Forum for Democracy
Forum for Democracy (Dutch: Forum voor Democratie; FVD) is a Dutch political party founded in 2016 by Thierry Baudet, initially as a think tank focused on democratic reform before evolving into an electoral force emphasizing national sovereignty and freedom.[1] The party advocates returning decision-making power to the national level, prioritizing Dutch law over supranational institutions, halting asylum and naturalization for a decade, promoting remigration, and safeguarding Dutch cultural identity against globalist influences.[1] FVD entered the House of Representatives in 2017 with two seats after receiving 1.8% of the vote, but surged in the 2019 provincial elections by capitalizing on anti-establishment sentiment, winning the most votes and indirectly securing the largest bloc in the Senate.[2][3] This breakthrough positioned it as a key player in indirect Senate elections and highlighted its critique of EU overreach and environmental policies perceived as economically damaging.[4] Subsequent internal divisions, including revelations of extremist communications in its youth organization and Baudet's temporary resignation amid Nazi-related scandals in 2020, triggered mass defections and a sharp electoral decline, reducing its House seats to five in 2021 and three by 2023.[5][2] Despite these setbacks, Baudet retained leadership, and the party continues to critique conspiracy-laden narratives in governance while preparing for the 2025 general elections.[6][7]
History
Origins as a think tank (2015–2016)
The Forum for Democracy was established in February 2015 by Thierry Baudet, a legal scholar with a PhD from Leiden University specializing in constitutional law and international relations, and Henk Otten, an economist, as a non-partisan think tank foundation.[8] The organization aimed to foster debates on core principles of democracy, national identity, and the effects of supranational structures like the European Union on Dutch sovereignty.[8] Baudet's intellectual framework, rooted in causal analysis of cultural and political stability, emphasized oikophilia—a profound attachment to one's homeland and heritage—as essential for societal cohesion, countering what he identified as elite-driven oikophobia, or self-loathing toward native traditions that undermines independent nation-states.[9] Early activities centered on critiquing European integration through empirical scrutiny of policy outcomes rather than ideological alignment. The think tank produced analyses highlighting risks of EU expansionism, arguing that supranational commitments dilute democratic accountability and expose member states to uncompensated liabilities.[10] A pivotal event was its opposition to the EU-Ukraine Association Agreement, which Forum for Democracy contended posed direct threats to Dutch interests, including potential fiscal drains and entanglement in geopolitical conflicts without reciprocal gains.[11] In the advisory referendum on the agreement held on April 6, 2016, the organization mobilized public discourse against ratification, stressing first-principles evaluation of costs—such as estimated billions in aid obligations—and benefits, which it deemed negligible for the Netherlands amid Ukraine's instability.[10] This stance reflected the think tank's foundational commitment to prioritizing verifiable national priorities over abstract internationalist ideals, drawing on Baudet's prior writings that linked cultural self-preservation to effective governance.[9] The 'No' vote, which prevailed with 61% turnout, underscored the resonance of these critiques, though the agreement proceeded with modifications post-referendum.[12]Entry into electoral politics (2017–2018)
Forum for Democracy formally registered as a political party on September 25, 2016, transitioning from its origins as a think tank founded in February 2015 by Thierry Baudet and others to contest elections.[8] This move positioned the group to challenge the established political order, with Baudet emerging as its prominent leader and public face, advocating for structural reforms to enhance democratic participation.[13] In the lead-up to the Dutch general election on March 15, 2017, the party's campaign centered on promoting direct democracy mechanisms, such as binding referendums, to empower citizens against policies perceived as driven by unaccountable elites and the "kartel" of mainstream parties. Baudet, heading the list, emphasized intellectual critiques of multiculturalism and supranational integration, drawing on his background as a publicist and academic to appeal to disillusioned voters seeking alternatives to conventional politics. The nascent organization relied on private donations for funding, underscoring its commitment to independence from government subsidies during its formative electoral phase.[14] The party secured 86,660 votes, or 1.79% of the national total, earning two seats in the House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer) through strong preferential voting for Baudet and his running mate Theo Hiddema, a well-known lawyer.[15] These modest gains highlighted an emerging anti-establishment niche, particularly among younger and educated demographics frustrated with the post-2010 coalition dynamics, without yet disrupting the broader parliamentary balance. In 2018, the party focused on consolidating its parliamentary presence, with Baudet actively participating in debates to amplify its platform, though it avoided major alliances or expansions beyond initial footholds.[15]Provincial breakthrough and Senate gains (2019)
