[The governing liberal party led by Mark Rutte is standing at about
16% in the current poll of polls, as is Wilders’ party. Three others
parties, including the Greens, hover around 11%. A leftwing coalition
– led by GroenLinks (Green Left) – could possibly be formed and
include the Eurosceptic and hard-left Socialist party (SP) or even the
fringe PvdD, an animal rights party, the respected Centre for European
Reform has reported.
...
Klaver told his young audience at the Meetup, staged in a music venue
in the university town of Leiden, that he had taken strength from the
attacks. As prime minister, he would offer “hope and change”. Out
would go the old “holy trinity” of economic growth, the market and the
rollback of the state, and in would come empathy, economic equality
and protection of the climate. Enough of the scapegoating of the
incomers to the Netherlands, he said, this is a “movement of empathy”.
The Green Left party in the Netherlands was formed 25 years ago by the
merger of four political groups: the communists, pacifists,
evangelicals and the self-styled political radicals. Unlike many green
parties elsewhere in Europe that emerged from environmental activist
groups, Groen Links has always had a social dimension to its politics
and traditionally done well in a general election after the Dutch
Labour party has been tainted by being in power. But the Greens have
never before managed to connect with the highly educated segment of
the electorate as Klaver appears to have done, let alone had the
chance to be part of a Dutch government.]

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/mar/06/the-jessiah-dutch-progressive-populist-jesse-klaver

The 'Jessiah': the Dutch progressive trying to turn back the populist tide
The Netherlands’ Green leader, Jesse Klaver, has quadrupled his
party’s polling in a few months and is now closing in on Geert
Wilders’ far-right Freedom party

With all parties polling low numbers, Jesse Klaver, 30, has been
talked about as the next Dutch prime minister. Photograph: Action
Press/Rex/Shutterstock

Daniel Boffey in Leiden
Monday 6 March 2017 10.32 GMT

It isn’t hard to see why, with only a hint of tongue-in-cheek, Jesse
Klaver is described by some in the Netherlands as “the Jessiah”. Amid
so much doom and gloom about the fate of the left across Europe in the
face of seemingly unstoppable populist movements, the success of the
bright-eyed 30-year-old leader of the Green Left party in the polls
just two weeks from the country’s election day is proving to be
something of a buoy that many progressives are holding on to for dear
life.

Klaver’s father has a Moroccan background, his mother is from mixed
Dutch and Indonesian stock. He is unashamedly “pro-EU and
pro-refugee”. And in a few short months, while the far-right Freedom
party’s Geert Wilders has been complaining about “Moroccan scum”,
Klaver has quadrupled his party’s standing in the polls. And he’s done
it with his shirt sleeves rolled up and a smile on his face.

Because of the quirks of the Netherlands’ extreme proportional
representation electoral system, the disintegration of the vote of its
Labour party, the fragmenting of tribal loyalties and the insistence
from the entire political class that they will not help Wilders form a
coalition government, there is even an outside chance, whisper it,
that the boy-wonder could be the next Dutch prime minister.


Dutch elections: all you need to know
 Read more

***The governing liberal party led by Mark Rutte is standing at about
16% in the current poll of polls, as is Wilders’ party. Three others
parties, including the Greens, hover around 11%. A leftwing coalition
– led by GroenLinks (Green Left) – could possibly be formed and
include the Eurosceptic and hard-left Socialist party (SP) or even the
fringe PvdD, an animal rights party, the respected Centre for European
Reform has reported.*** [Emphasis added.]

At a so-called Meetup event last week, not dissimilar to a political
rally but with added cool in the form of a Syrian
refugee-turned-rapper to warm up the crowd, Klaver was in no mood to
downplay expectations. The previous evening he had been roundly picked
on by the other leaders during a TV debate watched by 1.3 million
people. But while some have said the political ingénue stumbled in the
early stages of the debate, the focus on Klaver from the older group
of white men had only gone to further frame him as a serious
candidate.

