalism[1] |
Political position | Centre-right[2] |
European affiliation | Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe |
European Parliament group | Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe |
International affiliation | Liberal International |
Colours | Blue and Orange |
Senate | 13 / 75 |
House of Representatives | 41 / 150 |
King's Commissioners | 4 / 12 |
States-Provincial | 89 / 570 |
European Parliament | 3 / 26 |
Website | |
www.vvd.nl | |
The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (Template:Lang-nl, VVD) (Dutch pronunciation: [vɔl(ə)kspɑrtɛi voːr vrɛiɦɛit ɛn deːmoːˈkraːtsi] is a conservative-liberal[1][3][4][5][6] political party in the Netherlands.
The VVD supports private enterprise in the Netherlands and is an economically liberal party.[7][8][9] After the fourth Balkenende cabinet was formed (22 February 2007), the VVD was the second-largest opposition party in the House of Representatives. During the Dutch general-election of 2010 the VVD obtained the highest number of votes cast and came to occupy 31 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives. The VVD was the senior party in a centre-right minority government coalition together with the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) under the leadership of VVD party leader Mark Rutte. Rutte has been the leader of the VVD since 31 May 2006.
The First Rutte cabinet's parliamentary majority was provided by Geert Wilders' anti-Islam, -immigration, and -EU Party for Freedom (PVV), but this majority became unstable when Wilders' party refused to support austerity measures in connection with the Euro crisis.[10] Therefore, elections for the House of Representatives were held on 12 September 2012[11] The VVD remained the largest party, with 41 seats. Since 5 November 2012, the VVD has been the senior partner in the second Rutte cabinet, a "purple" coalition with the Labour Party (PvdA).
History
1948–1971
The VVD was founded in 1948 as a continuation of the Freedom Party,[12] which was a continuation of the interbellum Liberal State Party,[13] which in turn was a continuation of Liberal Union.[14] They were joined by the Comité-Oud, a group of liberal members of the Labour Party (PvdA), led by Pieter Oud. The liberals within the Labour Party were primarily members of the pre-war social-liberal Free-thinking Democratic League (VDB), who went on to join the Labour Party in the post-war Doorbraak (breakthrough) movement. They were unhappy[citation needed] with the social-democratic orientation[citation needed] of the Labour Party.
Between 1948 and 1952 the VVD took part in the broad cabinets led by the Labour Party Prime Minister Willem Drees. The party was a junior partner with only eight seats to the Catholic People's Party (KVP) and Labour Party, which both had around thirty seats (out of 100). The party's leadership was in the hands of the respected former Labour Party member Oud. The Drees cabinet laid the foundation for the welfare state[citation needed] and decolonization of the Dutch East Indies[citation needed]. In the Dutch general election of 1952 the VVD gained one seat, but did not join the government. In the Dutch general election of 1956 they increased their total, receiving thirteen seats, but were still kept out[citation needed] of government until the Dutch general election of 1959, which were held early because of cabinet crisis. This time they gained nineteen seats and the party entered government alongside the Protestant Anti Revolutionary Party (ARP), Christian Historical Union CHU and the Roman Catholic KVP.
In 1963, Oud left politics, and was succeeded by the minister of Home Affairs Edzo Toxopeus. With the lead of Toxopeus VVD lost three seats in the 1963 elections, but remained in government. In 1962, a substantial group of disillusioned VVD-members founded the Liberal Democratic Centre (Liberaal Democratisch Centrum, LDC) which was intended to introduce a more twentieth-century liberal direction pointing to the classical liberal VVD. In 1966, frustrated with their hopeless efforts, LDC-members departed the VVD altogether and went on now to form an entirely political party -- Democrats 66 (D66).
In 1965, there also occurred a conflict between VVD-ministers and their counterparts from KVP and ARP in Cabinet Marijnen. The cabinet fell and without elections it was replaced by the KVP-ARP-Labour Party cabinet under Cals, which itself also fell the next year. In the following 1967 elections the VVD remained relatively stable and entered yet again the cabinet under Prime Minister Piet de Jong.