![Thierry Baudet (2018)][float-right] In the Dutch provincial elections on 20 March 2019, Forum for Democracy (FVD) secured 86 seats in the Provincial States, achieving 14.53% of the vote and becoming the largest party nationwide.[16] This outcome stemmed from widespread voter dissatisfaction with immigration policies and EU integration, intensified by the Utrecht tram attack on 18 March 2019, which Baudet publicly linked to the failures of multiculturalism.[17] The party's eurosceptic platform resonated amid perceptions of elite detachment from national interests.[18] FVD's campaign leveraged social media platforms like Twitter to disseminate Baudet's distinctive rhetoric, blending intellectual critique with populist appeals that critiqued "oikophobia"—a term Baudet used for self-loathing cultural attitudes.[19] This approach effectively mobilized disillusioned voters, including a notable share of younger demographics seeking alternatives to traditional parties.[6] Baudet's suave, non-confrontational style contrasted with Geert Wilders' PVV, attracting voters wary of overt extremism while capturing anti-establishment sentiment.[20][21] The provincial gains translated into 12 seats in the Senate via the indirect election on 27 May 2019, positioning FVD as a pivotal opposition force and contributing to the ruling coalition's loss of majority.[22][23] In this chamber, FVD's eurosceptic senators opposed EU-aligned initiatives, including stringent climate measures and migration frameworks, often blocking or complicating their advancement by denying procedural majorities and forcing renegotiations on sovereignty concerns.[24] Their influence underscored a shift toward greater scrutiny of supranational policies in Dutch upper-house deliberations.[25]National elections and coalition experiments (2020–2021)
In the period leading to the Dutch general election of March 15–17, 2021, Forum for Democracy intensified its criticism of the national government's COVID-19 policies, portraying lockdowns and associated restrictions as an authoritarian overreach without historical precedent in pandemic management. The party argued that such measures infringed on civil liberties and economic freedoms, advocating instead for targeted protections over blanket impositions. This stance resonated amid public fatigue with prolonged closures, though it also drew accusations of downplaying health risks from opponents.[26] FVD entered the election with momentum from its 2019 provincial successes, emphasizing national sovereignty, reduced EU influence, and resistance to what it termed "globalist" agendas including stringent pandemic responses. The campaign highlighted empirical data on lockdown impacts, such as elevated youth mental health issues and business bankruptcies, to substantiate claims of disproportionate harm. In the results, certified by the Kiesraad on March 26, 2021, FVD garnered 343,418 votes, equating to 5.09% of the valid national vote share and securing 8 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives—an increase from 2 seats in 2017. This outcome positioned FVD as the eighth-largest party, reflecting voter shifts toward anti-establishment options amid the childcare benefits scandal and pandemic discontent.[27][28] Post-election and concurrent provincial maneuvers revealed FVD's challenges in forging alliances, particularly with center-right groups like the VVD and CDA. In several provinces, FVD explored support for coalition formations but clashed over nitrogen emissions policies, which the party criticized as pseudoscientific barriers to housing development and farming sustainability. FVD proposed exempting construction projects from rigid nitrogen thresholds to enable rapid home building, arguing that current rules—stemming from 2019 court rulings—exacerbated shortages without verifiable biodiversity gains. These tensions manifested in failed negotiations, such as in Gelderland and Noord-Brabant, where FVD's demands for policy concessions on emissions and land use alienated potential partners prioritizing EU-compliant environmental targets.[29] FVD's platform and electoral performance empirically pressured mainstream parties to recalibrate on immigration, widening the Overton window for restrictionist measures. Pre-2021, center-right platforms had softened on inflows; by the election cycle, VVD rhetoric shifted toward caps on asylum and family reunification, mirroring FVD's calls for border controls and remigration incentives—evidenced by VVD's manifesto pledging reduced non-Western migration to preserve cultural cohesion and fiscal capacity. Similar adjustments appeared in CDA positions, with leaders citing public opinion data showing majority support for limits, attributable in analyses to radical right gains like FVD's forcing competitive adaptation rather than ideological convergence. This dynamic underscored FVD's indirect influence, as vote shares for sovereignty-focused parties correlated with mainstream concessions on previously taboo topics.[30]Internal splits and leadership consolidation (2021–2022)
In late 2020, escalating tensions within Forum for Democracy (FVD) culminated in revelations from the party's youth wing, Jong Forum voor Democratie (JFVD), where leaked WhatsApp chats from November exposed members endorsing Nazi imagery, antisemitic conspiracy theories, and skepticism toward COVID-19 measures framed in Holocaust analogies. Party leader Thierry Baudet responded by suspending the JFVD on November 23 and temporarily stepping down as chairman the next day to mitigate reputational harm, though he resumed leadership within weeks after internal reviews. This episode prompted formal investigations by Dutch authorities into potential extremism and accelerated member departures, with critics attributing the scandal to Baudet's tolerance of fringe elements in pursuit of ideological intensity.[5][2] The crisis spilled into 2021, marked by high-profile exits framing a divide between Baudet's centralized control—accused by detractors of authoritarian tendencies—and demands for broader ideological discipline. In December 2020, senators Annabel Nanninga and Joost Eerdmans, along with others, defected to establish JA21 on December 18, citing Baudet's handling of the youth scandal as evidence of erratic governance undermining electoral viability ahead of the March 2021 general election. Further fragmentation occurred post-election, when MPs Wybren van Haga, Hans Smolders, and Olaf Ephraim broke away on May 13, 2021, to form an independent parliamentary group later evolving into Belang van Nederland; van Haga, who garnered nearly as many preference votes as Baudet in the national tally, criticized the leader's strategic missteps and perceived neglect of coalition-building opportunities. These splits reduced FVD's Senate representation from eight to two seats and its lower house presence, reflecting flux driven by disagreements over party purity versus pragmatic conservatism.[31][32] Amid the departures, Baudet reaffirmed his authority by purging dissenters and refocusing the party on core tenets of national sovereignty and cultural preservation, portraying leavers as moderates diluting FVD's anti-establishment edge. By mid-2022, with parliamentary numbers stabilized at five lower house seats following the 2021 vote, Baudet's unchallenged tenure—uncontested by formal leadership votes—signaled consolidation around a loyal base prioritizing uncompromised nationalism over broader alliances, even as membership volatility persisted. This period's internal realignment positioned FVD for subsequent strategic recalibrations, insulated from further major fractures under Baudet's direction.[31]Electoral setbacks and strategic shifts (2023–present)
In the 2023 general election for the House of Representatives held on November 22, FVD secured three seats with approximately 2.5% of the vote, a significant decline from its previous eight seats.[33][34] This result was widely attributed to vote fragmentation among right-wing voters, particularly competition with the Party for Freedom (PVV), which captured a larger share of anti-immigration sentiment amid public frustration with asylum policies and cultural integration challenges.[35] Despite the losses, FVD maintained a vocal parliamentary presence, consistently opposing EU fiscal transfers, such as contributions to the European Stability Mechanism and support for Ukraine, arguing these undermined Dutch sovereignty and taxpayer interests without reciprocal benefits.[34] Facing ongoing government instability—including the collapse of the Schoof cabinet in 2025 due to coalition disputes over migration and budget priorities—FVD adapted by emphasizing anti-globalist critiques of supranational institutions and advocating for national self-determination.[36] The party intensified campaigns on immigration controls, cultural preservation, and skepticism toward expansive EU integration, positioning itself as an alternative to mainstream parties perceived as complicit in open-border policies. In preparation for the snap elections scheduled for October 29, 2025, FVD pursued direct democracy mechanisms, renewing calls for binding referendums on EU membership and treaty revisions to enable a potential "Nexit" if public support materialized.[37] A key strategic shift occurred in August 2025 when Thierry Baudet stepped down as lead candidate, nominating Lidewij de Vos, a recent MP, to head the list and appeal to younger voters disillusioned with establishment politics.[37][38] Baudet cited the need to refresh the party's image amid persistent scrutiny over past internal controversies, while retaining influence as founder. Polling ahead of the 2025 vote placed FVD at low single digits, reflecting challenges in differentiating from larger rivals but sustaining focus on core issues like halting mass migration and reforming EU fiscal policies.[39] This repositioning aimed to consolidate a niche opposition role, prioritizing principled stands on sovereignty over short-term electoral gains.Ideology and political positions
