Dutch PM Mark Rutte quitting politics after record 13-year term

Dutch PM Mark Rutte quitting politics after record 13-year term

by Agence France-Presse
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Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Monday he was leaving politics after nearly 13 years in charge, in a shock end to his time as the longest-serving leader in the history of the Netherlands.

Nicknamed โ€œTeflon Markโ€ for surviving scandals that hit his four governments, the centre-right leader said he would bow out after elections triggered by the collapse of his coalition in a row over asylum policy.

The European Unionโ€™s second-longest-serving leader after Hungaryโ€™s Viktor Orban was widely expected to seek a fifth term in the elections this autumn, but stunned MPs with his surprise announcement.

โ€œI feel OK, but of course, it is a significant moment for me personally,โ€ Rutte, 56, told AFP after leaving parliament.

The bike-riding, frugal-living premier had steered the Netherlands through economic upheaval and the Covid pandemic since 2010, relying on a โ€œMr Normalโ€ image to appeal to voters.

He was also a European stalwart, who infuriated some southern countries with his hard line on bailouts but won support for his backing of Ukraine.

โ€“ โ€˜Pass the batonโ€™ โ€“

The four-party coalition government collapsed on Friday over Rutteโ€™s plans to cut numbers of family members from war zones who are allowed to reunite with asylum-seekers in the Netherlands.

The ChristenUnie โ€” a Christian Democratic party โ€” and the centre-left Democracy 66 had strongly opposed Rutteโ€™s plan.

Rutte, who passed Ruud Lubbers last August to become the longest-serving Dutch PM, is staying on as caretaker premier until a new government is formed. He is due to mark 13 years in office in October.

โ€œI would like to say something personal. There has been speculation over the past few days about what motivates me. The only answer is the Netherlands,โ€ Rutte said during a parliamentary debate on the fall of the coalition.

โ€œYesterday morning, I took the decision that I am no longer suitable to be the new leader of the VVD (his party). When the new government is sworn in after the elections, I will quit politics.โ€

He later told reporters: โ€œThis is not entirely without emotionโ€ฆ But it feels good to pass the baton.โ€

Rutte โ€œblew up his own government in the hope โ€” in my opinion, and I am not the only one โ€” that early elections would go well for his VVD liberal party and also for himself,โ€ said social scientist Hans Boutellier, professor at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

โ€œAnd I think โ€” but itโ€™s a bit of a guess of course โ€” that he was actually blamed too much,โ€ he told AFP.

Politicians from all sides paid tribute but were already eyeing the post-Rutte era, with a protest party of Dutch farmers, in particular, hoping to repeat their recent success in senate elections.

The farmers have held months of rowdy rallies against plans to cut livestock numbers and maybe close some farms to meet environmental targets.

โ€“ โ€˜Very surprisedโ€™ โ€“

The Farmer-Citizen Movement (BBB)โ€™s leader Caroline van der Plas told AFP she was โ€œvery surprisedโ€ by Rutteโ€™s decision but that it was โ€œvery wiseโ€.

She said she was โ€œnot sure yetโ€ if she wanted to serve as prime minister but the โ€œgood news for the Netherlands is that a new policy will be madeโ€.

Dutch lawmakers applauded after far-right leader Geert Wilders, Rutteโ€™s long-term rival, praised him in parliament, saying: โ€œYour choices were not ours, but you made them with conviction.โ€

Opposition parties scrapped a planned no-confidence motion that would have toppled Rutte as caretaker premier.

Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra, who said he was also stepping down as head of the CDA, one of the parties in the fallen coalition, said he had an โ€œincredible amount of respectโ€ for Rutte.

He later tweeted a meme involving the comic character Tintin, saying โ€œWhat a week huhโ€, with the reply, โ€œItโ€™s only Monday morning.โ€

There are no obvious successors in Rutteโ€™s own party, which announced it would choose a candidate this week ahead of the elections, which are likely to be in mid-November.

Turkish-born Justice Minister Dilan Yesilgoz and VVD parliamentary group leader Sophie Hermans, a former assistant to Rutte, are among the frontrunners, broadcaster RTL said.

Rutte meanwhile has been tipped for the top jobs at NATO or the European Council.

But he indicated he would continue his work as a part-time teacher instead. โ€œMaybe Iโ€™ll do that for a few days,โ€ he told reporters.

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