Opposition parties are increasingly uneasy about the PVV, VVD, NSC, and BBB coalition. The coalition parties are refusing to release an analysis of their coalition agreement, which reportedly shows that the future Cabinet will have multiple legal hurdles to cross to implement the plans therein, some of which are at odds with the Constitution. Opposition parties also have concerns about the choice of Dick Schoof as the new Prime Minister.
The PVV has little enthusiasm for an overly forgiving approach to fraud. MP Edgar Mulder said in response to the parliamentary inquiry into the derailed fraud policy that he does not want “parliament to immediately have to bake leniency” into legislation. “Because real fraudsters simply need to be tackled.” NSC and VVD are also unwilling to adopt the recommendations outright and have received harsh criticism from other parties for their reluctance.
Politicians who called the demonstration against Isaac Herzog's presence at the National Holocaust Museum 'antisemitic’ are playing into the hands of antisemitism