During this period the VVD had loose ties with other liberal organisations and together they formed the neutral pillar. This included the liberal papers Nieuwe Rotterdamsche Courant and the Algemeen Handelsblad, the broadcaster AVRO and the employers' organisation VNO.
1971–1994
In the Dutch general election of 1971 the VVD lost one seat and the cabinet lost its majority. A cabinet was formed by the Christian-democratic parties, the VVD and the Labour Party offshoot Democratic Socialists '70. This cabinet fell after a few months. Meanwhile, the charismatic young MP Hans Wiegel had attracted considerable attention. He became the new leader of the VVD: in 1971 he became the new Parliamentary group leader, and in 1972 he was appointed lijsttrekker. With Wiegel the VVD oriented towards a new political course, reforming the welfare state, cutting taxes etc. Wiegel did not shrink from conflict with the Labour Party and the trade unions. With this new course came a new electorate: working class and middle class voters, who because of individualization and depillarization were more easy to attract.
The course proved to be profitable: in the heavily polarized Dutch general election of 1972 the VVD gained six seats. The VVD was kept out of government by the social-democratic/Christian-democratic cabinet led by Den Uyl. Although the ties between the VVD and other organisations within the neutral pillar became ever looser, the number of neutral organisations, friendly to the VVD, expanded. The TROS and later Veronica, new broadcasters which entered the Netherlands Public Broadcasting were friendly to the VVD. In 1977 the VVD again won six seats bringing its total to twenty-eight seats. When lengthy formation talks between the Social-democrats and Christian-democrats eventually led to a final break between the two parties, the VVD formed cabinet with the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), with a majority of only two seats.
In the Dutch general election of 1981 the VVD lost two seats and its partner the CDA lost even more. The cabinet was without a majority and a CDA-Labour Party-D66 cabinet was formed, falling after only a few months. In 1982 Hans Wiegel left Parliament to become Queen's Commissioner in Friesland and was succeeded by Ed Nijpels. In the Dutch general election of 1982 Nijpels' VVD won ten seats, bringing its total up to 36. It entered again cabinet with the CDA under CDA-leader Ruud Lubbers. The cabinet began a program of radical reform to the welfare state, which is still in place today. The VVD lost nine seats in the 1986 elections but the cabinet nonetheless retained its majority. The losses were blamed on Nijpels, who stood down as leader of the VVD. He was succeeded by Joris Voorhoeve. In 1989 the CDA-VVD cabinet fell over a minor point. In the subsequent elections the VVD lost five seats, leaving only twenty-two. The VVD was kept out of government. Voorhoeve was replaced by the charismatic intellectual Frits Bolkestein.
1994–present
Bolkestein's VVD was one of the winners of the Dutch general election of 1994: they won nine seats. It formed an unprecedented government with the Labour Party (PvdA) and the social-liberal Democrats 66. The so-called "purple cabinet" led by Wim Kok was the first Dutch government without any confessional parties since 1918. Like many of his predecessors, the VVD-leader Bolkestein remained in parliament. His political style was characterized by some as "opposition to one's own government". This style was very successful and the VVD won seven seats in the 1998 elections becoming the second largest party in parliament with thirty-eight seats. The VVD formed a second Purple cabinet with the Labour Party and D66. Bolkestein left Dutch politics in 1999 to become European Commissioner. He was replaced by the more technocratic and social liberal Hans Dijkstal.
In the heavily polarized Dutch general election of 2002, dominated by the rise and murder of Pim Fortuyn, the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy lost fourteen seats, leaving only twenty-four. The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy nonetheless entered a cabinet with the Christian Democratic Appeal and the Pim Fortuyn List (LPF). Dijkstal stood down, and was replaced by the popular former Minister of Finance Gerrit Zalm. After a few months Zalm "pulled the plug" on the First Balkenende cabinet, after infighting between Pim Fortuyn List ministers Eduard Bomhoff and Herman Heinsbroek.
In the Dutch general election of 2003 the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy with Gerrit Zalm as Lijsttrekker gained four seats, making a total of twenty-eight. The party had expected to do much better, having adopted most of Fortuyn's proposals on immigration and integration. The People's Party for Freedom and Democracy unwillingly entered the Second Balkenende cabinet with Zalm returning as Minister of Finance and as Deputy Prime Minister. On 2 September 2004 Geert Wilders a Member of the House of Representatives left the party after a dispute with Parliamentary leader Van Aartsen. He has chosen to continue as an Independent in the Member of the House of Representatives. On 27 November 2004 Gerrit Zalm was replaced as Leader by the Parliamentary leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy in the House of Representatives of the Netherlands Jozias van Aartsen.
In 2006 the party lost a considerable number of seats in the municipal elections, prompting parliamentary leader Jozias van Aartsen to step down. Willibrord van Beek was subsequently appointed parliamentary leader ad interim. In the subsequent party leadership run-off Mark Rutte was elected as the leader, beating Rita Verdonk and Jelleke Veenendaal.[15]
The Dutch general election of 2006 did not start off well for the VVD: top candidate Mark Rutte was criticized by his own parliamentary party for being invisible in the campaign, and he was unable to break the attention away from the duel between current Christian-Democratic Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende and Wouter Bos of the Labour Party. However, the VVD's campaign started relatively late.[16] The election polls showed losses for the VVD; the former VVD deputy Prime Minister Hans Wiegel blamed a poor VVD campaign for this, caused by the heavily contested VVD leadership run-off between Mark Rutte and Rita Verdonk earlier in the year. Verdonk had her eyes on the deputy-minister post, while cabinet posts are normally decided upon by the political leader of the VVD.[17] On election day, the party received enough votes for twenty-two seats, a loss of six seats. When the official election results were announced on Monday 27 November 2006, preferential votes became known as well, showing that the second candidate on the list Rita Verdonk obtained more votes than the VVD's top candidate, Mark Rutte. Rutte received 553,200 votes, Verdonk 620,555.[18] This lead Verdonk to call for a party commission that would investigate the party leadership position, as a consequence of the situation of her obtaining more votes in the general election than Rutte, creating a shortly-lived crisis in the party.[19] A crisis was averted when Rutte called for an ultimatum on his leadership, which Verdonk had reconcile to, by rejecting her proposal for a party commission.[20] During 2007, signs of VVD infighting continued to play in the media. In June 2007, the former VVD minister Dekker presented a report on the previous elections, showing that the VVD lacked clear leadership roles, however the report did not single out individuals for blame for the party's losses.[21]
After Verdonk renewed her criticism of the party in September 2007, she was expelled from the parliamentary faction, and subsequently relinquished her membership of the party, after reconciliation attempts proved futile.[22][23] Verdonk started her own political movement, Proud of the Netherlands, subsequently. In opinion polls held after Verdonk's exit, the VVD is set to lose close to ten parliamentary seats in the next elections.[24][25][26]
Jan van Zanen, chairman of the VVD's party board, announced in November 2007 that he would step down in May 2008, a year before his term would end. The rest of the board also announced that they would step down. On the same day of his announcement, honorary member Hans Wiegel called for the resignation of the board, because it could not keep Verdonk in the party.[27][28] Wiegel also opinioned that the VVD should become part of a larger liberal movement, that would encompass the social-liberals Democrats 66, the Party for Freedom of Geert Wilders and Rita Verdonk's Proud of the Netherlands movement, although he found little resonance for this ideas from others.[29]
In 2008, the VVD chose a new party chairman, Ivo Opstelten, the outgoing mayor of Rotterdam. Mark Rutte announced at the celebration of the party's sixth decennial that he would rewrite the foundational program of the party that was enacted in the early 1980s, and offer the new principles for consideration to the party's members in the fall congress.
