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2017 Hennish federal election
Hennehouwe
← 2014 1 September 2017 Next →

All 180 seats in the Chamber of Deputies
91 seats needed for a majority
Turnout79.4% (Decrease 0.9%)
Party Leader % Seats ±
SAP Rupert van Bleiswijk 23.2 49 +4
VDP Eva Kaestel 19.0 40 +15
NVP Michiel Hagan 18.0 36 -18
MdP Klaas-Jan Jagers 9.6 16 +6
Groen Lilian de Flor & Magnus Golts 6.8 11 0
Links Pieter Fourny 5.6 7 -2
VSD Jaap-Jan van den Breul 4.9 6 +1
PP Gaspard Toussaint 2.9 6 -1
ABP Ad Arkink 3.6 5 -3
LIVE Katrijn Rotteveel 3.5 4 -2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Premier before Premier after
Jyrki Katainen A4.jpeg Michiel Hagan
NVP
Rupert van Bleiswijk
SAP
Informal meeting of ministers responsible for development (FAC). Arrivals Alexander De Croo (36766610160) (cropped2).jpg

Federal elections were held in Hennehouwe on 1 September 2017 to elect all 180 members of the 27th Chamber of Deputies.

The election was triggered by the Progressive Democratic Party's (VDP) withdrawal of support for Premier Michiel Hagan's centre-right government in June. The coalition, formed after the 2014 election, consisted of Hagan's National People's Party (NVP), the Agrarian–Farmer's Party (ABP), the Party for the Petois (PP), LIVE and the People's Party for Sotirian Democracy (VSD). It lacked a majority in the Chamber, and as such relied on support from the VDP throughout its three years of existence.

The Socialist Labour Party became the largest party for the first time since 2010, winning 49 seats on 23.2% of the vote. The VDP achieved the best result in its 28-year history, finishing in second place with 40 seats. The NVP received its worst result since 1978, winning 36 seats and falling to third place for the first time ever. The other big winner of the elections were the far-right Patriot's March, who gained six seats for a total of 16 seats in the Chamber. The Greens maintained their 2014 result of 11 seats, whilst the other represented parties acheived mix results. Provisional results were confirmed on the morning of 2 September, whilst the official results were certified on 6 September. The elected members were sworn in on 13 September.

Following the election, Hagan tendered his resignation as Premier, and Stadtholder Adriaan Wilhelm Paulus officially tasked SAP leader Rupert van Bleiswijk with forming a new government. The SAP reached a coalition agreement with the VDP to form a minority grand coalition, supported from the opposition by the PP and ABP. van Bleiswijk was invested as Premier following a vote in the Chamber on 26 September. The new government became the fifth grand coalition in the history of the Third Republic, and the first such consisting of centre-left and centre parties.

Background

At the previous federal election in 2014, the incumbent centre-left government led by the Socialist Labour Party (SAP) lost its majority. The National People's Party (NVP) became the largest party for the first time since before the 2005 financial crisis, whilst the Progressive Democratic Party (VDP) gained two seats. The Patriot's March (MdP) won double-digit seats for the first time, meanwhile left-leaning parties that participated in or supported the SAP govenment fared poorly. The NVP reached an agreement with the four smallest parties in the Chamber: the Agrarian–Farmer's Party (ABP), the Party for the Petois (PP), LIVE and the People's Party for Sotirian Democracy (VSD) to form a centre-right coalition, the first since 2002. However, it lacked an outright majority in the Chamber, falling eleven seats short of the 91 seats necessary for a majority. The coalition reached a subsequent agreement with the VDP, whereby the party would abstain in motions of confidence and important budgetary votes in exchange for policy concessions.

In November 2016, the VDP threatened to pull support for the government over its budget proposals. However, following mediation between them and the government parties, the VDP announced it would maintain its agreement and abstain from the budget later that month. Six months later in May 2017, allegations of leaked contracts by NVP and ABP government ministers to construction companies prompted internal conflicts within cabinet. On 16 June, the VDP formally announced its decision to withdraw support for the government and that it would support an SAP-initiated motion of no confidence in the Ministers of Housing & Infrastructure, and Economic Affairs. Before these motions could be debated in the Chamber, Premier Michiel Hagan called for snap elections to be held on 1 September 2017. The vote necessary for this to be called took place on 26 June, and passed the two-thirds threshold required for the election to take place.

Date

Article 42.2 of the Basic Law (Algemene Wet) states that a new Chamber of Deputies shall be elected no later than 28 days after the fourth anniversary of the first sitting of the current Chamber of Deputies, excluding public holidays. Article 42.3 states that the first sitting of the new Chamber must occur within 28 days after the election date, excluding public holidays.

The Electoral Law of 2000 legislates for fixed-term election dates, automatically scheduling an election for the first Friday of September four years after the previous election, or the second Friday of September if the former falls on a public holiday. An election prior to the fixed date can be called for in the Chamber via a two-thirds supermajority vote. Under the Law, the election had been scheduled for 7 September 2018. However, following a successful motion for a snap election in the Chamber on 28 June 2017, the election was scheduled for 1 September 2017, maintaining the convention of the first Friday in September.

Electoral system

The 180 members of the Chamber of Deputies are elected by open list proportional representation in 10 multi-member constituencies corresponding to the 10 regions of Hennehouwe, with seats allocated according to the Berger method. There is no electoral threshold, meaning the effective threshold depends on the size of the region: in the smallest region, Oudkessel-Witburg (7 seats), the effective threshold is around 10%, whilst in the largest region, Flamia (40 seats), it is closer to 2-2.5%. Seats are allocated to the regions in proportion to population, with a review of seat distribution carried out one year after the last census. For an outright majority in the Chamber, a party (or coalition of parties) must have at least 91 seats. Due to the nature of Hennehouwe's multi-party system, it is rare for any one party to singlehandedly obtain a parliamentary majority, and thus coalitions and/or agreements between different parties is necessary.

Electors vote by casting a preference for a personal candidate from their chosen list, rather than voting for a party list outright. If a candidate receives a quota of either 20% of 1/xth of votes (x equalling the number of seats in that region) or 33% of the total votes for their own list, they will bypass the rest of the list in the allocation of seats regardless of their placement on the electoral list. If multiple candidates from a list pass this threshold, their ordering is determined based on the number of votes received. Otherwise, the remaining seats are allocated according to the placement of candidates on the list. Following concerns over the size of ballot papers during the 2016 Flamish regional election, the Electoral Law was amended to limit the number of candidates on a single list to two-thirds of the total number of seats available in regions with 24 or more seats. Due to the current distribution of seats, only Flamia and Lower Stegeren are affected by this change. In all other regions, the maximum number of candidates on a list is the total number of seats.

In order to participate in the elections, a party or list of candidates must provide declarations of support by 0.1% of all votes cast in the previous election in each region contested, as well as a deposit of €1,800 in each region contested. This deposit is refunded to lists who obtain 1% of the vote in the region contested.

Region Seats
Alblasserdam vlag.svg Flamia 40
Flag of Berkelland.svg Geeland 9
Amersfoort flag outline.svg Grotevlakte 19
Flag of Zaanstad.svg Lower Stegeren 32
Aalsmeer flag.svg Molenburg 13
Binnenmaas vlag.svg Oudkessel-Witburg 7
Flag of Beek (Limburg).svg Reekland 12
Flag of Antwerp (City).svg s'Holle 21
VlagArnhem.svg Upper Stegeren 15
Flag of Rotterdam.svg Zilverzee 12
 Hennehouwe 180

Parties and leaders

A total of 28 parties participated in the elections, having ballot access in at least one of the 10 regions of Hennehouwe.

Parties represented in the 26th Chamber of Deputies
Party Leader Main ideology Position Last election Regions
National People's Party NVP Michiel Hagan Conservatism Centre-right % 54 seats 10
Socialist Labour Party SAP Rupert van Bleiswijk Social democracy Centre-left % 45 seats 10
Progressive Democratic Party VDP Eva Kaestal Social liberalism Centre % 25 seats 10
Green Party Groen Lilian de Flor & Magnus Golts Green politics Centre-left % 11 seats 10
Patriot's March MdP Klaas-Jan Jagers Right-wing populism Right-wing to far-right % 10 seats 10
The Left Links Pieter Fourny Democratic socialism Left-wing % 9 seats 10
Agrarian–Farmer's Party ABP Ad Arkink Agrarianism Centre-right % 8 seats 10
Party for the Petois PP Gaspard Toussaint Petois minority interests Centre % 7 seats 3
LIVE – The Liberal Union LIVE Katrijn Rotteveel Classical liberalism Centre to centre-right % 6 seats 10
People's Party for Sotirian Democracy VSD Jaap-Jan van den Breul Sotirian right Centre-right to right-wing % 5 seats 10

Opinion polls

Results

Preliminary results were finalised on the morning of 2 September, and the official result was published on 6 September.

Hennish Chamber 2017.png
Party Votes % Seats +/–
Socialist Labour Party 1,735,597 23.16 49 +4
Progressive Democratic Party 1,424,227 19.00 40 +15
National People's Party 1,350,417 18.02 36 -18
Patriot's March 718,983 9.59 16 +6
Green Party 512,304 6.84 11 0
The Left 416,460 5.56 7 -2
People's Party for Sotirian Democracy 367,895 4.91 6 +1
Agrarian–Farmer's Party 270,560 3.61 5 -3
LIVE – The Liberal Union 260,155 3.47 4 -2
Party for the Petois 215,432 2.87 6 -1
Others 223,190 2.98 0 0
Total 7,495,220 100.00 180 0
Valid votes 7,495,220 99.49
Invalid/blank votes 38,284 0.51
Total votes cast 7,533,504 100.00
Registered voters/turnout 9,487,300 79.41
Source: Verkiezingscommissie

Aftermath