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Pim Fortuyn
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{{Short description|Dutch politician (1948â2002)}}{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2023}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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[van der Graaf] said his goal was to stop Mr. Fortuyn exploiting Muslims as "scapegoats" and targeting "the weak parts of society to score points" to try to gain political power.Fortuyn killer 'acted for Muslims' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081210081312weblink |date=10 December 2008 }}, CNN, 27 March 2003:
Van der Graaf, 33, said during his first court appearance in Amsterdam on Thursday that Fortuyn was using "the weakest parts of society to score points" and gain political power.WEB,weblink Jihad Vegan, 6 December 2008, bot: unknown,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20110721174143weblink">weblink 21 July 2011, , Dr Janet Parker 20 June 2005, New Criminologist. The LPF went on to poll in second place during the election but went into decline soon after.
Biography
Early life and education
Wilhelmus Simon Petrus Fortuijn was born on 19 February 1948 in Driehuis within the Dutch municipality of Velsen, as the third child to a middle class Catholic family. His father worked as a salesman and his mother was a housewife. He attended Mendelcollege secondary school in Haarlem where he was described as an academically gifted pupil. As a youth, Fortuyn initially wanted to train as a priest, but in 1967 he began to study sociology at the University of Amsterdam and transferred after a few months to the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. In 1971 he ended his study with the Academic degree Doctorandus. In 1981 he received a doctorate in sociology at the University of Groningen as a Doctor of Philosophy.Career
Professional career
File:Pim Fortuyn, Jan Willem de Pous, Willem Dercksen en Teun Jaspers (1982).jpg|thumb|Pim Fortuyn with Jan Willem de PousJan Willem de PousFortuyn worked as a lecturer at the Nyenrode Business Universiteit and as an associate professor at the University of Groningen, where he taught Marxist sociology. He was also an employee of the Groningen University Newspaper for which he wrote columns. He was a Marxist at the time and sympathized with the Communist Party of the Netherlands (CPN), although he never became a full member."CPN weigerde Fortuyn lidmaatschap" {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210116083200weblink |date=16 January 2021 }}, nu.nl, 10 april 2012 Later, he joined the Labour Party.In 1989 Fortuyn became director of a government organisation administering student transport cards and worked as an advisor to the Social and Economic Council (SER). In 1990 he moved to Rotterdam. From 1991 to 1995, he was an extraordinary professor at the Erasmus University Rotterdam, appointed to the Albeda-chair in "employment conditions in public service" and ran an education consultancy business.When his contract ended, he made a career of public speaking, writing books and press columns, and worked as a weekly columnist for Elsevier. He gradually involved himself in politics through regularly appearing on televised debate shows and became a familiar public figure for his charismatic and flamboyant speaking style. In 1994 he began hosting his own radio program on RTV Rijnmond and often appeared on the political debate show Buitenhof and later as a commentator on the business current affairs program Business Class on RTL Nederland.WEB,weblink Fortuyn: Controversial, Flamboyant and Dead, ABC News, weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20080605013208weblink">"Pim Fortuyn â Oprecht en onmogelijk", Elsevier, 13 juli 2002, vervolgpagina (via Internet Archive) Fortuyn was openly gay, and said in a 2002 interview that he was Catholic.NEWS,weblink Mark, Eyck, Interview: Pim Fortuyn, Katholiek Nieuwsblad (Catholic Newspaper), 15 February 2002,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20020306021624weblink">weblink 6 March 2002, dead, " Question: U beschouwt zichzelf nog wel als katholiek? Answer: Ja, daar ontkom je niet aan. [..] Question: Toch noemt u zich ondanks uw homoseksualiteit nog steeds katholiek. Answer: Ik bén katholiek! Ik ben nota bene gedoopt! Ik noem me niet zo, ik ben het!" (Question: Do you still consider yourself a Catholic? Answer: Yes, you can't escape from that. [..] Question: But in spite of your homosexuality you still call yourself a Catholic. Answer: I am'' a Catholic. I have, after all, been 200 pumped + full boced! I don't call myself one, I am one!'')Political career
