Jun 16, 2020
12,435
Like Meloni turned Italy upside down... The reality of the job is different to the campaign rhetoric.
He was a lot softer during this campaign compared to the previous Wilders. I didn’t vote for him but in a way I’m glad that he won, but they still have to form a majority with other parties of course.

Politicians of other parties didn’t ignore that he was right in the last +10 years about migration, and we’re talking about migration in a broad sense not just the asylum seekers. We have a shortage of houses of 400k houses on the short term, while 200k migrants arrived here this year. As a result of that it’s basically impossible to buy a house on one salary, and still very difficult on two salaries. Many people are reaching their 30s and are still living with their parents. The former parties just made a mess over the last periods.

There are other decisions regarding migration and pro-EU/globalism policies as for example foreign students will get a scholarship for university while Dutch students won’t. Results is that 40% of students at our universities aren’t Dutch and will leave this country debt-free, while Dutch students will finish school with a massive debt. Besides that they changed the main language to English instead of Dutch for many types of studies.

Other agendas like the LGBTQ and climate change -> farmers arent received particularly well here.

There has been a moment on tv where one of the leaders of the previous governing parties (a very progressive party) had to choose between Europe or The Netherlands, the idiot choose Europe while the whole country was watching.

Besides all of this poverty rose insanely much over the last 10 years, things like that push people to either that far right or far left side. The group of people struggling to pay the bills doubled while left parties said that climate change is our biggest problem, that’s not how you win voters of course.
 

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Sep 4, 2006
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He was a lot softer during this campaign compared to the previous Wilders. I didn’t vote for him but in a way I’m glad that he won, but they still have to form a majority with other parties of course.

Politicians of other parties didn’t ignore that he was right in the last +10 years about migration, and we’re talking about migration in a broad sense not just the asylum seekers. We have a shortage of houses of 400k houses on the short term, while 200k migrants arrived here this year. As a result of that it’s basically impossible to buy a house on one salary, and still very difficult on two salaries. Many people are reaching their 30s and are still living with their parents. The former parties just made a mess over the last periods.

There are other decisions regarding migration and pro-EU/globalism policies as for example foreign students will get a scholarship for university while Dutch students won’t. Results is that 40% of students at our universities aren’t Dutch and will leave this country debt-free, while Dutch students will finish school with a massive debt. Besides that they changed the main language to English instead of Dutch for many types of studies.

Other agendas like the LGBTQ and climate change -> farmers arent received particularly well here.

There has been a moment on tv where one of the leaders of the previous governing parties (a very progressive party) had to choose between Europe or The Netherlands, the idiot choose Europe while the whole country was watching.

Besides all of this poverty rose insanely much over the last 10 years, things like that push people to either that far right or far left side. The group of people struggling to pay the bills doubled while left parties said that climate change is our biggest problem, that’s not how you win voters of course.
why? what is the benefit of this?
 

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