***Klaver told his young audience at the Meetup, staged in a music
venue in the university town of Leiden, that he had taken strength
from the attacks. As prime minister, he would offer “hope and change”.
Out would go the old “holy trinity” of economic growth, the market and
the rollback of the state, and in would come empathy, economic
equality and protection of the climate. Enough of the scapegoating of
the incomers to the Netherlands, he said, this is a “movement of
empathy”.*** [Emphasis added.]

[Guardian graphic |  *Latest poll projection]

***The Green Left party in the Netherlands was formed 25 years ago by
the merger of four political groups: the communists, pacifists,
evangelicals and the self-styled political radicals. Unlike many green
parties elsewhere in Europe that emerged from environmental activist
groups, Groen Links has always had a social dimension to its politics
and traditionally done well in a general election after the Dutch
Labour party has been tainted by being in power. But the Greens have
never before managed to connect with the highly educated segment of
the electorate as Klaver appears to have done, let alone had the
chance to be part of a Dutch government.*** [Emphasis added.]

“As it looks now, we might need four or five parties to form a
majority government. In which case the Green party would be one of the
candidates”, said Professor Sarah de Lange, of Amsterdam university.

Talking after his speech, in a small anteroom at the venue with his
wife, Jolein, in an armchair by his side, the man himself is charm
personified, even when challenged that as a party of protest,
governing might prove to be his undoing. The unravelling of the now
unbelievable Cleggmania of 2010 after the Liberal Democrats formed a
coalition government surely stands as the starkest example of the
danger. Does that not worry him? “No, not at all,” Klaver says. “This
is the nature of working together.


How are you voting in the Dutch elections?
 Read more

“I am always talking about the government I am looking forward to: a
centre-left government, with social democrats, the socialists, the
Christian democrats, even the liberals of [the] D66 [party].

“I believe cooperation is necessary to achieve our goals of change.
What I am not going to compromise are my principles. I want to ensure
we have a more equal society, I want to make sure that we fight
inequality. But I can think of 50 ways to do it. The ways to do it are
negotiable for me. Not the principle itself.”

Along with the collapse of the Dutch Labour vote from about 25% to as
little as 8%, another ingredient of Klaver’s success is the stark
contrast he offers to Wilders. Klaver says that in his dealings with
the leader of the PVV, who was convicted of racist speech in December,
he tries to keep things civil. But asked whether the rhetoric Wilders
aimed at Moroccans had ever touched him personally, given his family
roots, there is a discernible edge to the response. “No, only when...
Most of the time not,” Klaver says, pausing. “Only once. I am a father
of two sons. One and three years old. When the oldest was a couple of
weeks old he [Wilders] yelled in this cafe ‘less, less Moroccans’. It
was why he was in court.

 Geert Wilders
 Geert Wilders Photograph: Peter Dejong/AP

“I thought how far are you going? Are you talking about me? Are you
talking about my son? I think I was a little bit emotional because I
had just become a dad. That was the only time.”

Whether the many moving parts of the Dutch elections do give Klaver
his big moment, perhaps most likely as a junior partner in a Rutte
government, as a student of politics he believes it is his movement
that is the hope of the left, across Europe, including in the UK. “I
am interested in politics so I look to what is happening in the UK,
France and the United States. And I was watching [Jeremy] Corbyn too
and I think it was impressive what he did in the internal [election].
But when you look to his programme it is, you know, back to the
future,” he says.

“That is the big difference between us. We have a very modern
programme and it is all doable. It is very ambitious, but we can
manage it.

“He [Corbyn] was talking about opening the mines again, stuff like it.
That’s a problem for social democrats. Most of the time they choose to
go back. I think it was a great thing he [Corbyn] said: ‘the third way
was the wrong way’. I think he is correct but going back before the
third way is maybe even worse. You have to go forward. You have to
learn.”



-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to