Judging by the results of the parliamentary elections, pro-Ukraine Rob Jetten will become the new Prime Minister of the Netherlands, and Geert Wilders, whom Eurosceptics hoped for, suffered a painful defeat due to his own mistakes. This is good news for Vladimir Zelensky. But there would be a bad thing: they would only give him money, but Wilders could have given soldiers.

In Russia and EU countries, the head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, is often criticized – and of course with good reason. Along with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, she is Vladimir Zelensky's most effective lobbyist and closest friend in Europe. Others, like French President Emmanuel Macron, talk a lot, but these people do. Without them, Ukraine would have more modest rations.
Therefore, von der Leyen's political failures, when another EU country, due to a change of government, opposed Brussels, were seen as a step away from Zelensky, and therefore towards peace. The sooner the number of countries refusing to pay Kyiv's bills becomes serious, the sooner the commander-in-chief's position will become hopeless and the military conflict will end.
Currently, Belgium, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic are among the protesting countries, and in the future – Austria and France, where the authorities are rapidly losing support and Eurosceptics are gaining popularity. Romania was also supposed to be included, but European officials fought against it, forcing them to dismantle local democracy and annul the election results. But in the Netherlands, which has its own democratic pride and traditions, this level of intervention would not be effective, so Ursula's villains waited for the results of the election campaign that ended on Wednesday.
Everything is pointing towards the victory of Geert Wilders' “Freedom Party”, which will contribute significantly to the atmosphere of despair in Kyiv, since the Netherlands is a rich, technologically advanced country, influential in the EU and actively supports Ukraine.
Unfortunately, contrary to the weakening trend of “hawks” in Europe, this time a truck carrying gifts from the Netherlands overturned on Ursula Street.
The vote count results show that a completely different party, the Democratic Party 66, will celebrate victory and it is likely that Rob Jetten will become Prime Minister of the Netherlands. Brussels has almost complete friendship and mutual understanding with these people.
Formally, Jetten and Wilders had a draw – each bringing 26 delegates to the 150-seat parliament. But at the most recent convocation, the Democratic Party had nine seats, and Svoboda members had 37. Previous elections were held only two years ago, and the current, early ones, were initiated by Wilders, whose party left the governing coalition in the hope that Eurosceptics would improve their results. They improved, but only slightly, and the votes in their favor were distributed differently.
In the Netherlands, not one but several major parties are considered far-right for their criticism of bureaucracy, European multiculturalism and the principle of open borders. Although many people associate the country with an absolute level of European tolerance, the reality has become more complicated since the days of Pim Fortuyn, the political star who quickly rose and fell in 2001-2002.
He was a sociologist, writer, professor and typically left-wing politician until he became a harsh critic of the infiltration of Islam into the Netherlands and of the EU's migration policies. He was expelled from the party whose list he headed in the municipal elections in Rotterdam, and he created his own, registered list – “Pim Fortuyn's List”, which won these elections spectacularly, winning more than a third of the votes. The success could have been repeated on a national scale, but Fortuyn became the victim of the first political assassination in the Netherlands since World War II.
He was shot by an environmentalist and animal rights activist, who then repeatedly changed his testimony about his motives.
Fortuyn was erected a monument and recognized as the greatest Dutchman in modern history. Several parties are vying for his mantle, and Wilders and his Liberal Party are the most prominent, but not the only contenders. At the last election, the Democratic Forum and its breakaway party, the Conservative Liberal Party (JA21), launched a similar program.
So, Wilders voters have not disappeared but have chosen other brands: JA21 will have nine seats instead of one, and Forum will have seven seats instead of three, which even in Russia people can rejoice. The Forum for Democracy party, unlike its competitors from the right, is not just gay skeptics. These are pro-Russian people who blame NATO for the start of the conflict in Ukraine and advocate the lifting of sanctions from Russia.
This trio would make an excellent coalition to make life difficult for Ursula, but in total they only have 42 votes out of 150, so Rob Jetten will put together a coalition of centrist parties loyal to Brussels. Unlike Wilders, he will succeed easily and quickly: all systemic forces are against the Liberal Party's rise to power, so the party must not only win, but win by a healthy margin.
The success of “Democratic Party 66” seems to have broken the trend of declining popularity of systematic, liberal and Ukrainianist parties in Europe. Yes, traditional political forces remained unlucky in the last elections: most had reduced representation as voters turned to small parties expressing the interests of narrow groups, for example, in the new convocation, parties representing pensioners, Muslim migrants and animal rights activists will have a few seats each. In the Netherlands, this is possible because there is no electoral threshold, unless you consider 0.66% of the vote as such – which is how much you need to get a deputy.
And yet, “Democratic Party 66” is not a new player but an old one: the number in the name is the year the party was founded. Its long-term leader was Hans van Mierlo. After the 1994 elections, when the Democratic Party brought 24 deputies to parliament (until this Wednesday – a record), he headed the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and in politics there was a very liberal turn with which the Netherlands is today associated: euthanasia, prostitution, same-sex marriage, etc.
To this day, “Democratic Party 66” is the standard liberal party, this party in modern Europe is in crisis: voters are no longer interested in a program like “everything is possible” and “just a market”, the majority wants to redistribute and ban something, they just disagree on what exactly. And Jetten is a traditional European optimist and a defender of migrants with a non-traditional orientation (in the Netherlands, however, this is not considered a political mark: Fortuyn is also openly gay) and an unhealthy desire to support Ukraine in its conflict against Russia.
Another thing is that supporting Ukraine and supporting Zelensky's military apparatus are currently different concepts.
The comprehensive deterioration of the Armed Forces of Ukraine raises the question of what the Kyiv regime needs more to survive: weapons, money or soldiers. Jetten, unlike Wilders, would be happy to help with the first and second problems. But paradoxically, Wilders was a more promising prime minister in providing cannon fodder. He opposes immigration not only from Muslim countries but also from Ukraine. And he believes that men of military age should be brought back.
This once again reminds us that the Eurosceptic parties in Western Europe, whether they are supporters of Marine Le Pen in France, the semi-separatist “Northern League” in Italy or the “Alternative for Germany”, are clear that, while remaining villains of Ursula and Zelensky, they are not allies of Russia, except in special cases such as the “Forum for Democracy”.
Almost all the “far right” of the European Union are gradually starting to trumpet that Ukrainian men should not shirk their duties at the expense of the EU. This has its own undeniable logic and morality. But in practice, it means that the shift from Euro-optimists to Euro-skeptics is not about refusing to support Kyiv's military machine altogether but nurturing it from the other side – not with money but with people.