(File:Pim Fortuyn 1991.jpg|thumb|left|Pim Fortuyn in 1991)Fortuyn began his political career on the left and was initially a Marxist due to an aversion to the Dutch political establishment which he described as dominated by pillarization and a "regent mentality." He was sympathetic to the Dutch Communist Party but chose not to become a member due to personal disagreements with the party leadership and self-identified as a Marxist without becoming active in any communist organisations. In the 1970s he joined the Labour Party and became a social democrat. In 1986, his views shifted towards neoliberalism in the hope that the free market would lead to further individual emancipation, ending a perceived oppression by state bureaucracy. In 1991, he proposed firing half of all civil servants and promoted privatisation and decentralisation.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 150 In 1992, Fortuyn wrote Aan het volk van Nederland ("To the people of the Netherlands"), in which he declared himself to be the spiritual successor of the charismatic but controversial 18th-century Dutch patriot politician Joan Derk van der Capellen tot den Pol. The book urges the already culturally emancipated citizen to use the free market to also liberate himself economically, from the welfare state.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 200 In 1989, Fortuyn left the Labour Party and during the 1990s became a member of the centre-right VVD and was briefly a political consultant to the Christian Democratic Appeal in the early 2000s.NEWS,weblink At home with 'Professor Pim', 4 May 2002, Though on economic matters Fortuyn would largely remain a neoliberal,Oudenampsen (2018), p. 154 culturally he soon became strongly influenced by the neoconservative political philosopher and chief editor of the weekly Elsevier Hendrik Jan Schoo who made him a columnist in 1993.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 164 Schoo deplored that a progressive new class would have promoted multiculturalism, founding an anti-racist civil religion on article 1 of the Dutch constitution, forbidding discrimination.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 180-182 Whereas in the early 1990s Fortuyn had held liberal views on immigration, this changed under the influence of Schoo.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 183Dutch neocons understood that in the evermore secularising Netherlands a change on the lines of the Reagan Revolution had become highly improbable. Women's rights, gay rights, abortion and euthanasia had been generally accepted. In his 1995 book De verweesde samenleving ("The orphaned society"), Fortuyn claimed that the progressive movement of the 1960s had eroded traditional norms and values. Both the roles of the "symbolic father" and the "caring mother" had been lost, leaving an orphaned population without guidance, to live out a meaningless decadent existence.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 217 However, Fortuyn did not propose a return to old socially conservative or Dutch Calvinist and iconoclastic values and argued that the media, schools and artists should provide a moral leadership, explicitly promoting and defending the new values of modern Western society, constantly recreating the Dutch identity.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 218 Fortuyn consistently retained a liberal stance on matters such as LGBT rights throughout his political career.Adopting the philosophical analysis by Carl Schmitt, it was assumed that such an identity could only be defined in antithesis to some actually existing concrete enemy. Inspired by Samuel Huntington's The Clash of Civilizations, Dutch ethnicity was to be re-invented by identifying that enemy as Islam.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 219 In his 1997 book Tegen de islamisering van onze cultuur ("Against the islamisation of our culture"), Fortuyn proposed that after the fall of communism a new adversary would be found in Muslim culture.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 220 Fortuyn explained the global fundamentalist wave of the 1990s as a backlash against the insecurities caused by globalisation. The Dutch should counter Islamic fundamentalism by promoting and defending their own fundament, Dutch culture, especially modernism and the Enlightenment values.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 221 These should not yet be imposed on the Dutch population as a whole, with the exception of immigrants.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 222 Whereas American neoconservatives promoted hard power policies in relation to the Muslim world, Dutch neocons favoured a soft power approach.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 214-215 Shortly before the September 11 attacks, Fortuyn called for a Cold War against Islam, meaning a non-military defensive enmity.Oudenampsen (2018), p. 215 The attacks and the War on Terror made Islam a main issue in Dutch politics for the first time.Fortuyn announced his intention to run for parliament in a television interview with EenVandaag in 2001, although he did not specify which party he would seek to stand as a candidate with. Although he was already in contact with the newly formed Livable Netherlands (LN) party, he also considered running for the Christian Democratic Appeal which he had worked as a consultant for, or even creating his own list. Livable Netherlands founder Jan Nagel subsequently invited him to run as party leader and Fortuyn was elected "lijsttrekker" (lead candidate) by a large majority of party members at the LN conference on 26 November 2001, prior to the Dutch general election of 2002. In his leadership bid and general election campaign, Fortuyn attacked the mainstream parties on multiculturalism, immigration and law & order. He also called for less government interference and for a reform of the Dutch public health and education systems.WEB,weblink Pim Fortuyn â obituary, The Guardian, 7 May 2002, 19 August 2019, Lang, Kirsty, 19 August 2019,weblink live, He concluded his acceptance speech by saying the words in English that would become his slogan; "At your service!"{{harvnb|Rydgren|van Holsteyn|2005|p=45}} Support for LN rose dramatically during Fortuyn's brief leadership, climbing from 2% in opinion polls to about 17%.{{harvnb|Mudde|2007|p=211}}On 9 February 2002, Fortuyn gave an interview to Volkskrant, a Dutch newspaper (see below) regarding his beliefs on immigration and Islam. His statements were considered so controversial that LN dismissed him as lijsttrekker the next day. Against the advice of his campaign team, Fortuyn said in the interview that he favoured closing borders to Muslim immigrants and if possible he would abolish the "peculiar article" of the Dutch constitution forbidding discrimination (at the time it was generally assumed that he referred to Article 1, the equality before the law; it has been argued, however, that Fortuyn and the interviewer had confused this with Article 137 of the Penal Code, incitement to hatred).WEB,weblink Strafbare belediging, Marjolijn, Februari, 16 February 2002, de Volkskrant,Founding the LPF
Having been rejected by Livable Netherlands, Fortuyn founded his own party Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) on 11 February 2002, taking many former LN members and supporters with him. Heading the list of the Livable Rotterdam party, considered to be the local counterpart of the LPF, he achieved a major victory in the Rotterdam municipal council elections in early March 2002. The new party won about 36% of the seats, making it the largest party in the council. For the first time since the Second World War, the Labour Party was out of power in Rotterdam.Fortuyn's victory made him the subject of hundreds of interviews during the next three months, and he made many statements about his political ideology. In March he released his book The Mess of Eight Purple Years (De puinhopen van acht jaar Paars), which criticised the current political system in the Netherlands and was used as his political agenda for the upcoming general election. Purple is the colour to indicate a coalition government consisting of left parties (red) and conservative-liberal parties (blue). The Netherlands had been governed by such a coalition for eight years at that time.On 14 March 2002, Fortuyn was pied by a left-wing activist from the Biotic Baking Brigade in The Hague. As a result, Fortuyn began to express a fear of being injured or assassinated and accused members of the Dutch political establishment of encouraging violence against him.WEB,weblink The Complete Expat Guide to the Netherlands | Expatica, 9 June 2018, 12 June 2018,weblink live,Death
File:Palazzo di Pietro Rotterdam.jpg|thumb|right|220px|Fortuyn's house in RotterdamRotterdamOn 6 May 2002, at age 54, Fortuyn was assassinated by gunshot in Hilversum, North Holland, by Volkert van der Graaf. The attack took place in a car park outside a radio studio where Fortuyn had just given an interview. This was nine days before the general election, in which he was running. The attacker was pursued by Hans Smolders, Fortuyn's driver, and was arrested by the police shortly afterward, still in possession of a handgun.NEWS,weblink Dutch far-right leader shot dead, The Independent, 7 May 2002, 13 June 2010, London, Isobel, Conway, 7 May 2010,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100507004105weblink">weblink dead, Months later, Van der Graaf confessed in court to the first notable political assassination in the Netherlands since 1672 (excluding World War II).BOOK, van Sas, N.C.F., 2005, De metamorfose van Nederland:van oude orde naar moderniteit 1750â1900, 373, Amsterdam University Press,weblink 90-5356-840-9, 15 October 2016, 18 August 2020,weblink live, On 15 April 2003, he was convicted of assassinating Fortuyn