Nationalism and sovereignty
The Forum for Democracy (FVD) posits that the European Union's supranational structure has systematically undermined Dutch sovereignty by transferring key decision-making powers from national parliaments to unelected Brussels institutions, necessitating either radical reform toward a loose confederation of sovereign states or an orderly exit via referendum. Party leader Thierry Baudet has articulated this view in public statements, arguing that the EU's centralized model erodes the foundational legitimacy of the nation-state, where sovereignty derives from the people's direct consent rather than delegated bureaucracy. Empirical evidence cited by FVD includes the Netherlands' status as a major net financial contributor to the EU budget; in 2023, the country paid over €3 billion more into the EU than it received back, equivalent to substantial opportunity costs for domestic priorities.[40] Additionally, EU-derived regulations impose significant administrative burdens on Dutch businesses and citizens, with the Netherlands maintaining an Advisory Board on Regulatory Burden to assess and mitigate these impacts, often highlighting directives originating from EU legislation as sources of compliance costs estimated in billions of euros annually.[41] To counteract this perceived sovereignty loss, FVD advocates for expanded direct democratic mechanisms, including mandatory plebiscites on treaties, constitutional changes, and major international commitments, positioning these as essential safeguards for popular accountability. The party draws parallels to Switzerland's semi-direct democracy, where frequent referendums on federal laws and initiatives have sustained political stability and public trust by embedding citizen veto power against elite overreach. FVD's platform emphasizes that such tools would restore decision-making to the Dutch populace, preventing the ratification of agreements like the EU-Ukraine association pact without broad consent, as demonstrated in their support for the 2016 advisory referendum that rejected it. This approach aligns with Baudet's writings on the need for "binding referendums" to enforce the will of the majority on sovereignty-defining issues.[42] FVD further contends that supranational integration dilutes national cultural cohesion, which forms the bedrock of institutional trust and social solidarity, by prioritizing abstract cosmopolitan ideals over organic communal bonds. Baudet has critiqued this dynamic as fostering "oikophobia"—a self-loathing aversion to one's own culture—exacerbated by EU policies that homogenize identities and erode borders. Supporting data from cross-national surveys indicate that stronger national identity correlates with higher interpersonal and institutional trust, whereas supranational attachments show weaker links to social cohesion in diverse member states.[43] The party argues that reclaiming sovereignty would reinvigorate Dutch cultural preservation and public confidence in governance, countering the observed decline in trust toward EU institutions amid persistent integration efforts.[44]Immigration and cultural preservation
Forum for Democracy proposes a ten-year moratorium on asylum grants and naturalization to reclaim national border control, advocating withdrawal from the Schengen Agreement, UN Refugee Convention, and other restrictive international treaties, supplemented by biometric surveillance and modern border infrastructure.[30] The party prioritizes remigration through targeted incentives like scholarships and return coaching to achieve a negative net migration flow, alongside denaturalization of dual nationals convicted of serious crimes and penalties for illegal residence, including closure of asylum centers and taxation of migrant remittances up to 40 percent.[30] It underscores integration failures manifested in parallel societies and declining social cohesion, requiring periodic proof of societal contributions for residency extensions every five years and deferring social benefits until after ten years of employment.[45] FVD cites disproportionate welfare strains from non-Western inflows, with lifetime costs per migrant ranging from €375,000 for Syrians to €688,000 for Somalis, and annual national expenditures escalating to €27 billion in the past decade, fueling demands for a selective Green Card system limited to temporary, high-value labor.[45] The party rejects multiculturalism as a policy that erodes Dutch identity and imposes avoidable social fragmentation, projecting that migration backgrounds could encompass 40 percent of the population by 2050 according to official estimates.[45] This stance aligns with empirical observations, such as Robert Putnam's analysis showing ethnic diversity linked to reduced interpersonal trust, lower civic participation, and community "hunkering down" across diverse U.S. locales, which FVD extends to critique assimilation deficits in the Netherlands. Forum for Democracy, through leader Thierry Baudet's framework of oikophobia, frames cultural preservation as resistance to Western self-loathing that normalizes relativism, asserting the need to safeguard indigenous norms against unintegrated mass inflows that alter public spaces and traditions.[30]Economic liberalism and fiscal conservatism
