Dutch pro-Europe vote winner Rutte nixes left-bloc coalition

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The Liberal winners of Dutch elections Friday categorically rejected a left-wing bloc joining government, a move that could critically weaken the pro-Europe poll winners’ commitment to austerity.
Prime Minister Mark Rutte said he would try to form a government with the centre-left Labour party that came second in Wednesday’s election but said third-place eurosceptic Socialists (SP) were not welcome.
“It would be impossible for the (Liberal) VVD to take part in a cabinet with the SP and the (Labour) PvdA,” the pro-business Rutte said after meeting mediator Henk Kamp who has been appointed to explore coalition possibilities.
The victory by Rutte’s VVD with a party record of 41 seats, closely followed by Labour with 38, was a boost for centrist pro-Europe parties at the expense of eurosceptic populists such as Geert Wilders’ far-right PVV party.
Emile Roemer’s hard-left Socialists won 15 seats, putting them in third place along with the far-right PVV, whose leader Wilders said he had “chosen” to be in opposition after collapsing the previous government and precipitating the early elections.
While not as extreme as Wilders, who wants to leave the EU and the eurozone, the Socialists are opposed to transferring further responsibility to Brussels and to the European Stability Mechanism (ESM).
Together VVD and Labour have 79 seats, a majority in the 150-seat parliament but the coalition will likely want more partners who will ultimately have some say in The Hague’s attitude towards Brussels.
But Labour leader Diederik Samsom, a former Greenpeace activist who enjoyed a stellar rise in polls on the back of his performance in televised debates, said that the Socialists “must” join any expanded Liberal-Labour coalition.
“I advised to start exploring the possibility of at least the VVD and the Labour Party” forming a coalition, Samsom said after talks with mediator Kamp.

“I said that there could be reasons for more parties to be involved, and if so then I think that in any case the SP must be involved,” Samsom said.
Mediator Kamp, the social affairs minister in the current cabinet, is meeting party leaders to test the waters for different coalition possibilities.
Labour leader Samsom has already expressed his desire to join the coalition, despite sharp policy differences with the centre-right VVD. Both parties will have to make policy sacrifices in order to govern together.
The election success of Rutte’s VVD and rising star Diederik Samsom’s PvdA suggests that the new coalition will be moderate and marks a victory for parties committed to debt-busting austerity.
The two parties’ success reflected Dutch voters’ desire for an ongoing relationship with the rest of Europe and was seen as keeping the eurozone’s fifth largest economy closely allied with economic powerhouse Germany.
Fiscally prudent Rutte’s government has been allied to German Chancellor Angela Merkel, while Samsom’s calls for stimulus echo those of France’s Socialist President Francois Hollande.
Both parties had lashed out at the EU status quo during campaigning, but the Dutch export-based economy could not afford to call into question membership in the bloc, where it sends 75 percent of its exports.