After the Dutch general election of 2010 the VVD became the largest party with 31 seats and was the senior party in a centre-right minority First Rutte cabinet with the Christian Democratic Appeal supported by the Party for Freedom of Geert Wilders to obtain a majority. Rutte was sworn in as Prime Minister on 21 October 2010, becoming both the first VVD Prime Minister and the first liberal to hold the post in 92 years. However, on 21 April 2012, after failed negotiations with the Party for Freedom on renewed budget cuts, the government became unstable and Mark Rutte deemed it likely that new elections would be held in 2012.[30] On election day, 12 September 2012, the VVD became once more the biggest party within Dutch Parliament, winning 41 seats, a gain of 10 seats. Mark Rutte seems to be, in September 2012, the only European political leader who hasn't been voted out of office by the electorate during the euro-crisis.
Name
The VVD was originally a merger of the Party of Freedom and Freethinking Democratic dissenters within the Labour Party. In this name, both tendencies, classical liberalism ("Freedom") and social liberalism ("People's Party"; "Democracy") are represented. Despite being a liberal party, the VVD did not openly call itself "liberal", mainly because of the still lingering "negative" connotations of liberalism developed during the Great Depression and Second World War.[citation needed]
The most common English translation of the name is the literal translation (People's Party for Freedom and Democracy).[31][32][33]
Ideology and issues
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The VVD is a party founded on liberal philosophy,[35] traditionally being the most ardent supporter of 'free markets' of all Dutch political parties, promoting political, economic liberalism, classical liberalism, cultural liberalism, but also (in contrast to this) committed to the idea of the welfare state.
Post 1971, the party became more populist, although some conservative liberal elements remain.[8] The 2006 leadership election was interpreted by many as a conflict between a liberal group and a conservative group within the VVD, with the distinctly liberal Rutte beating conservative Verdonk.[36] The results were, with 52% voting for Rutte and 46% for Verdonk.[37]
Liberal Manifesto
Part of a series on |
Liberalism |
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The principles of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) are outlined in the Liberal Manifesto ("Liberaal Manifest") and the election programs. The Liberal Manifesto is a general outlook on the direction of the party would like to mirror itself and is an expansion of the party's foundational principles.[38] The election programs are more oriented to practical politics, for example, winning the elections on-the-day and by any means possible.
The last Liberal Manifesto of the VVD was published in September 2005.[38] It develops a broad outline around the themes of democracy, security, freedom and citizenship, along with a vision of the future of party's internal structure. Below some of the points from the Manifesto are presented:
Democracy
- The Manifesto calls for a directly elected Minister-President, whereby voters can show their preference on the ballot.
- The question of (advisory) referendums is left open as a possibility.
- Mayors should be directly elected by the people.
- Commitment to the Four Freedoms of the European Union.
Security
- A common policy on defense and security in the European Union is called for.
Freedom
- The principle of non-discrimination should be given more importance than the exercise of religion.[citation needed]
- 'Social rights' are to be continued. These are not simple 'rights', but they also create 'obligations'.
- Euthanasia is part of a person's 'right' to self-determination.
- Commitment to an open economy, with a 'regulated free-market', including patents.
- Support for the freedom of contract. No right for workers to enter into nationally-binding collective bargaining agreements.
Citizenship
- Minimize the option of dual citizenship.
- Social security should only be fully open for Dutch nationals. Migrants will have to integrate in order to become citizens.
