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Dutch parties aiming for rare minority coalition government

By Thomson Reuters Jan 9, 2026 | 9:54 AM

AMSTERDAM, Jan 9 (Reuters) – Government formation talks in the Netherlands will be aimed at forming a ‍rare minority cabinet, leaders of the three prospective coalition parties said on Friday.

Negotiations are set to continue between the centrist, pro-EU D66 party, which won the ‌election last October, the ‌conservative Christian Democrats and the right-wing VVD.

This coalition would hold 66 seats in the 150-seat lower house of parliament, and would ​have to seek support on a case-by-case basis from other parties ‍for its policies.

The ​Netherlands is usually led by ​majority coalitions, but the heavily fractured ‍political landscape has made it increasingly difficult to assemble one.

After the October election, all major mainstream parties ruled out governing with anti-Muslim populist Geert ‍Wilders after he brought down the last government, led by his PVV.

The VVD ruled ‍out ‍working with the left-wing Green/Labour ​combination, whose inclusion was ​the ⁠only option for a solid ‌majority.

D66, for its part, objected to including the Eurosceptic, conservative JA21, which could have brought up the seat total to 75.

(Reporting by Bart Meijer; Editing by ⁠Kevin Liffey)