
IPFS News Link • Netherlands
Geert Wilders' Conservatives Surge To Top Of Polls Just Days Before Dutch Election
• https://www.zerohedge.com, by Thomas BrookeGeert Wilders' Party for Freedom (PVV) has experienced a dramatic rise in popularity among Dutch voters in a matter of days, rising from fourth place to now polling joint top with the governing VVD after an impressive performance in the latest television debate.
In the most recent survey conducted by pollster MDH, the right-wing populist party strengthened its electoral position by five percentage points to reach 26 percent, on par with the party of outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte, now led by Turkish-born Justice Minister Dilan Ye?ilgöz-Zegerius.
The increase in support appears to be at the expense of Pieter Omtzigt's New Social Contract, the centrist party fighting its first national election, whose party's popularity dropped by the same margin.
"The past week has seen the biggest changes in polling of this campaign. This directly relates to the fact that Geert Wilders was only involved in a debate on television for the first time on Nov. 12," pollster Maurice de Hond explained.
The Dutch mainstream media has been accused of bias concerning the exposure it gives the more establishment parties in the country in comparison to those advocating a conservative, nationalist approach, particularly regarding immigration.
Earlier this week, data published by a diversity watchdog revealed that no politician from Wilders' PVV or Thierry Baudet's Forum for Democracy (FvD) has featured on the leading late-night talk show, Op1, since the fall of the Dutch government back in July, while mainstream parties seemingly deemed to be more palatable by producers, have been invited on dozens of times during the election period.
The SBS debate this week, of which de Hond says "Wilders clearly appeared to be the winner," seems to have drastically shifted the odds in favor of Wilders' party being a part of the next Dutch government, or at the very least having a considerable influence on the composition of any coalition government.