![]() |
| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
The ‘no’
vote in Wednesday’s referendum to give sweeping new surveillance powers to the
security services has given the Dutch coalition government its first real test
since taking office last year.
The Dutch voted by a majority of 49.5% to 46.5%
against the new legislation, which is due to come into effect in May and has
been described as a ‘Big Brother charter’ by critics and privacy experts.
Prime
minister Mark Rutte said in a reaction that the government would abide by the
referendum rules, which state that 30% of the electorate must take part for the
vote to have any legal weight. Turnout in Wednesday’s vote was 51.6%.
‘The
advisory referendum law requires us to look again at the legislation and that
is what we will do,’ Rutte said in Brussels, where he is attending an EU
summit.
Newspapers on Friday called for a major rethink. The Telegraaf said in
an editorial the result of the referendum is a ‘powerful signal’ which cannot
be ignored by the cabinet.
‘Spy services need to be well equipped but this far
too-widely worded law will lead to a surveillance society in which citizens
feel they are under constant supervision,’ the paper said.
Trouw too said the
legislation needs to be amended. ‘Ignoring the result, as CDA leader Sybrand
Buma has suggested, is not an option,’ the paper said.
Surprise
The ‘no’ vote
surprised ministers, given that polls leading up to the referendum all
predicted a clear ‘yes’. The ‘no’ vote was particularly large in the northern
provinces, in Amsterdam, Utrecht, Rotterdam and other major cities.
The result
adds to the pressure on coalition partner D66 which has been criticised for
backing the legislation in the first place, and for agreeing to scrap the
advisory referendum option from the statute books.
D66 home affairs minister
Kajsa Ollongren, who is responsible for the new legislation, has described the
result as ‘disappointing’ but has not yet commented officially on what will
happen next.
Senate
The legislation still has to be debated in the upper house
of parliament at the end of April and senators could also be influential in
forcing a rethink.
Whatever the outcome of the discussions which will now take
place, the referendum result has had one effect already, according to Ton
Siedsma of privacy campaign group Bits of Freedom.
At last there has been a
lively and in-depth discussion about the balance between privacy and security,
he said: ‘The issue of privacy has matured as a subject for discussion.’

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.