Dutch centrists D66 back in lead in election vote count, edging past far-right PVV – Europe live | Netherlands

Centrist D66 back in lead in Dutch vote count, edging past Wilders’s PVV

Aaaand we have a change at the top, with the centrist D66 party back in the lead after almost all votes were counted in Amsterdam and Hilversum.

Rob Jetten’s party is now leading by 15,122 votes, NOS reported, putting it back in the pole position to lead the talks on forming the next government.

D66 leader Rob Jetten cuts a cake in a meeting room ahead of the faction meeting in The Hague, the Netherlands. Photograph: Pierre Crom/Getty Images
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Rob Jetten: anti-Wilders, ‘yes we can’ candidate poised to be next Dutch PM – profile

Senay Boztas

Senay Boztas

in Amsterdam

Rob Jetten, a former junior athlete, was pictured last month in a sports magazine running merrily past the Dutch prime ministerial office in The Hague. Now, the 38-year-old could be forgiven for wondering when he will get the keys.

D66 leader Rob Jetten addresses the press in a meeting room ahead of the faction meeting in The Hague, the Netherlands. Photograph: Pierre Crom/Getty Images

Such is the nature of Dutch politics that confirmation will not come for weeks or even months. But after a general election in which Jetten’s liberal-progressive D66 party made huge gains, he appears almost certain to be the Netherlands’ next prime minister.

Speaking to an ecstatic crowd of supporters on Wednesday night, Jetten said the backing for his pro-European, pro-climate party marked the end of the far right’s stranglehold over Dutch politics – and showed the rest of Europe that the centre can hold.

Those who know Jetten well say he is “the real deal” – a genuine optimist not afraid of a tough debate and a down-to-earth pragmatist who can unite a splintered political scene.

He worked as a manager at the ProRail national track network before going into politics and met his partner, the Argentinian hockey player Nicolás Keenan, in a supermarket. He would be the Netherlands’ first out gay prime minister.

“Rob has an incredibly positive story,” said Eindhoven’s deputy mayor, Robert Strijk, on election night. “And I think that is what the Netherlands has been yearning for after the past years where everything was negative, criticism, hate. He came with hope.”

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