Electoral results
Parliament
Election year | House of Representatives | Government | Notes | |||
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# of overall votes |
% of overall vote |
# of overall seats won |
+/– | |||
1948 | 391,908 | 7.9 (#5) | 8 / 100
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2 | in coalition | |
1952 | 470,820 | 8.8 (#5) | 9 / 100
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1 | in opposition | |
1956 | 502,325 | 8.7 (#4) | 9 / 100 13 / 150
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0 4 |
in opposition | |
1959 | 732,658 | 12.2 (#3) | 19 / 150
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6 | in coalition | |
1963 | 643,839 | 10.2 (#3) | 16 / 150
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3 | in coalition | |
1967 | 738,202 | 10.7 (#3) | 17 / 150
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1 | in coalition | |
1971 | 653,092 | 10.3 (#3) | 16 / 150
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1 | in coalition | |
1972 | 1,068,375 | 14.4 (#3) | 22 / 150
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6 | in opposition | |
1977 | 1,492,689 | 17.0 (#3) | 28 / 150
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6 | in coalition | |
1981 | 1,504,293 | 17.3 (#3) | 26 / 150
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2 | in opposition | |
1982 | 1,897,986 | 23.1 (#3) | 36 / 150
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10 | in coalition | |
1986 | 1,595,377 | 17.4 (#3) | 27 / 150
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9 | in coalition | |
1989 | 1,295,402 | 14.6 (#3) | 22 / 150
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5 | in opposition | |
1994 | 1,792,401 | 20.0 (#3) | 31 / 150
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9 | in coalition | |
1998 | 2,124,971 | 24.7 (#2) | 38 / 150
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7 | in coalition | |
2002 | 1,466,722 | 15.4 (#3) | 24 / 150
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14 | in coalition | |
2003 | 1,728,707 | 17.9 (#3) | 28 / 150
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4 | in coalition | |
2006 | 1,443,312 | 14.7 (#4) | 22 / 150
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6 | in opposition | |
2010 | 1,929,575 | 20.5 (#1) | 31 / 150
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9 | in coalition | Largest party |
2012 | 2,504,948 | 26.6 (#1) | 41 / 150
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10 | in coalition | Largest party |
Election year | Senate | Government | Notes | |||
# of overall votes |
% of overall vote |
# of overall seats won |
+/– | |||
1995 | 23 / 100
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11 | in coalition | Largest party | ||
1999 | 39,809 | 25,3 (#2) | 19 / 100
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4 | in coalition | |
2003 | 31,026 | 19,2 (#3) | 15 / 100
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4 | in coalition | |
2007 | 31,360 | 19,2 (#2) | 14 / 100
|
1 | in opposition | |
2011 | 34,590 | 20.83 (#1) | 16 / 100
|
2 | in coalition | Largest party |
2015 | 28,523 | 16.87 (#1) | 13 / 100
|
3 | in coalition | Largest party |
European Parliament
Election year | # of overall votes |
% of overall vote |
# of overall seats won |
+/– |
---|---|---|---|---|
1979 | 914,787 | 16.1 (#3) | 4 / 25
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1984 | 1,002,685 | 18.9 (#3) | 5 / 25
|
1 |
1989 | 714,721 | 13.6 (#3) | 3 / 25
|
2 |
1994 | 740,451 | 17.9 (#3) | 6 / 31
|
3 |
1999 | 698,050 | 19.7 (#3) | 6 / 31
|
0 |
2004 | 629,198 | 13.2 (#3) | 4 / 27
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2 |
2009 | 518,643 | 11.4 (#4) | 3 / 25
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1 |
2014 | 567,903 | 12.0 (#4) | 3 / 26
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0 |
Representation
Members of the cabinet
The members of the Second Rutte cabinet (since 2012):
Ministers | Title/Portfolio | Assumed office | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Mark Rutte (born 1967) |
Prime Minister | General Affairs | 14 October 2010 | |
Ard van der Steur (born 1969) |
Minister | Security and Justice | 20 March 2015 | |
Henk Kamp (born 1952) |
Minister | Economic Affairs | 5 November 2012 | |
Jeanine Hennis-Plasschaert (born 1973) |
Minister | Defence | 5 November 2012 | |
Edith Schippers (born 1964) |
Minister | Health, Welfare and Sport | 14 October 2010 | |
Melanie Schultz van Haegen (born 1970) |
Minister | Infrastructure and the Environment | 14 October 2010 | |
Minister without portfolio | Title/Portfolio/Ministry | Term of office | ||
Stef Blok (born 1964) |
Minister without portfolio | Housing and the Central Government Sector (within the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations) |
5 November 2012 | |
Undersecretaries | Title/Portfolio/Ministry | Term of office | ||
Eric Wiebes (born 1963) |
Undersecretary | Fiscal Affairs and Finances of the Lower Government (within the Ministry of Finance) |
4 February 2014 | |
Klaas Dijkhoff (born 1981) |
Undersecretary | Prevention, Family Law, Copyright Law, Youth Justice, Integration and Immigration (within the Ministry of Security and Justice) |
20 March 2015 | |
Sander Dekker (born 1975) |
Undersecretary | Higher Education, Science and Knowledge, Teachers and Culture (within the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science) |
5 November 2012 |
Members of the House of Representatives
Current members
Current members of the House of Representatives since the general election of 2012:
Members of the Senate
Current members
Current members of the Senate since the election of 2015:
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Seats
Seats in the Senate:
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Members of the European Parliament
Current members
Current members of the European Parliament since the election of 2014:
Seats
Seats in the European Parliament:
VVD MEPs are part of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party and Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Group in the European parliament.
