Far-right Geert Wilders gives up on bid to become prime minister

Dutch anti-Islam populist leader Geert Wilders abandons bid to become prime minister after failing to gain the support of other parties to form a coalition

Geert Wilders
Geert Wilders

Dutch anti-Islam populist leader Geert Wilders has abandoned his bid to become prime minister after failing to gain the support of other parties to form a coalition.

"I can only become prime minister if ALL parties in the coalition support it. That was not the case," he wrote on X.

His Freedom Party (PVV) won the most votes last year - but needed support of other parties to form a coalition.

Talks with three other parties over the shape of a new government are ongoing.

The negotiator leading the latest round of talks, which concluded on Tuesday, is due to share his report with the Dutch parliament on Thursday.

"I would like a right-wing cabinet. Less asylum and immigration. Dutch on 1. The love for my country and voter is great and more important than my own position," Wilders wrote in his post on Wednesday evening.

Mr Wilders, 60, has spent months in talks with the centre-right VVD, New Social Contract (NSC) and BBB farmers' parties to try and form a coalition government.

The leaders of those three insisted this week that the only way they would be willing to move forward was if all four party leaders agreed not to take a role in the government, according to Dutch public broadcaster NOS.

It was not immediately clear if a compromise figure for the prime minister's post had emerged.

The PVV's victory last year not only shook Dutch politics, but had repercussions across Europe as the Netherlands is one of the founding members of what is now the European Union.