Amsterdam has not much on with the PVV

Gepubliceerd op 19 maart 2016 om 11:35

If municipal elections be held now, WINS green left in Amsterdam the most terrain. PVV hardly gets foot to the ground.

Rutger Groot Wassink van GroenLinks (rechts)  zou bij nieuwe verkiezingen de grote winnaar zijn. Jan Paternotte van D66 (links) kan de enorme winst uit 2014 niet vasthouden.

Locals go in against a number of rural trends, according to a poll that service research, information and statistics (OIS) has held in command of Het Parool.

Thus, the PVV, which in the polls for the second Room is the largest party in the city, does not go beyond such a 7.5%. This is good for three to four of the 45 seats, with which the party of Geert Wilders in the middle bracket.

Eighty percent of the people of Amsterdam certainly will not vote on the PVV, twelve percent indicates this is probably not to do or are not sure yet. The trailer can thus be higher.

The growth in Amsterdam is bigger than the rural, so I conclude also that the people of Amsterdam our way of opposition in the City Council appreciate Rutger Groot Wassink, group Chairman green left Amsterdam during the last elections, for the European Parliament in 2014, voted eight percent of Locals on the PVV, more than 16000 in total.

Green left today is exactly two years after the elections, with which the municipality Council half way through her term. Green Links would be the big winner in new elections. The party rises from 10.7 to 15.1%.

This follows Amsterdam called the rural trend, because since Jesse Clover in may 2015 was elected political leader as a successor of Bram van Ojik Committee, Green Left also on gains in the House.

"But the growth in Amsterdam is bigger than the rural, so I conclude also that the people of Amsterdam our way of opposition in the City Council appreciate," says Rutger Groot Wassink, leader of Greenleft in Amsterdam.

I am glad that we are still the largest are Jan P, group Chairman D66 D66 keeps profit not fixed the Amsterdam coalition parties are losing ground. D66, the huge profits from 2014 not stick and drops nearly five percentage points. The party benefited in the previous Council elections of the great reckoning with the PvdA: at the last minute chose many Amsterdammers for D66 to ensure that that would be the largest party and not the Social Democrats.
"But prior to that municipal elections we scored a lot lower in the polls than now," responds Jan P, political leader of D66 in Amsterdam. "I am glad that we are still the greatest."

Coalition enjoyed SP loses light, while the party nationwide have seats WINS. VVD in Amsterdam remains practically the same.

The Labour Party, which in the national polls year, the loss in Amsterdam limited and remains the second party in the city.

The party for the animals is in the race for a second seat, just as, to a lesser extent, the CDA. On the other hand, the party of the elderly threatens to disappear from the Board.

http://www.parool.nl/ by: MICHIEL CAPON photo: Jean Pierre Jans

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