The Forum for Democracy advocates economic liberalism through substantial tax reductions and deregulation to foster entrepreneurship and growth, arguing that high taxation and bureaucratic hurdles stifle innovation and individual initiative. The party proposes a flat income tax rate of 20% with a tax-free threshold of €30,000 for all workers and pensioners, alongside simplification by eliminating complex brackets and deductions.[46] It also seeks to lower VAT rates to 19% (standard) and 6% (reduced), abolish inheritance and gift taxes, and reduce energy taxes such as electricity to €0.11 per kWh and natural gas to €0.17 per cubic meter, contending that such measures would enhance disposable income and economic dynamism without artificial wealth redistribution.[47] Deregulation efforts target small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) and self-employed (ZZP) workers by raising the corporate tax threshold to €1 million, increasing the ZZP deduction to €15,000, scrapping the UBO register and Wet DBA, and limiting employer sick pay liability to one year, positing that reduced regulatory burdens causally link to higher business formation and productivity.[47] Fiscal conservatism forms a core tenet, with commitments to shrink central government expenditures by 3% annually to fund only essential public tasks like defense and infrastructure, critiquing expansive state intervention as a driver of stagnation and inefficiency.[46] The party opposes welfare expansions that induce dependency, favoring reforms such as lowering the state pension age to 66 while indexing benefits to pre-2015 levels with retroactive payments, and redirecting savings from immigration costs (€27 billion annually) and climate subsidies (€1,000 billion total) toward tax relief rather than perpetuating entitlements.[47] This restraint extends to skepticism of corporate subsidies, particularly to multinationals, prioritizing SME empowerment over favoritism toward large firms, as evidenced by Thierry Baudet's public emphasis on defending medium-sized entrepreneurs against both left-wing minima-focused policies and right-wing multinational biases.[48] On international finance, the Forum for Democracy rejects eurozone bailouts as moral hazards that encourage fiscal irresponsibility and erode national sovereignty, advocating Nexit and euro exit to prevent Dutch taxpayers from subsidizing profligate EU partners.[47] Empirical precedents, such as the Greek debt crisis where bailouts exceeded €280 billion without structural reforms leading to sustained growth, underscore their view that such transfers distort incentives and burden prudent economies like the Netherlands, which contributed over €50 billion in net EU payments since 2010.[49] Instead, the party promotes independent fiscal policy to align spending with domestic priorities, linking oversized supranational commitments to suppressed national growth rates observed in eurozone peripherals post-2008.[47]Environmental realism and skepticism of green agendas
Forum for Democracy (FVD) espouses environmental realism, contesting alarmist interpretations of climate data and prioritizing empirical evidence over consensus-driven narratives. The party maintains that claims of an existential climate crisis lack substantiation, pointing to discrepancies between observed temperature trends and projections from climate models, which have consistently overestimated warming rates since the 1990s. For instance, satellite measurements indicate global warming of approximately 0.14°C per decade from 1979 to 2023, below many model ensembles' predictions of 0.2–0.3°C per decade. FVD leaders, including Thierry Baudet, highlight the fertilizing effects of elevated CO2 levels, which have contributed to a 14% increase in global vegetation cover between 1982 and 2015, countering narratives of uniform ecological harm. This skepticism extends to rejecting net-zero emission targets by 2050 as economically ruinous, estimating that full implementation could cost the Dutch economy hundreds of billions of euros in lost productivity and higher energy prices without verifiable climate benefits.