Dutch trouble?

lets wait and see.
Even if you found a leader stupid enough to put a referendum to the Dutch people, it will lose the vote. There is no Russian/Aaron Banks cash for starters, to feed the, not so gullible Dutch, a load of lies.
 
Will Britain lift their ban on Wilders being able to come into the country I wonder hmmm.
Next elections in Germany 25 and France in 27.
 
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After 25 years in parliament, his Freedom party (PVV) is set to win 37 seats, well ahead of his nearest rival, a left-wing alliance. But to fulfil his pledge to be "prime minister for everyone", he will have to persuade other parties to join him in a coalition. His target is 76 seats in the 150-seat parliament.

The left-wing alliance under ex-EU commissioner Frans Timmermans is set to come second with 25 seats. He made clear he would have nothing to do with a Wilders-led government.

Mr Wilders wants to hold a referendum to leave the EU, dubbed a "Nexit", although he recognises there is no national mood to do so. He tempered his anti-Islam rhetoric in the run-up to the vote, saying there were more pressing issues at the moment and he was prepared to "put in the fridge" his policies on banning mosques and Islamic schools.

Seems to me a great deal of horse trading is still to be done and even then, a watered down version of his far right policies is likely to take effect. So before Gant and Goober run around throwing Gatorade over each other in the showers, the game's still afoot. :mrgreen:
 
Pootin will be rubbing his hands in glee at the rise of the far right in europe, divide and rule. Why do brexxers on here think damaging the dutch economy by leaving the eu is any more sensible than it was for the uk. Just remember our farmers were shafted by the borris deal, farming policy, or lack of it, is made up on the hoof.

Blup
 
Seems to me a great deal of horse trading is still to be done and even then, a watered down version of his far right policies is likely to take effect. So before Gant and Goober run around throwing Gatorade over each other in the showers, the game's still afoot. :mrgreen:
Another one making assumptions of what I think.
All I reflect on is the EU and governments telling their people's what's best for them by way of climate change, unlimited immigration, 15 minute cities, a pandemic that didn't scratch the surface of numbers dying that normally would die but has resulted in more deaths than the norm by the measures taken to combat it, the freezing of the tax threshold dragging pensioners into it's net etc etc
Then it seemingly comes as a surprise when the people push back.
 
Another one making assumptions of what I think.
All I reflect on is the EU and governments telling their people's what's best for them by way of climate change, unlimited immigration, 15 minute cities, a pandemic that didn't scratch the surface of numbers dying that normally would die but has resulted in more deaths than the norm by the measures taken to combat it, the freezing of the tax threshold dragging pensioners into it's net etc etc
Then it seemingly comes as a surprise when the people push back.
:LOL:

Analysts have predicted that coalition negotiations could prove even longer and more complex than after the previous 2021 election, when four coalition partners took a record 271 days to hammer out an agreement.

Wanna bet how long it'll take 'em to form a govt.?
 
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