The Netherlands is a constitutional monarchy. Legislative power is vested in parliament, and the monarch has only nominal power. ProfileDutch politics are characterized by a high degree of consensus. Since the early 1980s, governments have employed the "polder model," which focuses on job creation, pay moderation, economic deregulation, and generous social protection. The CDA has traditionally led two-party coalition governments, either with the left-of-center PvdA or with the right-wing VVD. However, after the 1994 election it was the PvdA under Wim Kok which led the government, in coalition with the VVD, and the left-liberal D66. Reelected in 1998, this administration resigned in April 2002 after a report criticized Dutch troops serving with the UN in Bosnia in 1995 for failing to stop the Srebrenica massacre. In 2002 the emergence of the ultra-nationalist Pim Fortuyn challenged current policy on immigration and integration. Fortuyn's influence, articulating a sense of widespread public alienation from a complacent political establishment, was expected to be lasting, despite his assassination only days before the May election. The strong sympathy vote boosted a swing to the right, resulting in victory for the CDA, under Jan Peter Balkenende, and second place for the LPF. Main Political IssuesThe future of social welfareDespite cutbacks in the 1980s, the Dutch still had one of Europe's most generous welfare systems. Most political parties accepted that levels of welfare could not be maintained indefinitely. The debate thus focuses on how much and in which areas cuts should be made. Refugees and asylum-seekersResponding to rising numbers of people seeking political asylum in the Netherlands, asylum laws have been tightened since 1994. Immigrants accounted for 9% of the national population in 2001, but for 40% (30% non-European) in Rotterdam, where Fortuyn's party won 35% of the vote in the March 2002 local elections. Fortuyn opposed multiculturalism and advocated amending the constitutional ban on discrimination. |