[50][51] Leveraging the Netherlands' expertise in hydraulic engineering and delta management—evidenced by successful containment of sea-level rise through dikes and polders managing over 26% of the country's land below sea level—FVD advocates adaptation-focused policies over mitigation mandates. The party argues that historical Dutch innovations in flood control demonstrate human ingenuity's capacity to address environmental challenges without sacrificing industrial capacity, citing IPCC reports' own admissions of uncertainty in sea-level projections (ranging from 0.28–1.01 meters by 2100 under various scenarios). Rather than pursuing deindustrialization via carbon taxes or emission caps, FVD calls for halting subsidies to intermittent renewables like wind and solar, which suffer reliability issues due to weather dependency and require costly backup systems, as seen in Germany's Energiewende where energy prices rose 50% above EU averages by 2022.[47] FVD favors investment in nuclear power for baseload energy security, viewing it as a dense, low-emission alternative that avoids the intermittency pitfalls of subsidized green technologies. The party's 2025 election program proposes expanding small modular reactors, drawing on France's model where nuclear supplies 70% of electricity at stable costs, in contrast to Dutch reliance on imports during wind lulls. This stance underscores opposition to the EU Green Deal, which FVD characterizes as a supranational scheme eroding national sovereignty by imposing binding emission reductions and redistributing funds via the Just Transition Mechanism—totaling €17.5 billion for 2021–2027—effectively transferring fiscal control to Brussels. FVD MEPs, such as Rob Roos, have voted against the European Climate Law, arguing it circumvents democratic accountability in pursuit of unproven decarbonization goals.[50][47][52]Foreign policy: Euroscepticism and national interests
The Forum for Democracy (FVD) promotes a foreign policy centered on Dutch sovereignty and neutrality, drawing inspiration from Switzerland's model of armed neutrality and economic self-reliance. The party rejects supranational decision-making in international affairs, arguing that the European Union (EU) undermines national control over borders, trade, and defense. FVD calls for an "intelligente uittreding" (intelligent exit) from the EU, or Nexit, to join the European Free Trade Association (EFTA) alongside countries like Norway and Iceland, thereby regaining autonomy in foreign relations while maintaining free trade access without political integration.[49] This stance prioritizes bilateral trade agreements over EU-led multilateral deals, such as CETA or MERCOSUR, which the party views as detrimental to Dutch economic interests by imposing supranational standards.[53] In defense matters, FVD emphasizes bolstering national capabilities for deterrence, including improved military compensation, cyber defenses, and a domestic arms industry, while opposing conscription and foreign control over Dutch troops. The party supports reviewing NATO membership through a referendum, favoring independent defense investments over strict adherence to alliance spending targets, and explicitly rejects EU army proposals as erosions of sovereignty; a 2025 FVD motion against an integrated European force was adopted by the Dutch parliament.[53][54] This realist approach posits that alliances should serve concrete Dutch security needs rather than idealistic multilateral commitments, with the guiding principle that "in foreign policy, there are no friends or enemies—only interests."[53] FVD has criticized extensive Dutch aid to Ukraine, totaling over €6 billion in military and financial support by mid-2025, as fiscally unsustainable given domestic pressures like housing shortages and infrastructure deficits.[55] The party demands an immediate halt to funding the conflict and opposes deploying Dutch personnel, advocating instead for diplomatic normalization with Russia to safeguard energy supplies and trade routes essential to the Netherlands' export economy.[53][55] This position reflects a broader skepticism of interventionism, favoring de-escalation and national resource allocation over open-ended commitments that could escalate to direct involvement.[53]Social issues: Family, education, and traditional values
The Forum for Democracy opposes the integration of transgender ideology into school curricula and youth programming, arguing that it introduces confusing ideological messages that unsettle children and undermine parental authority.[56] The party has campaigned against what it describes as LGBTQ indoctrination starting from primary education, exemplified by its "Stop Woke" petition and public critiques of gender ideology's impact on young minds.[57] In broader education policy, FVD emphasizes restoring the Dutch language as the foundational element of instruction across all levels, while reducing administrative burdens to empower teachers with greater professional discretion.[58] To address the Netherlands' demographic challenges, including a total fertility rate of 1.43 children per woman in 2023—the lowest since records began in 1901—FVD links native population decline to eroding traditional family structures and advocates cultural measures to bolster nuclear families as a counter to replacement-level shortfalls. Party leader Thierry Baudet has highlighted how sustained low birth rates among ethnic Dutch, even absent further immigration, threaten majority status, framing revival of pro-family norms as essential for societal continuity.[59] FVD upholds traditional values by resisting cancel culture's chilling effects on discourse, positioning robust free speech protections as vital against institutional pressures that stifle heterodox views and hinder intellectual progress.[60] The party critiques progressive orthodoxies in education and media for prioritizing conformity over evidence-based inquiry, advocating instead for policies that safeguard familial autonomy and cultural heritage from ideological overreach.[56]Electoral performance
Senate and provincial elections
In the Dutch political system, seats in the Senate (Eerste Kamer) are allocated indirectly through elections to the provincial councils (Provinciale Staten), where council members subsequently vote for senators based on national party lists using a proportional system weighted by provincial population. Forum voor Democratie (FVD) first contested provincial elections in 2019, achieving a breakthrough that granted it substantial influence in the Senate despite lacking direct voter input for that chamber. This positioned FVD as a pivotal player capable of blocking government initiatives requiring a simple majority of 38 seats out of 75.| Year | Provincial vote share | Total provincial seats won | Senate seats won |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 14.5% | 86 | 12 |
| 2023 | 3.1% | 18 | 5 |
House of Representatives elections
In the 2017 general election held on March 15, Forum for Democracy (FVD) secured 86,660 votes, equivalent to 1.79 percent of the national vote, earning 2 seats in the 150-seat House of Representatives (Tweede Kamer).[67] This modest debut aligned with rising public concerns over EU sovereignty and immigration following the 2015-2016 European migrant crisis, where FVD's campaign emphasized national self-determination and skepticism toward supranational policies.[68]| Election Year | Vote Share (%) | Seats Won | Change in Seats |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 1.79 | 2 | +2 (from 0) |
| 2021 | 5.13 | 8 | +6 |
| 2023 | 2.36 | 3 | -5 |
European Parliament elections
In the 2019 European Parliament election held on 23 May, Forum for Democracy (FVD) achieved a breakthrough by securing three seats with 7.2% of the vote, marking its entry into the EP as a proponent of Dutch sovereignty against EU federalism.[73] The party's MEPs—Derk Jan Eppink, Rob Roos, and Simone Grimbergen—aligned with the Identity and Democracy (ID) group, a sovereignist caucus emphasizing national interests over supranational integration.[74] Within ID, FVD contributed to efforts advocating deregulation and critiquing the EU's bureaucratic overreach, arguing that centralized powers undermine member states' democratic accountability. FVD's EP representatives consistently highlighted the institution's democratic deficit, citing empirical evidence such as chronically low voter turnout—50.66% EU-wide in 2019—and the frequent realignment of MEPs across groups post-election, which dilutes voter mandates. They opposed federalist initiatives like deeper fiscal union, positioning themselves as defenders of intergovernmental cooperation over erosion of national vetoes. This stance resonated with ID's broader push for repatriating competencies, as evidenced by joint resolutions calling for reduced EP legislative scope in areas like migration and trade. In the 2024 European Parliament election on 6 June, FVD participated but failed to retain seats, garnering only 2.49% of the vote amid internal party turmoil and competition from other right-wing groups like PVV.[75] The absence of FVD representation underscored challenges in sustaining EP momentum, though its prior term reinforced sovereignist critiques of the EP's limited direct legitimacy compared to national parliaments.Municipal and other local results
In the 2018 municipal elections held on March 21, Forum for Democracy contested seats in approximately 61 municipalities and secured representation in several, including 3 seats on the Amsterdam city council with 5.8% of the local vote.[76] The party's campaigns emphasized local autonomy against central government interference, such as opposition to imposed housing development quotas and asylum seeker distribution mandates, appealing to voters in suburban and urban-fringe areas concerned with preserving community control over land use and demographics.[77] Performance varied regionally, with stronger showings in municipalities on the periphery of major cities like The Hague and Rotterdam, where national issues of cultural preservation intersected with local disputes over zoning and migrant integration. However, FVD's overall local gains remained modest compared to its breakthrough in the concurrent national provincial elections, highlighting a disconnect between national momentum driven by leader Thierry Baudet and weaker grassroots mobilization.