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Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte on Sunday again ruled out any chance of working with Geert Wilders, as the far-right MP insisted he could not be ignored if he wins next month's general election.
"Zero percent. Geert. ZERO percent. That. Will not. Happen," Rutte said in a Tweet on his private account, which has been dormant for six years.
Tensions are heating up as campaigning begins in earnest for the March 15 vote - the first in a series of elections including in France and Germany which could shake up Europe's political landscape.
Wilders and his Freedom Party (PVV) have been riding high for months, with opinion polls predicting he could emerge as the largest party but without enough MPs to form a majority in the 150-seat parliament.
Rutte has already said he would not form a coalition with his bouffant-haired adversary.-AFP
White House considering new immigration order
WASHINGTON: The White House confirmed Sunday it is considering issuing a new order on immigration now that President Donald Trump's travel ban has been halted as it makes its way through the courts.
"Right now we are considering and pursuing all options," presidential aide Stephen Miller told Fox television. He said the next step would be either filing an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court, defending the merits of the order in lower courts or issuing a new one.
"The president's powers here are beyond question," said Miller, who is considered one of the driving forces behind Trump's first actions on immigration.
Miller insisted the president has the power to keep some people from entering the United States.
"We are contemplating new and additional actions to ensure that immigration is not a vehicle for admitting people into our country that are hostile to its nation and its values," Miller said.
The order that Trump issued abruptly on January 27 halts resettlement of all refugees for 120 days and that of Syrian refugees indefinitely.
It also bars for 90 days the entry of nationals from seven mainly Muslim countries.
A federal judge in Seattle issued a stay against the order on February 3. Then a three judge appeals panel in San Francisco voted unanimously last week against reinstating Trump's ban. Among other things, it rejected the argument that the president's actions in the area of immigration cannot be reviewed by the courts.
The Trump ban was supposed to be in place while the government comes up with a new system of so-called "extreme vetting" of people seeking entry visas. This could include checks on their social media accounts, according to John Kelly, the secretary of homeland security.
"Our immigration system should not be a vehicle for admitting people who have anything but love in their hearts for this nation and this constitution," said Miller, who is 31.
"It is a message that I want the world to hear today. This country will protect its borders. It will protect its people," Miller said.
The idea of the White House issuing a modified immigration order that would survive scrutiny in the courts does not convince Democrats, who from the outset have charged that Trump's order is simply anti-Muslim and plays into the hands of extremists.
"It will be used as a recruitment for terrorist organizations. It will put Americans at greater risk traveling abroad," said Democratic Senator Ben Cardin.

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