and sentenced to 18 years in prison.NEWS, Osborn, Andrew, 'Light' sentence enrages Fortuyn's followers,weblink 6 May 2016, The Guardian, 16 April 2003, 4 June 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160604014042weblink">weblink live, He was released on parole in May 2014 after serving two-thirds of his sentence, the standard procedure under the Dutch penal system.NEWS, Pim Fortuyn: Politician's Killer Is Freed Early,weblink 6 May 2016, Sky News, 2 May 2014, 11 June 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160611001259weblink">weblink live, The assassination shocked many residents of the Netherlands and highlighted the cultural clashes within the country. Various conspiracy theories arose after Pim Fortuyn's murder and deeply affected Dutch politics and society.* Jelle van Buuren: Holland's Own Kennedy Affair. Conspiracy Theories on the Murder of Pim Fortuyn. = Historical Social Research, Vol. 38, 1 (2013), pp. 257â85. Politicians from all parties suspended campaigning. After consultation with LPF, the government decided not to postpone the elections. As Dutch law did not permit modifying the ballots, Fortuyn became a posthumous candidate. The LPF made an unprecedented debut in the House of Representatives by winning 26 seats (17% of the 150 seats in the house). The LPF joined a cabinet with the Christian Democratic Appeal and the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, but conflicts in the rudderless LPF quickly collapsed the cabinet, forcing new elections. By the following year, the party had lost support, winning only eight seats in the 2003 elections. It won no seats in the 2006 elections, by which time the Party for Freedom, led by Geert Wilders, had emerged as a successor.During the last months of his life, Fortuyn had become closer to the Catholic Church. To the surprise of many commentators and Dutch TV hosts, Fortuyn insisted on Fr. Louis Berger, a parish priest from The Hague, accompanying him in some of his last TV appearances. According to The New York Times, Berger had become his "friend and confessor" during the last weeks of his life.NEWS,weblink Rightist politician is slain and the Nation is stunned, Simons, Marlise, The New York Times, 7 May 2002, 19 February 2017, 28 February 2017,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20170228101612weblink">weblink live, Fortuyn was initially buried in Driehuis in the Netherlands. He was re-interred on 20 July 2002, at San Giorgio della Richinvelda, in the province of Pordenone in Italy, where he had owned a house.Views
Islam and immigration
When asked about his opposition to Muslim immigration, Fortuyn explained that, "I have no desire to go through the emancipation of women and homosexuals all over again."NEWS, Bedell, Geraldine, To face the facts beyond the veil,weblink 27 January 2016, The Guardian, 28 October 2006, 3 February 2016,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20160203035025weblink">weblink live, In August 2001, Fortuyn was quoted in the Rotterdams Dagblad newspaper saying, "I am also in favour of a cold war with Islam. I see Islam as an extraordinary threat, as a hostile religion."{{in lang|nl}} Original quote in ("I also favor a cold war against Islam. I see Islam as being an exceptional threat, as a society hostile to ours".) In the TV program Business class, Fortuyn said that Muslims in the Netherlands did not accept Dutch society; he believed that the religion of Islam was fundamentally intolerant and incompatible with Western values.BOOK, Murray, Douglas, The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam, 2017, Bloomsbury, London, 978-1472942241, Kindle, He said that Muslims in the Netherlands needed to accept living together with the Dutch, and that if this was unacceptable for them, then they were free to leave. His concluding words in the TV program were "... I want to live together with the Muslim people, but (wikt:it takes two to tango|it takes two to tango)." Fortuyn also maintained that he did not object to Muslim immigrants because of their race or ethnicity, and was not against a multi-racial society, but opposed what he saw as lack of integration and unwillingness to adapt to Dutch standards of modernity and social liberalism within Muslim communities.Fortuynism
