As MTI wrote, the party leader said this in a post on his page
He put it like this
I can only become Prime Minister if all parties in the coalition support me. This is not the case.
He confirmedHe wants a right-wing government with fewer asylum seekers and less immigration. Wilders, an ally of Viktor Orban, added: “My love for my country and my voters is greater and more important than my position.”
He did not mention the party or parties that did not support him in his endeavor (although one of the groups announced more than a month ago that it would no longer negotiate with him). On the other hand, he indicated that he will not give up his plans to become prime minister, and will become prime minister sooner or later.
Supported by more Dutch people. If not tomorrow, then the day after tomorrow. Because the voice of millions of Dutch people will be heard
Geert Wilders wrote about it.
The Netherlands is a country of protracted coalition negotiations
Dutch law does not specify a deadline for forming the government. Four parties, the Party for Freedom (PVV), the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD), the New Social Contract (NSC), and the Farmers and Citizens' Movement (BBB) are trying to reach an agreement in the country. Negotiations to form the government have been ongoing for more than two months.
On Thursday, Kim Potters, who is responsible for managing the negotiations, will present a report to the lower house of the Dutch Parliament on the status of the government formation negotiations. Until a decision is made, the Dutch government will be headed by former Prime Minister Mark Rutte as acting prime minister.
In the Netherlands, coalition negotiations have unsurprisingly taken an unusually long time: in 2021, for example, it was Rutte who managed to put together a coalition after 271 days of negotiations.
(Cover image: Right-wing Dutch politician Geert Wilders and the Freedom Party [PVV] The leader after his election victory during a pause in talks with other party leaders, in The Hague, Netherlands, on November 24, 2023. Photo: Karl Kort/Getty Images Hungary)
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