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Dutch Government Collapses, Labor Party Leader Wouter Bos Insists on Withdrawal from Afghanistan

Cabinet collapse: what happens next?

Saturday 20 February 2010

http://www.dutchnews.nl/news/archives/2010/02/cabinet_collapse_what_happens.php

The collapse of prime minister Jan Peter Balkenende's fourth government means new elections will be held within the next three months.

Christian Democrat and ChristenUnie ministers will stay on in a caretaker role until a new coalition government has been formed but are not allowed to take controversial decisions.

Temporary replacements will be found for the six Labour ministers.

Once queen Beatrix has signed the official declaration that the coalition government has been dissolved, the new election campaign can begin.

Unless the monarch agrees otherwise, elections must be held within 83 days. Political parties have 40 days to finalise their list of candidates - the Netherlands does not have a constituency based system and MPs are chosen on the basis of party lists.

Once the lists have been drawn up, there is a maximum 43 period for the formal campaign and vote itself. Eight days after the election, the new parliament will meet for the first time.

How to form a new government

Once the votes have been counted, the actual process of forming a new government can begin.

With a majority government requiring at least 76 of the 150 seats in parliament, forming a coalition can be a tricky business. It is a process which takes months: the longest cabinet formation took 208 days, the shortest just 10.

Queen Beatrix will first consults the party leaders, her own advisors and other senior politicians and appoint an informateur - the person charged with putting together a tentative coalition. The informateur sounds out the party leaders about potential coalitions and reports back to the queen.

Once a potential coalition has been identified, the queen will name a formateur. The formateur (usually the next prime minister) does the nitty gritty job of putting together a coalition agreement, or regeerakkord, in which the broad lines of new government policy are set down.

When all that has been finalised, ministers are appointed and the new government is finally sworn in.

Dutch government collapses over Afghan mission

By ARTHUR MAX, Associated Press Writer

February 20, 2010

AMSTERDAM --

The Dutch coalition government collapsed Saturday over whether to extend the country's military mission in Afghanistan, leaving the future of its 1,600 soldiers fighting there uncertain. An early election is now expected.

Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende announced that the second largest party in his three-party alliance is quitting, ending an uneasy partnership.

"Where there is no trust, it is difficult to work together. There is no road along which this cabinet can go further," Balkenende said.

The Dutch debate comes as opinion polls in many troop-providing European countries indicate growing public opposition to sending more soldiers to Afghanistan amid a global financial crisis and shrinking defense budgets.

Any Dutch withdrawal would be a worrying sign for NATO, which has struggled to raise the 10,000 additional troops that its top commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, has demanded to accompany the 30,000 American reinforcements being deployed there.

In another sign of the weakening commitment to the war, Canada is planning to withdraw its entire 2,800-strong unit from Afghanistan by the end of 2011. The Canadian contingent, the third-largest after the U.S. and Britain, serves with the Dutch in the southern Afghan province of Uruzgan.

Balkenende made no mention of elections as he spoke to reporters after a marathon 16-hour Cabinet meeting that ended close to dawn. However, the resignation of the Labor Party - which has demanded the country stick to a scheduled withdrawal from southern Afghanistan - leaves his government with just 47 seats in the 150-member parliament.

With no viable prospects for other coalitions, an early election is expected. By law it must be held within 83 days and by custom it is on a Wednesday, so the vote is likely May 11.

Balkenende, 53, said his center-right Christian Democratic Alliance would continue in office with the small Christian Union. His minority cabinet would continue as a caretaker government until a new coalition is formed, which could take months of political bargaining following an election.

Dutch soldiers have been deployed since 2006 in Uruzgan on a two-year stint that was extended until next August, and 21 Dutch soldiers have lost their lives there. Balkenende's party wanted to keep a trimmed-down military presence in the restive province but Labor was adamant that they leave Uruzgan as scheduled.

"A plan was agreed to when our soldiers went to Afghanistan," said Labor Party leader Wouter Bos. "Our partners in the government didn't want to stick to that plan, and on the basis of their refusal, we have decided to resign."

The Dutch government split came after weeks of tension between Balkenende and Bos, the finance minister, mainly over Afghanistan.

Balkenende's allies argued that a pullout from Afghanistan would damage the Netherlands' reputation as a nation that carries more than its weight in international peacekeeping missions, and could encourage other wavering countries to also withdraw.

"The future of the mission of our soldiers in Afghanistan will now be in the hands of the new Cabinet," said Deputy Defense Minister Jack de Vries.

NATO recently sent a letter to the Dutch government asking if it would consider staying longer.

In Brussels, alliance spokesman James Appathurai said NATO would not specifically comment on the internal political debates in member countries.

"(But) Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen continues to believe that the best way forward would be a new smaller Dutch mission, including a provincial reconstruction team in Uruzgan to consolidate the success that the Dutch have had and to transition to Afghan lead," Appathurai said.

He said whatever happened, the Afghan people should know that NATO will "continue to provide support to them as long as necessary."

Andre Rouvoet, leader of Christian Union party, said Queen Beatrix, Holland's ceremonial head of state, will formally accept the resignations of the Labor ministers and "ask the remaining ministers to prepare for elections." First, however, she must return from her skiing holiday in Austria.

Opinion polls suggest the Afghan war is deeply unpopular in the Netherlands. Labor, which has been dropping in the polls, appeared determined to take a stand with next month's local elections in mind.

An election in the next few months could see a further boost for extreme anti-immigrant populist Geert Wilders, whose ranking in the polls rivals Balkenende's.

Associated Press writers Slobodan Lekic and Bruce Mutsvairo contributed to this report.





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