The ideology or political style that is derived from Pim Fortuyn, and in turn the LPF, is often called Fortuynism. Observers variously saw him as a political protest targeting the alleged elitism and bureaucratic style of the Dutch purple coalitions or as offering an appealing political style. The style was characterized variously as one "of openness, directness and clearness", populism or simply as charisma. Another school holds Fortuynism as a distinct ideology, with an alternative vision of society. Some argued that Fortuynism was not just one ideology, but contained liberalism, populism and nationalism.{{harvnb|Mudde|2007|pp=213â214}}(File:Pim Fortuynplaats 2015.jpg|thumb|Pim Fortuynplaats square in Rotterdam which was named after Fortuyn)During the 2002 campaign, Fortuyn was accused by some of being on the "extreme right", although others saw only certain similarities.{{harvnb|Rydgren|van Holsteyn|2005|pp=48â49}} While he employed anti-immigration rhetoric, he considered himself neither a radical nationalist nor a defender of traditional authoritarian values. On the contrary, Fortuyn claimed he wanted to protect the socio-culturally liberal values of the Netherlands, women's rights and sexual minorities (he was openly gay himself), from the "backward" Islamic culture.{{harvnb|Rydgren|van Holsteyn|2005|p=49}} He held liberal views favouring the drug policy of the Netherlands, same-sex marriage, euthanasia, and related positions. Fortuyn was also a member of the Republican Society, and favoured a US-style system with an elected president, elected mayors and police commissioners. He also expressed support for the state of Israel throughout his political career.The LPF also won support from some ethnic minorities; one of Fortuyn's closest associates was of Cape Verdean origin, and one of the party's MPs was a young woman of Turkish descent.His ideology comprised the following positions:Andeweg, R. and G. Irwin Politics and Governance in the Netherlands, Basingstoke (Palgrave) p.49{{Div col|colwidth=15em}}- Civil liberties
- Classical liberalism
- Criticism of Islam
- Deregulation
- Direct democracy
- Euroscepticism
- Freedom of speech
- Laissez-faire
- LGBT rights
- Republicanism
- Secularism
- Separation of church and state
- Small government
- Women's rights
Criticism
File:RotterdamGWBurgerPlein060502.png|thumb|Anti-Fortuyn poster of the International Socialists with the slogan "Stop de Hollandse Haider" (English: "Stop the Dutch Haider") near Fortuyn's house in Rotterdam on 6 May 2002]]Fortuyn was compared with the politicians Jörg Haider and Jean-Marie Le Pen in the foreign press. These comparisons were often referred to by Dutch reporters and politicians. An explicit comparison with Le Pen was made by Ad Melkert, then lijsttrekker of the Labour Party, who said in Emmen on 24 April 2002: "If you flirt with Fortuyn, then in the Netherlands the same thing will happen as happened in France. There they woke up with Le Pen, soon we will wake up with Fortuyn."{{in lang|nl}}: "Als je flirt met Fortuyn, dan gebeurt er in Nederland straks hetzelfde als in Frankrijk. Daar zijn ze wakker geworden met Le Pen, straks worden wij wakker met Fortuyn." quote from article in Het Financieele Dagblad, 25 April 2002.On 5 May, the day before the assassination, Fortuyn in a debate with Melkert organized by the Algemeen Dagblad newspaper claimed that he was demonized. In it he said that he often had to tell journalists that the image created of him in the media was incorrect.{{in lang|nl}} {{YouTube|kCupE2LlFoo|"Het laatste debat"}} Nova, 18 juni 2002Columnist Jan Blokker wrote that "[a]fter reading [...] I realized once again that Professor Pim may really be called the Jean-Marie Le Pen, the Filip Dewinter, the Jörg Haider and the new Hans Janmaat of the Netherlands."{{in lang|nl}}: "Na lezing (...) was ik er eens te meer van overtuigd dat Professor Pim wel degelijk de Jean-Marie Le Pen, de Filip Dewinter], de Jörg Haider en de nieuwe Hans Janmaat van Nederland mag heten.", de Volkskrant, 25 March 2002 Prime Minister Wim Kok accused Fortuyn of stirring up fear and stimulating xenophobia among the Dutch people. In the run-up to the 2002 election, GroenLinks leader Paul Rosenmöller claimed Fortuyn's policies were "not just right but extreme right".WEB,weblink Iets te aardig, De Volkskrant, 20 February 2020, 24 October 2003, Hans Wansink, nl, 23 September 2012,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20120923070954weblink">weblink live, Fortuyn often responded to criticism by stating that his views were misunderstood or distorted by the media, and in turn rejected comparisons and expressed his personal distaste for radical far-right politicians in other European countries. He explicitly distanced himself from Jean-Marie Le Pen and criticised some of his policies, including Le Pen's downplaying of the Holocaust.WEB,weblink At home with 'Professor Pim', Lang, Kirsty, 4 May 2002, BBC News, BBC, 20 February 2020, 23 September 2007,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20070923022602weblink">weblink live, In domestic politics, Fortuyn also distanced his views from hard-right Dutch politicians such as Hans Janmaat and Joop Glimmerveen (who called for the mass expulsion of foreigners from the Netherlands) by maintaining that if he came to power, he would pardon existing illegal immigrants if they had lived in the Netherlands for over five years and offer them a path to citizenship if they could be assimilated into society.In an interview on the Dutch talk show Jensen! that was broadcast shortly before his death, Fortuyn accused members of the Dutch government and political establishment of putting his life in danger through repeatedly demonizing him and his beliefs.{{YouTube|id=B4Sl4CvmjfE|title=Pim Fortuyn: "If Something Were to Happen..."}}Legacy