[78] By the 2022 municipal elections on March 16, internal divisions—exacerbated by scandals involving extremism allegations and party youth wing controversies—led to the dissolution or independence of numerous local branches, limiting coordinated participation.[34] FVD entered races in over 80 municipalities but achieved only marginal results, gaining presence in most councils yet few substantive seats due to fragmented vote shares below 2-3% in most locales. This underperformance stemmed partly from the party's model of personalized candidate lists, which prioritized individual appeal over unified branding and hindered scaling national support to local levels amid voter preference for established or independent local parties.[78][79] Local platforms continued to stress resistance to national housing quotas as erosions of municipal sovereignty, but these arguments failed to overcome the structural challenges of limited organizational depth.[77]Organization and leadership
Central leadership and Thierry Baudet's role
Thierry Baudet, born on February 1, 1983, transitioned from an academic career in history and law at Leiden University to political activism, earning a PhD in 2012 with a dissertation emphasizing the essential role of national borders in preserving sovereignty, representative democracy, and the rule of law. This intellectual foundation directly shaped the Forum for Democracy (FVD), which Baudet co-founded on December 19, 2016, initially as a think tank to critique the European Union's supranational structure following the Dutch rejection of the EU-Ukraine association agreement in a 2016 advisory referendum.[10] Baudet's strategic pivot transformed FVD into a political party by 2017, leveraging his public intellectual profile to position it as a vehicle for oikophilia—a term he coined for love of one's homeland—prioritizing cultural continuity and national self-determination over globalist integration.[10] As FVD's founder and perennial leader, Baudet maintains centralized control over the party's ideological and strategic direction, with decision-making processes revolving around his personal vision rather than broad internal consultation, reflecting a "personalist" model that prioritizes charismatic authority over institutionalized mass-party structures.[10] This approach has causally driven FVD's policy emphases, including direct democracy mechanisms like referendums and skepticism toward supranational entities, as Baudet's writings and speeches frame multiculturalism and EU federalism as existential threats to Dutch identity.[10] His influence manifested in electoral breakthroughs, such as FVD's unexpected dominance in the 2019 provincial elections, where Baudet's campaign rhetoric on immigration and sovereignty secured the party the most seats in the Senate, reshaping the Dutch right-wing landscape.[10] Amid internal crises in late 2020, including youth wing scandals involving extremist messaging that prompted mass resignations and Baudet's brief resignation on November 24, 2020, party members voted on December 4, 2020, to retain him as leader with approximately 65% support, affirming his grip despite defections and enabling FVD's continued operation into the 2021 general election. This retention underscores Baudet's causal role in sustaining the party's ideological coherence, as his retention vote hinged on members' alignment with his vision over factional alternatives, though it exacerbated organizational fragility by reinforcing top-down dynamics.[10]Party structure and membership trends
The Forum for Democracy (FVD) maintains a centralized organizational structure, with decision-making authority concentrated in its leadership board, chaired by founder Thierry Baudet, who exercises significant control over party direction and candidate selections.[80] This hierarchical model, implemented following rapid growth after the 2019 provincial elections, contrasts with the more diffuse, member-driven processes of traditional Dutch parties like the VVD or PvdA, prioritizing executive vetoes on internal proposals to ensure ideological coherence.[81] The party's statutes emphasize Baudet's role in resolving disputes and approving key initiatives, as evidenced by his override of a 2020 internal referendum where approximately 9,000 of 45,000 members voted against his continued leadership amid factional splits.[82] Membership in FVD surged following its breakthrough in the 2019 provincial elections, reaching a peak of 61,633 as of 1 January 2024, making it the largest political party in the Netherlands by this metric.[82] This growth persisted through internal crises, including high-profile departures in late 2020 and early 2021, but stabilized at elevated levels due to sustained recruitment via online campaigns and ideological appeals. By 1 January 2025, membership stood at 60,163, marking the first annual decline amid broader political shifts, though still far exceeding competitors like the PVV (no formal membership) or GroenLinks-PvdA (around 20,000).[82][83]| Year (1 January) | Membership |
|---|---|
| 2018 | 22,884 |
| 2019 | 30,674 |
| 2020 | 43,716 |
| 2021 | 45,322 |
| 2022 | 58,890 |
| 2023 | 61,284 |
| 2024 | 61,633 |
| 2025 | 60,163 |