Current:Home > NewsDutch election candidates make migration a key campaign issue in the crowded Netherlands -VisionFunds
Dutch election candidates make migration a key campaign issue in the crowded Netherlands
View
Date:2025-04-16 18:51:05
TER APEL, Netherlands (AP) — It is a familiar sight in this remote rural town: a migrant in a headscarf and thick winter coat carrying her belongings to the overcrowded reception center as a storm brews over the flat landscape.
For many here and across this nation once known as a beacon of tolerance, it is too familiar.
“Immigration is spiraling out of control,” Henk Tapper said while visiting his daughter in Ter Apel two weeks before the Netherlands votes in parliamentary elections on Nov. 22.
Candidates across the political spectrum are campaigning on pledges to tackle migration problems that are crystallized in Ter Apel, just over 200 kilometers (120 miles) northeast of Amsterdam. Once mostly known for its monastery, the town has now become synonymous with Dutch struggles to accommodate large numbers of asylum-seekers.
In the summer of 2022, hundreds of migrants were forced to sleep outside because the reception center was full. The Dutch branch of Doctors Without Borders sent a team to help the migrants, the first time it was forced to deploy within the Netherlands.
The center still is overcrowded and locals complain of crime and public order problems blamed on migrants who wander in small groups through the village.
It is not only asylum seekers, though. Political parties also are pledging to crack down on labor migrants and foreign students, who now make up some 40% of university enrollments.
Tapper said he plans to vote for anti-Islam lawmaker Geert Wilders’ Freedom Party which advocates a halt in asylum seekers and opting out of EU and United Nations agreements and treaties on refugees and asylum.
The migration debate in the Netherlands echoes across Europe, where governments and the European Union are seeking ways to rein in migration. Italy recently announced plans to house asylum seekers in Albania.
In Germany, the center-left government and 16 state governors have agreed on a raft of measures to curb the high number of migrants flowing into the country. They include speeding up asylum procedures and restricting benefits for asylum-seekers.
Outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte was part of an EU delegation visiting Tunisia over the summer to hammer out a deal with the North African nation intended to combat the often lethal smuggling of migrants across the Mediterranean Sea.
Meanwhile, many Dutch voters are calling for tougher domestic policies in this country once famed for its open-arm approach to refugees dating all the way back to the Pilgrim Fathers who lived in Leiden after fleeing religious persecution in England and before setting sail for what is now the United States.
One of the leading candidates to succeed Rutte is herself a former refugee. Now, Dilan Yeşilgöz, leader of the center-right People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) advocates making her adopted country less welcoming.
“Our laws, our regulations are ... way more attractive than the laws and regulations of the countries around us, which makes us more attractive for people to come here,” she told The Associated Press.
Yeşilgöz is the daughter of Turkish human rights activists who fled to the Netherlands when she was a child.
“Being a refugee myself, I think it’s very important that ... we take the decisions to make sure that true refugees have a safe place,” she said. “And politicians who refuse to take those difficult decisions they are saying to the true refugees, but also to the Dutch public: ‘You’re on your own.’”
The vote is shaping up to be very close, with the VVD and the recently formed conservative populist party New Social Contract leading in polls against a center-left bloc of Labor and Green Left.
According to the official Dutch statistics agency, just over 400,000 migrants arrived in the Netherlands last year — that includes asylum seekers, foreigners coming to work in the Netherlands and overseas students. The number was pushed higher by thousands of Ukrainians fleeing the war sparked by Russia’s invasion.
Ekram Jalboutt, born to Palestinian parents in a Syrian camp, has been granted asylum in the Netherlands and doesn’t like what she sees in the debate about migration. “I hate the idea of playing with this card of migration in this political game,” she said at the headquarters of the Dutch Refugee Council, where she now works.
The recently formed New Social Contract party wants to set a “guideline” ceiling of 50,000 migrants a year allowed into the Netherlands — including asylum seekers, labor migrants and students. Along with the VVD, it wants to introduce an asylum system that differentiates between people fleeing persecution and those fleeing war. The latter group would have fewer rights, including the right to family reunifications. Acrimonious discussions on such moves brought down the last ruling Dutch coalition in July.
The number of new arrivals blends into another major problem Tapper highlighted— a chronic shortage of housing in this crowded nation of about 18 million people.
“There are houses for foreigners, and Dutch people can hardly get a house ... that is a bit strange here in the Netherlands,” he said.
Advocates for cracking down on migration argue that people granted refugee status are also fast-tracked into scarce social housing and can leapfrog Dutch people who can languish for years on waiting lists.
The Dutch Refugee Council argues that refugees make up only a small proportion of people whose applications for social housing are fast-tracked.
“The political debate about asylum and migration is very polarized,” said Anna Strolenberg, a spokeswoman for the council. “We see most political parties proposing solutions that are too simplistic, that are not realistic, and they’re actually capitalizing on the gut feelings of people.”
___
Follow AP’s coverage of global migration at https://apnews.com/hub/migration
veryGood! (32)
Related
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Ireland women's team declines pregame pleasantries after Israeli player's antisemitism accusation
- Colin Jost revealed as headliner for the 2024 White House Correspondents' Dinner
- Tunisia says 13 migrants from Sudan killed, 27 missing after boat made of scrap metal sinks off coast
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Baby boom of African penguin chicks hatch at California science museum
- A Swiftie Super Bowl, a stumbling bank, and other indicators
- Wayne Kramer, late guitarist of rock band MC5, also leaves legacy of bringing music to prisons
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Super Bowl 2024: Time, channel, halftime show, how to watch Chiefs vs. 49ers livestream
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- How King Charles and Kate Middleton’s Health Challenges Are Already Changing the Royal Family
- Flu hangs on in US, fading in some areas and intensifying in others
- Former St. Louis officer who shot suspect in 2018 found not guilty
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- Cheap, plentiful and devastating: The synthetic drug kush is walloping Sierra Leone
- Veteran NFL assistant Wink Martindale to become Michigan Wolverines defensive coordinator
- Sean Payton hasn't made 'final decision' on Russell Wilson's future, regrets bashing Jets
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
How murdered Hollywood therapist Amie Harwick testified at her alleged killer's trial
Tommy Hilfiger takes over the Oyster Bar in Grand Central for a joyous New York-centric fashion show
Pink Stops Concert After Pregnant Fan Goes Into Labor During Show—Again
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Hawaii Supreme Court quotes The Wire in ruling on gun rights: The thing about the old days, they the old days
Feds offer up to $10 million reward for info on Hive ransomware hackers
Harris slams ‘politically motivated’ report as Biden to name task force to protect classified docs