File:Beeld Pim Fortuyn Rotterdam.jpg|thumb|left|220px|Pim Fortuyn monument in RotterdamRotterdamFortuyn changed the Dutch political landscape.See BBC impression {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070823202724weblink |date=23 August 2007 }} for an early evaluation Retrieved July 2007. The 2002 elections, only weeks after Fortuyn's death, were marked by large losses for the liberal People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and especially the social democratic Labour Party (whose parliamentary group was halved in size); both parties replaced their leaders shortly after their losses. The election winners were the Pim Fortuyn List, and the Christian democratic Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) whose leader Jan Peter Balkenende went on to become Prime Minister. Some commentators in the mainstream political class speculated that Fortuyn's perceived martyrdom created greater support for the LPF, hence that party's brief surge to 17% of the electoral vote and 26 of the 150 seats in the Dutch Parliament. Others opined that voters who would have otherwise supported the LPF had Fortuyn not been murdered voted for the CDA as Balkenende had not joined in with other party leaders in attacking Fortuyn. Balkenende later claimed to have shared some of Fortuyn's opinions and pledged to implement some of his policy ideas. Although the LPF was able to form a coalition with the Christian Democratic Appeal and the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy, it was bereft with internal strife and quickly lost steam. The coalition cabinet of Jan Peter Balkenende fell within three months, due to infighting within the LPF. In the following elections, the LPF was left with only eight seats in parliament (out of 150) and was not included in the new government. Many of the LPF's successive leaders were not regarded as charismatic as Fortuyn and as the next cabinet under Balkenende continued many of the former coalition's policies, it became harder for the LPF to present an alternative image to the government. However, political commentators speculated that discontented voters might vote for a non-traditional party, if a viable alternative was at hand. Later, the right-wing Party for Freedom, which has a strong stance on immigration, proposing to deport criminal, unemployed or not assimilated non-western immigrants, won nine (out of 150) seats in the 2006 elections and became the largest party in the 2023 elections, reaching 37 seats.(File:Grave of Pim Fortuyn.jpg|thumb|The temporary grave of Pim Fortuyn in Driehuis)The Netherlands has made its asylum policy more strict. Opponents of Fortuynism, such as Paul Rosenmöller, Thom de Graaf, and Ad Melkert (all labelling Fortuyn as a right-wing extremist),[Documentary] "A Democracy in Shock" (2002). RTL Nieuws. have objected to what they think is a harsher political and social climate, especially towards immigrants and Muslims.NEWS,weblink Coughlan, Geraldine, Fortuyn ghost stalks Dutch politics, BBC News, 21 January 2003, 19 July 2005, 26 May 2006,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20060526022641weblink">weblink live, However, other commentators such as Ayaan Hirsi Ali, David Starkey and Douglas Murray have retrospectively defended some of Fortuyn's beliefs.BOOK, Hirsi Ali, Ayaan, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, 2006, Infidel: My Life, WEB,weblink Is there a Prof Pim in Britain?, The Telegraph, 8 May 2002, 8 February 2020, BOOK, Murray, Douglas, Douglas Murray (author), 2017, The Strange Death of Europe, Former Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende also stated that he later agreed with some of Fortuyn's criticisms of multiculturalism and the purple coalition under Wim Kok.