Official Dutch results confirm win for Liberals

22 Mar, 2017

The Netherlands formally confirmed Tuesday the results of last week's general election won by ruling Prime Minister Mark Rutte's Liberals, as political horse-trading gathered pace to form a coalition government. The final tally from Wednesday's vote gave Rutte's People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) a total of 33 seats in parliament, followed by 20 for anti-Islam MP Geert Wilders' Freedom Party (PVV) in a distant second place.
The progressive D66 and Christian Democrats (CDA) both garnered 19 seats, followed by the rising GroenLinks (GreenLeft) and Socialist Parties, both with 14. Outgoing junior coalition partner, the Labour Party, crashed from 35 seats picked up in the 2012 election to a mere nine. Electoral Council chairman Jan-Kees Wiebenga said a total of just over 10.5 million people cast their votes. "Voter turnout was 81.9 percent, the highest since parliamentary polls in 1986," he told reporters.
Meanwhile, the arduous task of knocking together a coalition government continued Tuesday, with party heads meeting a so-called "scout", the person appointed to test the possible political combinations to form a 76-seat majority in the 150-seat lower house.
Dutch broadcaster NOS reported that veteran parliamentarian Edith Schippers met Rutte, D66 leader Alexander Pechtold, CDA leader Sybrand van Haersma Buma and Jesse Klaver, the rising star of the ecologist GroenLinks party eyeing a possible ruling bloc. Together, the four parties would muster a ruling majority of 85 seats.

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