Municipal and provincial government
Provincial government
The VVD provides four of twelve King's Commissioners. The VVD is part of every college of the Provincial-Executives Gedeputeerde Staten except for Friesland.
In the following figure one can see the election results of the provincial election of 2003, 2007, 2011 and 2015 per province. It shows the areas where the VVD is strong, namely the Randstad urban area that consists out of the provinces North and South Holland, Utrecht and (parts of) Flevoland. The party is weak in peripheral provinces like Friesland, Overijssel, Zeeland and Limburg.
Province | 2003 | 2007 | 2011 | 2015 | ||||
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Votes | Seats | Votes | Seats | Votes | Seats | Votes | Seats | |
Drenthe | 18.0% | 9 / 51
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16.8% | 8 / 41
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19.0% | 9 / 41
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15.2% | 7 / 41
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Flevoland | 22.7% | 11 / 47
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22.8% | 9 / 39
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22.9% | 9 / 39
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16.7% | 7 / 39
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Friesland | 10.9% | 6 / 55
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10.8% | 5 / 43
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13.8% | 6 / 43
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11.0% | 5 / 43
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Groningen | 13.4% | 7 / 55
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11.7% | 5 / 43
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13.2% | 6 / 43
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9.2% | 4 / 43
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Gelderland | 16.9% | 13 / 75
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16.6% | 9 / 53
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19.1% | 11 / 55
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15.8% | 9 / 55
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Limburg | 14.5% | 9 / 63
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14.5% | 7 / 47
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16.0% | 8 / 47
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11.5% | 5 / 47
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North Brabant | 19.0% | 15 / 79
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18.9% | 11 / 55
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20.8% | 11 / 55
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17.5% | 10 / 55
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North Holland | 23.0% | 20 / 83
|
22.7% | 13 / 55
|
22.3% | 13 / 55
|
18.6% | 11 / 55
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Overijssel | 13.7% | 9 / 63
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13.6% | 6 / 47
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15.8% | 8 / 47
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12.4% | 6 / 47
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South Holland | 21.4% | 18 / 83
|
20.3% | 12 / 55
|
20.7% | 12 / 55
|
17.6% | 10 / 55
|
Utrecht | 20.7% | 14 / 63
|
20.1% | 10 / 47
|
22.1% | 11 / 47
|
17.5% | 9 / 47
|
Zeeland | 14.5% | 7 / 47
|
14.5% | 6 / 39
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16.8% | 7 / 39
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13.5% | 6 / 39
|
source: www.verkiezingsuitslagen.nl |
Municipal government
109 of the 414 Dutch mayors are member of the VVD. Furthermore, the party has about 250 aldermen and 1100 members of municipal councils.
Electorate
Historically the VVD electorate consisted mainly of secular middle-class[39] and upper-class voters, with a strong support from entrepreneurs. Under the leadership of Wiegel, the VVD started to expand its appeal to working class voters.
Organisation
Leadership
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Current Party Board
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Organisational structure
The highest organ of the VVD is the General Assembly, in which all members present have a single vote. It convenes usually twice every year. It appoints the party board and decides on the party program.