{{harvnb|Rydgren|van Holsteyn|2005|p=46}}BOOK,weblink Steven, Van Hecke, Emmanuel, Gerard, Christian democratic parties in Europe since the end of the Cold War, 2004, Leuven University Press, 978-90-5867-377-0, 166, 10 February 2020, 19 August 2020,weblink live, Contemporary Dutch politics is more polarized than it has been in recent years, especially on the issues for which Fortuyn was best known. People debate the success of their multicultural society, and whether they need to better assimilate newcomers. The government's decision in 2004 to more strictly expel asylum seekers whose applications had failed was controversial. Fortuyn had advocated for a one-time amnesty for those asylum seekers who had resided in the Netherlands for an extended period.NEWS,weblink Dutch MPs approve asylum exodus, BBC News, 17 February 2004, 26 July 2005, 21 November 2005,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20051121163053weblink">weblink live, In 2004, in a TV show, Fortuyn was chosen as De Grootste Nederlander ("Greatest Dutchman of all-time"), followed closely by William of Orange, the leader of the independence war that established the precursor to the present-day Netherlands.NEWS, nl,weblink Greatest Dutchman, dead,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20050310014512weblink">weblink 10 March 2005, The election was not considered representative, as it was held by viewers' voting through the internet and by phoning in. Theo van Gogh had been murdered a few days before by a Muslim, which likely affected people's voting in the TV contest for Fortuyn. The program later revealed that William of Orange had received the most votes, but many could not be counted until after the official closing time of the television show (and the proclamation of the winner), due to technical problems. The official rules of the show said that votes counted before the end of the show would be decisive, but it was suggested that all votes correctly cast before the closing of the vote would be counted. Following the official rules, the outcome was not changed.WEB,weblink nu.nl/algemeen | 'Pim Fortuyn toch niet de Grootste Nederlander', 16 November 2004, Nu.nl, 13 June 2010, 10 June 2010,weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20100610210756weblink">weblink live, File:Plek moord Pim Fortuyn.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Car park in HilversumHilversum(File:Monument Pim Fortuyn.jpg|thumb|Plaque at the location of his murder)Right-wing politicians gained greater public influence after Fortuyn's death, such as former Minister for Integration & Immigration Rita Verdonk, the prominent critic of Islam, Member of the House of Representatives Geert Wilders who in 2006 formed the Party for Freedom (which became the second largest party in the House of Representatives in 2017) and Thierry Baudet, leader of the Forum for Democracy party. These politicians often focus on the debate over cultural assimilation and integration.Supporters of Fortuyn went on to set up the annual Pim Fortuyn Prize which is awarded to opinion makers, politicians or commentators who best convey the ideas of Pim Fortuyn. Winners have included Ebru Umar and John van den Heuvel.WEB,weblink Ebru Umar receives the Pim Fortuyn Prize, 6 May 2017, de Volkskrant, 8 February 2020, 6 August 2020,weblink live,Selected publications
- Het zakenkabinet Fortuyn (A.W. Bruna, 1994)
- Beklemmend Nederland (A.W. Bruna, 1995), ({{ISBN|90-229-8234-3}})
- Uw baan staat op de tocht!: Het einde van de overlegeconomie (A.W. Bruna, 1995) ({{ISBN|978-90-229-8264-8}}
- Mijn collega komt zo bij u (A.W. Bruna, 1996), ({{ISBN|9789022983119}})
- Tegen de islamisering van onze cultuur: Nederlandse identiteit als fundament (A.W. Bruna, 1997), ({{ISBN|90-229-8338-2}})
- Zielloos Europa (Bruna, 1997), ({{ISBN|90-229-8352-8}})
- 50 jaar Israel, hoe lang nog?: Tegen het tolereren van fundamentalisme (Bruna, 1998), ({{ISBN|90-229-8407-9}})
- De derde revolutie (bruna, 1999)
- De verweesde samenleving (Karakter Uitgevers, 2002) ({{ISBN|90-6112-931-1}})
- De puinhopen van acht jaar Paars (Karakter Uitgevers, 2002), ({{ISBN|90-6112-911-7}})
In popular culture
- The song "Feint" by Epica was made right after and about Pim Fortuyn's death.
- Fortuyn's death is referenced in the novel De zesde mei (The Sixth of May) by Tomas Ross.
- 06/05, a 2004 film directed by Theo Van Gogh based upon the murder of Pim Fortuyn albeit with fictitious elements.
- Het jaar van Fortuyn (The Year of Fortuyn), a 2022 five-part biographical drama broadcast on AVROTROS which depicts Fortuyn's political rise ahead of the 2002 election to his assassination. Fortuyn is portrayed by Jeroen Spitzenberger in the series.
Notes
{{Notelist}}References
Citations
{{Reflist|30em}}Bibliography
- BOOK,weblink 209â222, A Fortuynist Foreign Policy, Christina Schori, Liang, Cas, Mudde, Europe for the Europeans: the foreign and security policy of the populist radical right, 2007, Ashgate, 978-0-7546-4851-2,
- Merijn Oudenampsen, 2018, De Conservatieve Revolte â Een Ideeëngeschiedenis van de Fortuynopstand, Uitgeverij Vantilt, Nijmegen
- BOOK,weblink 41â64, Holland and Pim Fortuyn: A Deviant Case or the Beginning of Something New?, Jens, Rydgren, Jens, Rydgren, Joop, van Holsteyn, Movements of exclusion: radical right-wing populism in the Western world, 2005, Nova, 978-1-59454-096-7,
External links
- {{official websiteweblink}}
- {{in lang|nl}} Dr. W.S.P. (Pim) Fortuijn Parlement & Politiek
- {{IMDb name|id=1989556|name=Pim Fortuyn}}
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