1998 Dutch general election

General elections were held in the Netherlands on 6 May 1998.[1]

1998 Dutch general election

6 May 1998

All 150 seats in the House of Representatives
76 seats needed for a majority
Turnout73.4%
Party Leader % Seats ±
PvdA Wim Kok 29.0% 45 +8
VVD Frits Bolkestein 24.7% 38 +7
CDA Jaap de Hoop Scheffer 18.3% 29 -5
D66 Els Borst 9.0% 14 -10
GL Paul Rosenmöller 7.3% 11 +6
SP Jan Marijnissen 3.5% 5 +3
RPF Leen van Dijke 2.0% 3 0
SGP Bas van der Vlies 1.7% 3 +1
GPV Gert Schutte 1.2% 2 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Strongest political party by municipality
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Wim Kok
PvdA
Wim Kok
PvdA

Introduction

During the 1998 election the purple coalition of social-democrats and liberals (left and right) fortified its majority. Both the social-democratic PvdA and the conservative liberal VVD won considerably, much at the cost of their junior partner in cabinet, the progressive liberal D66.

Political observers attributed the win to the economic performance of the coalition, including reduction of unemployment and the budget deficit, steady growth and job creation combined with wage freezes and trimming of the welfare state, together with a policy of fiscal restraint.[2]

The two small left opposition parties, the green GroenLinks, and the socialist SP, were rewarded for their 'quality opposition'. The major opposition party, CDA, uncomfortable in its opposition role, also lost seats. The two parties for the elderly AOV and Unie 55+ and the rightwing populist CD did not return to parliament.

The formation resulted in the continuation of the Kok cabinet, with the second Kok cabinet (PvdA, VVD & D66).

Results

Party Votes % Seats +/–
Labour Party2,494,55529.045+8
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy2,124,97124.738+7
Christian Democratic Appeal1,581,05318.429–5
Democrats 66773,4979.014–10
GreenLeft625,9687.311+6
Socialist Party303,7033.55+3
Reformatory Political Federation174,5932.030
Reformed Political Party153,5831.83+1
Reformed Political League108,7241.320
Centre Democrats52,2260.60–3
General Elderly Alliance/Union 55+45,9940.50–7
Mobile Netherlands45,2190.50New
Seniors 200036,1570.40New
New Middle Party23,5120.30New
The Greens16,5850.200
Natural Law Party15,7460.200
Catholic Political Party8,2330.10New
Progressive Integration Party7,2250.100
New Solidarity Elderly Union6,4550.10New
New Communist Party of the Netherlands5,6200.100
Idealists/Jij2,5000.00New
The Voters Collective1,6680.00New
Invalid/blank votes14,435
Total8,622,2221001500
Registered voters/turnout11,755,13273.3
Source: Nohlen & Stöver, European Elections Database
Popular Vote
PvdA
28.98%
VVD
24.69%
CDA
18.37%
D66
8.99%
GL
7.27%
SP
3.53%
RPF
2.03%
SGP
1.78%
GPV
1.26%
CD
0.61%
AOV/Unie 55+
0.53%
Other
1.96%
gollark: Blocking?
gollark: Too bad, it is inevitable.
gollark: Well, there are tradeoffs; either you accept it just repeating the input lots, or poor quality.
gollark: Which means it can capture other stuff less, and when it reaches 0 health it dies.
gollark: It takes damage.

References

  1. Dieter Nohlen & Philip Stöver (2010) Elections in Europe: A data handbook, p1396 ISBN 978-3-8329-5609-7
  2. Netherlands: Elections held in 1998 Inter-Parliamentary Union

Further reading

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