The order of the First Chamber, Second Chamber and European Parliament candidates list is decided by a referendum under all members voting by internet, phone or mail. If contested, the lijsttrekker of a candidates lists is appointed in a separate referendum in advance. Since 2002 the General Assembly can call for a referendum on other subjects too. The present chairman of the board was elected this way.
About 90 members elected by the members in meetings of the regional branches form the Party Council, which advises the Party Board in the months that the General Assembly does not convene. This is important forum within the party. The party board handles the daily affairs of the party.
Linked organisations
The independent youth-organisation that has a partnership agreement with the VVD is the Youth Organisation Freedom and Democracy (Jongeren Organisatie Vrijheid en Democratie; JOVD), which as a member of the Liberal Youth Movement of the European Union and the International Federation of Liberal and Radical Youth.
The education institute of the VVD is the Haya van Someren Foundation. The Scientific institute Telders Foundation publishes the magazine Liberaal Reveil every two months. The party published the magazine Liber bi-monthly.
International organisations
The VVD is a member of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party and Liberal International.
Relationships to other parties
The VVD has always been a very independent party. The VVD cooperates on the European and the international level with the social-liberal Democraten 66. It has a long history of coalitions with the Christian Democratic Appeal and its Christian-democratic predecessors, but was in government with the social-democratic Labour Party from 1994 to 2002 and again since 2012.
The VVD participates in the Netherlands Institute for Multiparty Democracy, a democracy assistance organisation of seven Dutch political parties.
See also
References
- ^ a b Andeweg, R. and G. Irwin Politics and Governance in the Netherlands, Basingstoke (Palgrave) p.49
- ^ Keman, Hans (2008), "The Low Countries: Confrontation and Coalition in Segmented Societies", Comparative European Politics, Taylor & Francis, p. 221
- ^ Rudy W Andeweg; Lieven De Winter; Patrick Dumont (5 April 2011). Government Formation. Taylor & Francis. p. 147. ISBN 978-1-134-23972-6. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
- ^ Jochen Clasen; Daniel Clegg (27 October 2011). Regulating the Risk of Unemployment: National Adaptations to Post-Industrial Labour Markets in Europe. Oxford University Press. p. 76. ISBN 978-0-19-959229-6. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
- ^ David Broughton (4 January 1999). Changing Party Systems in Western Europe. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-85567-328-1. Retrieved 20 August 2012.
- ^ Thomas Poguntke; Paul Webb (21 June 2007). The Presidentialization of Politics: A Comparative Study of Modern Democracies. Oxford University Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-19-921849-3. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
- ^ T. Banchoff (28 June 1999). Legitimacy and the European Union. Taylor & Francis. p. 123. ISBN 978-0-415-18188-4. Retrieved 26 August 2012.
- ^ a b Andeweg R.B. and G.A. Irwin Government & Politics in the Netherlands 2002 Palgrave p. 48
- ^ http://www.whois.ws/domain_information-nl/vvd.nl/
- ^ Bruno Waterfield (23 April 2012). "Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte resigns over austerity measures". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 3 March 2015.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ http://www.houseofrepresentatives.nl/dossiers/2012-elections
- ^ "Partij van de Vrijheid (PvdV) - Parlement & Politiek". parlement.com.
- ^ "Liberale Staatspartij 'De Vrijheidsbond' (LSP) - Parlement & Politiek". parlement.com.
- ^ "Liberale Unie - Parlement & Politiek". parlement.com.
- ^ NRC Handelsblad 31 May 2006 Link Dutch language
- ^ "Rutte: "Het karwei begint nu pas"". NOS Nieuws. 2006-11-04.
- ^ "Wiegel leest Rutte en Verdonk de les". trouw.nl.
- ^ http://www.kiesraad.nl/nieuwsberichten/uitslag_van_de
- ^ "Verdonk wil onderzoek naar leiderschap VVD" (in Dutch). Elsevier. 2006-11-28.
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- ^ "Rutte pleased with committee report". Expatica. 2007-06-13. Retrieved 2007-06-15.
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