Dutch PM Rutte Fights for Political Life After Blunder

Dutch PM Rutte Fights for Political Life After Blunder
Dutch outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte of the VVD party leaves during a suspension of a debate at the Parliament's Lower House in The Hague on April 1, 2021. (Bart Maat/ANP/AFP via Getty Images)
Reuters
4/2/2021
Updated:
4/2/2021

AMSTERDAM—Dutch opposition parties presented a no-confidence motion in caretaker Prime Minister Mark Rutte on April 1 and accused him of lying in public about what he had privately discussed during talks to form a Cabinet, presenting the biggest challenge to his leadership in a decade.

Rutte was the clear winner of the March 17 parliamentary elections that were seen as a referendum on his handling of the coronavirus pandemic crisis. Losing a vote of confidence would cripple his ability to form a new government.

It wasn’t clear whether centrist parties in Rutte’s previous coalition, who are likely to participate in any new coalition, would continue to support him. A debate over the situation appeared likely to last into the early hours of April 2.

The crisis arose on April 1 after Rutte acknowledged having privately discussed what job should go to a prominent member of Parliament who had been critical of his previous Cabinet. Rutte had previously said he didn’t do so.

“The only thing I can do here is say from the bottom of my heart, my toes, say what happened, what went well, what went wrong, that I never lied,” Rutte said in Parliament on April 1.

Rutte, a 54-year-old conservative who has been in office for more than 10 years, pointed to his record and said he hoped to continue leading the country.

Talks on forming a new government were abruptly put on hold on March 25 when one of the chief negotiators unwittingly revealed a sensitive document to a news photographer as she rushed out of Parliament after learning that she had tested positive for COVID-19.

The document showed that negotiators were discussing a position “elsewhere” for popular MP Pieter Omtzigt, a prominent critic of Rutte’s previous Cabinet, though Omtzigt’s Christian Democrats were part of the ruling coalition. The cryptic remark has been interpreted as implying outside Parliament or outside the Netherlands.

Rutte told reporters on March 25 he hadn’t been the one to mention Omtzigt’s position.

‘Lied to the Whole Country’

In Parliament on April 1, Rutte told skeptical lawmakers that he had forgotten mentioning a Cabinet post for Omtzigt in a private conversation. He said he hadn’t hinted at a position “elsewhere” during talks about the Cabinet, which he said meant he technically hadn’t said anything untrue.

Opposition lawmaker Geert Wilders, who filed the no-confidence motion, said Rutte had “lied to the whole country.” “Seek a job elsewhere yourself,” Wilders said. “We cannot go further with this PM.”

Omtzigt, who was sworn in as a member of Parliament on March 31, said the implication he should be removed was “an affront to the Dutch voter.”

He demanded full transparency about how his name had come to be on the document.

Rutte’s conservative VVD party convincingly won March’s national elections, even though his government resigned in January over a scandal in which thousands of families were wrongfully accused of child care benefit fraud for years, often on the basis of ethnicity.

Omtzigt had persistently asked questions about the matter until it became fully public.

In his defense, on April 1, Rutte appealed to his track record.

“I led the country through an economic crisis, an immigration crisis, and through a very serious health crisis, a pandemic, and I am looking very much forward to working on the recovery of this country,” he said.

The Omtzigt affair wasn’t the first time that Rutte has blamed a poor memory for making false statements in public.

Saying he didn’t have “an active memory” of crucial details, he survived a string of heated debates in recent years, on issues ranging from Iraqi civilians killed in Dutch bombardments to a corporate lobby to scrap the country’s dividend tax.

By Bart H. Meijer & Anthony Deutsch