The Dutch Labour Party leader, Wouter Bos, is resigning and is leaving the political scene entirely. Once tipped as a potential prime minister, the politician says he’s stepping down as he doesn’t want to miss his children growing up.
He says he will not be leading Labour into elections scheduled for 9 June and will no longer be available for any political posts, including being an MP. He has led Labour since 2002.
The Amsterdam Mayor, Job Cohen, a political heavyweight, is widely seen as the most likely candidate to replace Mr Bos as Labour leader.
Until three weeks ago Wouter Bos was deputy prime minister in the governing coalition, but the cabinet fell in a dispute over extending the Dutch troop mission in Afghanistan.
A clash with Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende, from the Christian Democrat CDA, over the issue led to Wouter Bos pulling his ministers out of the government, triggering its collapse.
Reactions
Shocked. Amazed. Disappointed. These were some of the reactions to Wouter Bos' announcement. The Labour leader says he wants to spend more time with his wife and three children.
"If I were to continue and become prime minister, I would completely miss seeing my own children grow up. That is not worth it."
The coalition between his Labour Party and the Christian CDA was never easy for Wouter Bos. He had to compromise on a number of his party's fundamental standpoints, including giving up on an inquiry into Dutch support for the US invasion of Iraq.
In the end, it proved one compromise too many and Mr Bos brought the cabinet down when he refused to talk about options of extending the Dutch troop mission in Afghanistan.
Dented reputation
The Labour Party benefited in public opinion polls from the fall of the cabinet, and went on to limit its losses in municipal elections ten days later. Nevertheless, after three years of governing, Mr Bos' image had suffered.
The same can be said about Christian Democrat leader Jan Peter Balkenende. Except that, for Mr Balkenende, this was his fourth cabinet in eight years and his party very quickly re-elected him as their leader going into elections in June. But many say the country is tired of Mr Balkenende as prime minister, and question his ability to lead a strong cabinet.
Dutch politics is going through a particularly turbulent period. The rise of Geert Wilder's far-right Freedom Party, and the loss of support for the three dominant parties, Labour, the Christian Democrats and the Conservative VVD, has turned the political scene on its head.
Change of guard
Other Dutch politicians have also been falling on their swords in recent days, Camiel Eurlings, widely regarded as the successor to Christian Democrat leader Jan Peter Balkenende, also withdrew from political life.
Mr Eurlings says he would like to start a family. The 36-year-old does not want to be a new father when he is already in his fifties.
The resignations of the two leaders, along with last week's resignation of Socialist Party leader Agnes Kant, signal a changing of the guard in Dutch politics as parliamentary elections loom.
The Christian Democrats have a well-known figure leading them into June's parliamentary elections in Jan Peter Balkenende. The Labour Party, like the Socialist Party, has to start from scratch. This is highly unusual so close to an election.
But unlike the Socialist Party, with almost unknown Emile Roemer taking over, the Labour Party will turn to Amsterdam Mayor Job Cohen, already a national figure. He will see if he can lead the Labour Party to its first win in a parliamentary election since 1998.























..just to finish point below..
I think Bos's quick exit out the sidedoor invites comparisons with another story reported today from Denmark.
The leader of the Danish research group that produced several key studies that mercury-laden vaccines were safe for children has disappeared with $2m in research money after investigations into possible fraudulent research started closing in.
Just as the obvious statistical relationship between autism and mercury in vaccines became too undeniable to cover up anymore, so too Bos, the facilitor-defender of the Dutch multicultural experiment, has realised there is no credibility in his argument anymore and will now leave it to others to deal with the aftermath.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-f-kennedy-jr/central-figure-in-cdc-...
Trust some Anonymous Poster Extrapolator [ APE ] to "reason" by innuendo.
Mr. Bos is not leaving with the cash-box. Period. Nor does that Danish red-herring "autism & mercury" stuff have anything to do with this departure from Dutch politics.
Nor... etc.,
So long
Last week Bos got destroyed by Wilders when they went toe-to-toe (literally) on a televised debate:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t80ShDaNxB8
Wilders called him out for what he and his party of socialist dreamers have done to facilitate the destruction of Dutch society...maybe the penny finally dropped. Now he has done the honorable thing and withdrawn from public life to contemplate watching his children growing up as a minority ethnic group in their own country.
Perhaps he also saw himself caricatured in this amusing parody that is going viral in netherlands at the moment:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BwXh3aAF0Nw
The only thing clear from that debate is:
a) Wilders is a rude SOB; who speaks out of turn, and who slanders.
b) Wilders needs a new barber. [ Why is a guy of mixed race so keen to wanna be a "blondje"? ]
Bos - time and again - defended traditional Dutch tolerance; even the right of Wilders to be the idiot he is. Wilders' own family benefited from this [racial] tolerance.
Wilders is a narcissistic trouble maker who lacks that fundamental [traditional] Dutch tolerance. In CANADA he would be running afoul of our HATE LAWS. What a piece of work!
Wonder why has family become so important for these two Dutch politicians!!! Never heard of this excuse to leave politics: to see their children grow!!!! A strange period for Netherlands...The man who brings down the national house, leaves to manage his family...What's the real reason? He could have resigned before and let the government complete the tenure...Completely irresponsible leader!
Add to that how people in the CDA are openly questioning why BALKENENDE is also not examining his options. Many feel they have seen enough. Three cabinets that did not make it to the end-of-term,
under his
"leadership"
.
See http://www.rnw.nl/english/video/week-netherlands-20#comment-25750
""The man who brings down the house""...
Well indeed, the coalition collapsed because Mr. Bos and his party could no longer support the shenanigans of the Balkenende Bunch. Aka "enough was enough".
Given that that created a "check-point" it means that Mr. Bos did the right thing in evaluating if he was prepared to commit to another [minimum] 4-5 years in the saddle, most likely as the next PM.;
There are few people who would put family over personal ambition. My hat off to Wout Bos
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