2002 Dutch general election|
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All 150 seats in the House of Representatives 76 seats needed for a majority |
Turnout | 79.06% (Increase 5.71pp) |
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This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. |
General elections were held in the Netherlands on 15 May 2002.[1] The elections were amongst the most dramatic in Dutch history,[2] not just in terms of the electoral results, as they were completely overshadowed by the assassination of leader Pim Fortuyn only nine days before election day.
Fortuyn had led the Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) party, a right-wing populist party that represented his political views. He had drawn controversy in the campaign with his views on Islam, attacked the government's immigration policies and had also questioned many aspects of government by the previous 'purple' cabinets of Wim Kok, which he blamed for everything from crime to waiting lists in health services. After his death, the LPF made its general election debut with 17% of the vote, coming in second place. The Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA), which took a neutral stance towards Fortuyn, gained seats to become the country's largest political party. On the other hand, the three parties in the government all lost a significant number of seats.
Two months after the election Jan Peter Balkenende formed his first cabinet, with a coalition of the CDA, the LPF and the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD). However, the LPF was unstable due to its lack of strong leadership and its members' lack of experience; this resulted in the new cabinet resigning before the end of the year.
Background
Campaign
In the 2002 municipal elections, held on 6 March, Liveable Rotterdam took 35% of the vote in the city of Rotterdam, a city with a high immigrant population. They formed the city's first non-Labour government since the Second World War. In the same month, he released the book De puinhopen van acht jaar Paars (The Wreckage of eight purple years) criticising the record of the governing coalition. The Economist described the rise in support for Fortuyn as a shock for the Dutch political establishment and their traditional system of consensus.[3]
The government resigned on 16 April - only a month before polling day - after the Netherlands Institute for War Documentation published the Srebrenica: a 'safe' area report, criticizing the Dutch government's handling of the events that led to the Srebrenica massacre in 1995.[4] However, the ministers remained in office as a caretaker government until after the elections and the formation of the next government, and the date of the election was not changed.
On 6 May, Fortuyn was assassinated in Hilversum by Volkert van der Graaf. Months later, Van der Graaf stated his motivation was his belief that Fortuyn was exploiting Muslims as "scapegoats" and targeting "the weak members of society" in seeking political power.[5] The murder was a shock to the Netherlands; it was denounced by Kok and other Dutch politicians and other national leaders. It was the country's first political assassination in modern times.[6]
Opinion polls
Polling firm
|
Date
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PvdA
|
VVD
|
CDA
|
D66
|
GL
|
SP
|
CU
|
SGP
|
LPF
|
LN
|
VSP
|
Lead
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Interview/NSS[7]
|
14 May 2002
|
26
|
25
|
35
|
9
|
13
|
8
|
5
|
2
|
24
|
3
|
0
|
9
|
NIPO[8]
|
13 May 2002
|
25
|
25
|
31
|
8
|
14
|
8
|
6
|
2
|
28
|
2
|
1
|
3
|
NIPO[9]
|
1 May 2002
|
30
|
24
|
29
|
7
|
14
|
7
|
6
|
2
|
26
|
4
|
1
|
1
|
Interview/NSS[10]
|
2 Mar 2002
|
34
|
28
|
31
|
8
|
11
|
7
|
7
|
3
|
13
|
8
|
0
|
3
|
Interview/NSS[11]
|
6 Oct 2001
|
45
|
41
|
26
|
6
|
13
|
6
|
6
|
4
|
–
|
3
|
–
|
4
|
1998 election
|
6 May 1998
|
45
|
38
|
29
|
14
|
11
|
5
|
3
|
3
|
–
|
–
|
–
|
7
|
Result
The great losers of the election were Labour Party, People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and Democrats 66, the coalition parties of the 'purple' cabinets. Especially the Labour Party under the technocratic leadership of Ad Melkert suffered a landslide defeat.
The Christian Democratic Appeal was the surprising winner of the election, gaining 14 seats (from 29 to 43) and becoming the largest party in the House of Representatives. This success is in part owed to its new leader Jan Peter Balkenende, who went on to become prime minister, and to its neutral attitude in the debate with Fortuyn, not having participated in the supposed ‘demonization’ by the political Left.
Fortuyn's former party Livable Netherlands also contested the election. While they had been overshadowed by Fortuyn, they also entered the House of Representatives, winning 2 seats.
The 15 May 2002 election was the beginning of a year of political chaos in the Netherlands following the LPF leader's assassination on 6 May the same year. The power vacuum resulted in violent internal conflicts in LPF, which eventually led to the fall of the first Balkenende cabinet (CDA-LPF-VVD), which governed from 22 July 2002 to 16 October 2002. The CDA once again became a coalition party after eight years in opposition (1994–2002) in a government which, however, became the shortest-ruling Dutch cabinet since the Second World War, lasting less than five months.
File:2002 Dutch General Election.svg |
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Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– |
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| Christian Democratic Appeal | 2,653,723 | 27.93 | 43 | +14 |
| Pim Fortuyn List | 1,614,801 | 17.00 | 26 | New |
| People's Party for Freedom and Democracy | 1,466,722 | 15.44 | 24 | –14 |
| Labour Party | 1,436,023 | 15.11 | 23 | –22 |
| GroenLinks | 660,692 | 6.95 | 10 | –1 |
| Socialist Party | 560,447 | 5.90 | 9 | +4 |
| Democrats 66 | 484,317 | 5.10 | 7 | –7 |
| Christian Union | 240,953 | 2.54 | 4 | –1 |
| Reformed Political Party | 163,562 | 1.72 | 2 | –1 |
| Livable Netherlands | 153,055 | 1.61 | 2 | New |
| United Seniors Party [nl] | 39,005 | 0.41 | 0 | New |
| Free Indian Party and Elderly Union | 10,033 | 0.11 | 0 | New |
| Durable Netherlands [nl] | 9,058 | 0.10 | 0 | New |
| Party of the Future | 6,393 | 0.07 | 0 | New |
| New Middle Party | 2,305 | 0.02 | 0 | New |
| Republican People's Party [nl] | 63 | 0.00 | 0 | New |
Total | 9,501,152 | 100.00 | 150 | 0 |
|
Valid votes | 9,501,152 | 99.85 | |
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Invalid/blank votes | 14,074 | 0.15 | |
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Total votes | 9,515,226 | 100.00 | |
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Registered voters/turnout | 12,035,935 | 79.06 | |
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Source: Kiesraad[12] |
By province
References
Further reading