Misplaced Pages

Provincial council (Netherlands)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Provincial parliament in the Netherlands For the states provincial in early modern France, see States provincial (France).

Part of the Politics series
Politics of the Netherlands
Azure, billetty Or a lion with a coronet Or armed and langued Gules holding in his dexter paw a sword Argent hilted Or and in the sinister paw seven arrows Argent pointed and bound together Or.  The shield is crowned with the (Dutch) royal crown and supported by two lions Or armed and langued gules. They stand on a scroll Azure with the text (Or) "Je Maintiendrai" (French for "I will maintain".)
Constitution
Monarchy
Cabinet
States General
Judiciary
Elections
Local government
Foreign relations
Related topics
icon Politics portal

The provincial council (Dutch: Provinciale Staten, PS), also known as the States-Provincial, is the provincial parliament and legislative assembly in each of the provinces of the Netherlands. It is elected for each province simultaneously once every four years and has the responsibility for matters of sub-national or regional importance. The number of seats in a provincial council is proportional to its population.

The provincial councils originated as Estates assemblies in the Middle Ages, hence the name 'States Provincial'. From 1813 to 1850, the noble members of the ridderschap chose one-third of the members of the provincial councils. Johan Rudolf Thorbecke's reforms and his 'Provinces Law' (Provinciewet) of 1850 brought this privilege to an end.

The provincial council chooses the provincial executive, which is the executive organ of the province. Originally, the States Provincial themselves also had executive powers and chose the provincial executive from among their own members. On 11 March 2003, the two institutions split.

The principal roles of the provincial council have become to set general policies, represent the people, approve provincial legislation and the annual budget and to oversee the executive. Both the provincial executive and the provincial council are chaired by the King's Commissioner in the province, appointed by the monarch every six years.

The last provincial elections were held on 15 March 2023.

Three months after their election, the combined members of the States Provincial elect the members of the Senate of the States General of the Netherlands.

Number of seats in each provincial council

The size of the provincial councils ranges from 39 members for a province with less than 400,000 inhabitants to 55 members for a province with more than 2,000,000 inhabitants.

Before 2007, they ranged from 47 members for a province with less than 200,000 inhabitants to 83 members for a province with more than 2,500,000 inhabitants. As a consequence of a change to the Provinciewet, starting at the provincial elections of 7 March 2007, the total number of provincial councillors was reduced from 764 to 564. A survey of the change in seats per province:

Province Seats 2003 Seats 2007 Seats 2011 Seats 2015 Seats 2019 Seats 2023
Groningen 55 43 43 43 43 43
Friesland 55 43 43 43 43 43
Drenthe 51 41 41 41 41 43
Overijssel 63 47 47 47 47 47
Flevoland 47 39 39 41 41 41
Gelderland 75 53 55 55 55 55
Utrecht 63 47 47 49 49 49
North Holland 83 55 55 55 55 55
South Holland 83 55 55 55 55 55
Zeeland 47 39 39 39 39 39
North Brabant 79 55 55 55 55 55
Limburg 63 47 47 47 47 47
Total 764 564 566 570 570 572

A consequence of this reduction in the number of seats is that the election threshold (the minimum number of votes needed for a party to gain at least one seat in an assembly) has risen. Depending on the province, the threshold now lies between 1.5% and over 2% of the votes. Because of this, it has become harder for small parties to win a seat. This may also have consequences for the representation of small parties in the Senate, which is elected by the members of the States Provincial.

National results

Outcome of the provincial elections calculated at national level:

Political party 2003* 2007 2011 2015 2019 2023
Farmer–Citizen Movement (BBB) 137
Forum for Democracy (FvD) 86 15
People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) 103 102 112 89 80 63
Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) 169 151 86 89 72 43
GroenLinks (GL) 37 33 34 30 61 51
Labour Party (PvdA) 150 114 107 63 53 46
Party for Freedom (PVV) 0 69 66 40 34
Democrats 66 (D66) 20 9 42 67 40 32
Socialist Party (SP) 29 83 56 70 35 23
Christian Union (CU) 19 35 23 29 31 22
Party for the Animals (PvdD) 0 8 7 18 20 25
JA21 22
50Plus 0 0 9 14 17 8
Reformed Political Party (SGP) 13 13 12 18 14 16
Denk (DENK) 4 0
Volt 11
GroenLinks–PvdA 6
CU – SGP 4 3 1 2 1 1
Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) 10 0 - -
Regionalist parties 10 13 8 15 15 17
Total 564 564 566 570 570 572
Turnout 47.62% 46.40% 55.97% 47.76% 56.16% 58.80%

Note *: 2003 election calculated for the 2007 number of seats (564).

See also

References

  1. Combinated list in Zeeland.
  2. Combinated list in two provinces (North Holland and North Brabant, also Friesland in 2003).
Provincial councils of the Netherlands
Netherlands Decentral government in the Netherlands
ProvinceMunicipalitySpecial municipality
Other public bodies
Borough
Safety region
Water board
Dike-reeve
Executives
Categories: