Dutch Rutte Government Resigns Over Child Welfare Fraud Scandal
Mark Rutte's
government has stepped down after thousands of families were wrongly accused of
child welfare fraud and told to pay money back.
Families
suffered an "unparalleled wrong", Dutch MPs decided, with tax
officials, politicians, judges and civil servants leaving them powerless.
Many of
those affected were from an immigrant background and hundreds were plunged into
financial difficulty.
Mr Rutte
submitted the cabinet's resignation to the king.
"Innocent
people have been criminalised and their lives ruined," he then told
reporters, adding that responsibility for what had gone wrong lay with the
cabinet. "The buck stops here."
The
"unanimous" decision, taken at a cabinet meeting in The Hague, comes
at a key moment in the Covid-19 pandemic.
The
Netherlands has gone into lockdown and ministers have been considering stiffer
measures to halt the spread of infection.
The
government will stay on in a caretaker role to tackle the pandemic until
parliamentary elections in March but Economics Minister Eric Wiebes has quit
with immediate effect for his role in the scandal. Asked whether the cabinet's
resignation was merely symbolic, Mr Rutte was adamant that it was not.
This is not
the first time a Dutch government has resigned en masse in a gesture of
collective responsibility. In 2002, the cabinet stood down after a report
criticised ministers and the military for failing to prevent the massacre of
Muslims at Srebrenica during the Bosnian war seven years earlier. Parents were
branded fraudsters over minor errors such as missing signatures on paperwork,
and erroneously forced to pay back tens of thousands of euros given by the
government to offset the cost of childcare, with no means of redress. They
were, as one junior minister who resigned in connection with the scandal put
it, "steamrolled" by the system.
Families
were left in a state of ruin, by a state apparatus that became "the enemy
of the people".
Relationships
disintegrated under the pressure, homes were lost, mothers have spoken
tearfully of the financial and psychological anguish they suffered after being
targeted by tax officials.
Last year
the tax office admitted that 11,000 people were subjected to extra scrutiny
simply because they had dual nationality. This confession has reinforced the
widely held belief among many ethnic minorities in the Netherlands that
discrimination against them is institutionalised and perpetuated by those in
power.
But while
being seen as the responsible, honourable response - sacrificing power in an
admission of government failure - the mass resignation could be interpreted as
an act of self-preservation by the Rutte government that avoids the prospect of
losing a no-confidence vote by MPs next week. The scandal began in 2012 and the
number of parents involved could be as high as 26,000. Some openly called for
the government to step down, saying they had lost faith in the ability of the
cabinet to clean up the system.
One mother
faced demands to pay tax authorities around €48,000 (£42,000). She tried to
explain to the authorities that mistakes had been made but officials then
started withholding not just childcare allowances but other benefits too.
Her rent
went into arrears and energy companies refused to provide a regular supply.
Eventually she lost her job and could not find another as she was seen as a
fraudster. Her relationship with her child broke down as the pressure took its
toll.
"Rutte
says he thinks it's terrible, but he's not the one who had to pay up... This
shouldn't happen in the Netherlands - I've been labelled a fraudster,"
another mother, Nazan Aydin, told NOS.
Mr Rutte's
liberal VVD party is performing well in the opinion polls, so the 17 March
election could see another Rutte-led administration. He has already led three
governments since 2010.
Although he
initially opposed the cabinet's resignation, it was seen as inevitable once the
opposition Labour leader Lodewijk Asscher resigned on Thursday in response to
the scandal. Mr Asscher was social affairs minister under the previous Rutte
coalition government.
Mr Rutte
heads a four-party centre-right-liberal coalition and his party leads the
latest opinion polls, ahead of far-right leader Geert Wilders.
However,
victims of the childcare allowance scandal who had to repay large sums paid out
in benefit have this week filed a formal complaint against several current and
former ministers.
Compensation
to the tune of at least €30,000 (£26,000) each is to be paid out to parents who
were wrongly accused, but many have argued it is not enough.
Ahead of the
government's decision to step down, Sigrid Kaag, the leader of the liberal D66
party said it was "important to be politically accountable and to take
responsibility for the content of the report and for the injustice done to the
parents".
State
Secretary for Finance Alexandra van Huffelen said children caught up in the
fraud scandal should also be looked after so they could "soon move
on".
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