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Far-Right Extremists Fail to Get a Foothold in Dutch Election

Populist Geert Wilders has failed to live up to hype in Dutch elections

Populist firebrand Geert Wilders and his PVV party failed to live up to the hype following them into the Netherlands elections Wednesday, winning only 19 seats in the country's parliament — far short of the 30 they were predicted to win at the start of the year.

The results will keep the right-wing extremist Wilders firmly outside of any ruling coalition government. Instead, by sheer virtue of a highly splintered Dutch electorate, and despite losing 10 seats, incumbent Prime Minister Mark Rutte and his center-right VVD party remain best positioned to head up the country's next coalition government.

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In a highly fractured and divisive race dominated by the issues of immigration and integration, voter turnout was much more robust than previous elections, with exit polling showing turnout sky-rocket to a 31-year high of 82 percent, up 17 percentage points from 2012.

In fact, the looming figure cut by Wilders transformed the country's typically low-profile election into an international spectacle. Thanks to Brexit and President Donald Trump's surprise November win, the crowded Dutch election was billed by international media as a "bellwether vote" for populism and the future of Europe.

The results no doubt will be seen not only as a personal blow for Wilders, but a sharp rebuke of the surging populism growing across Europe in recent years.

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