To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

2015 Dutch Senate election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2015 Dutch Senate election

← 2011 26 May 2015 2019 →

All 75 seats to the Senate
38 seats are needed for a majority
Turnout100,0%
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Loek Hermans Elco Brinkman Thom de Graaf
Party VVD CDA D66
Last election 16 seats, 20,8% 11 seats, 14.6% 5 seats, 7.6%
Seats won 13 12 10
Seat change Decrease3 Increase1 Increase5
Popular vote 28,523 25,145 21,997
Percentage 16.9% 14.9% 13.0%
Swing Decrease3.9% Increase0.3% Increase5.4%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Marjolein Faber Tiny Kox Marleen Barth
Party PVV SP PvdA
Last election 10 seats, 13.1% 8 seats, 10.3% 14 seats, 18.1%
Seats won 9 9 8
Seat change Decrease1 Increase1 Decrease6
Popular vote 20,235 20,038 17,651
Percentage 12.0% 11.9% 10.5%
Swing Decrease1.1% Increase1.6% Decrease7.6


President before election

Ankie Broekers-Knol
VVD

Elected President

Ankie Broekers-Knol
VVD

Elections of the Dutch Senate were held on 26 May 2015. The elected senators were sworn in on 9 June 2015.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/4
    Views:
    7 609 073
    1 042 812
    2 250 763
    4 918 732
  • The Debt Limit Explained
  • Which voting system is the best? - Alex Gendler
  • When Did the Romans Become Italians? (Short Animated Documentary)
  • Young Cattle Auctioneer Champion - America's Heartland

Transcription

The debt limit is kind of a financial weapon of mass destruction chained to the United States government by the United States government. Confused? Then it's time for The United States debt limit Explained. To understand the debt limit you need to know the US splits financial responsibility between the president and congress. The president has two jobs when it comes to money: 1. Collect taxes and... 2. Spend those taxes to run the government. This might give you the impression that the president, with regards to money, is all-powerful. Especially when you hear news reports on 'the president's new budget' or his plan to 'raise taxes on haberdashers' or 'lower taxes on apiarists'. But reality is just the opposite and the president is the one who takes orders. From whom? Congress. Congress has the jobs of setting the tax level and determining how much the government will spend by writing a budget. So while the president does get to submit budgets to congress, and asks for changes in the tax level, these are just requests that congress doesn't have to pay attention to. Congress can add or subtract anything they want from the president's budget or throw it out entirely and write a new one. The same goes for the level of taxes. So congress decides what it wants: bridges, tanks, buildings, courts, robots on Mars, robots on Earth, National Parks, whatever and approves a budget with that stuff in it. Once approved the president's is required by law to spend the money Congress listed in the budget and pay for it using the taxes that congress set. As long as more taxes come in than spending goes out everything is fine. But, almost always, Congress puts more stuff in the budget than they cover with taxes which means the president must borrow money to cover the difference. In most countries the story ends here because if their legislatures approved more spending than they have income, they've also implicitly approved the necessary borrowing -- but not in America. Here Congress *also* limits the total amount of debt the United States can have. A debt limit sounds like a good idea until you see the real-world consequences of these two branches of government interacting. As the total amount borrowed gets closer to the limit, Congress usually points to the president and acts shocked, *shocked* that his reckless spending has brought us so close to the debt limit that they, reasonable, prudent Congress have set. And while it's technically correct that the president has borrowed this money, congress has forced him to do it, by approving a budget that the president is legally obligated to spend without also approving the necessary taxes to cover that spending. So the debt limit fight is essentially the government version of the playground favorite: 'stop hitting yourself' except with added terror for everyone watching. For, it's important to note, the debt limit is not about future spending -- it's not a credit card on which the limit will be raised so a crazy government party can be thrown -- the debt limit is about paying bills already incurred. For example, the government hires a company to repave a federal highway. But if the US is at the debt limit, when the company asks to be paid after the work has been done, the government can't. This shakes trust in the US and since large parts of the global economy depend on the dollar being trust worthy, messing with that trust is a big deal. But there is a way out: Congress can raise the debt limit and, because of the aforementioned terror, they always have. So… if not raising the debt ceiling is potentially disastrous and the solution is simple and always taken in the end: *why does this debate last months‽* Because: politics. The debt limit isn't in the constitution, congress created it themselves and from their point of view, the debt limit is awesome because: 1. It creates a problem that 2. Congress can (technically) blame on the president who 3. Needs the solution that only they can provide Congress gets to use the threat of mutual financial self destruction as leverage in negations that they benefit from extending until the last… possible… second.

Electoral system

The Senate is elected by the members of the States-Provincial of the country's twelve provinces, who had been directly elected by the citizens two months earlier, in the 2015 provincial elections. The value of a vote is determined by the population of the province in which the voter is a member of the States-Provincial. The seats are distributed in one nationwide constituency using party-list proportional representation.

Province Members Population Value
South Holland 55 3,600,784 655
North Holland 55 2,762,163 502
North Brabant 55 2,489,325 453
Gelderland 55 2,026,393 368
Utrecht 49 1,263,509 258
Overijssel 47 1,140,659 243
Limburg 47 1,118,054 238
Friesland 43 646,324 150
Groningen 43 584,104 136
Drenthe 41 488,611 119
Flevoland 41 401,503 98
Zeeland 39 380,717 98

Results

Parties Vote Seats
Votes Value Won +/-
  People's Party for Freedom and Democracy 90 28,523 13 Decrease 3
  Christian Democratic Appeal 89 25,145 12 Increase 1
  Democrats 66 67 21,997 10 Increase 5
  Party for Freedom 66 20,235 9 Decrease 1
  Socialist Party 70 20,038 9 Increase 1
  Labour Party 63 17,651 8 Decrease 6
  GroenLinks 30 9,520 4 Decrease 1
  Christian Union 32 8,237 3 Increase 1
  Party for the Animals 18 6,073 2 Increase 1
  Reformed Political Party 17 4,597 2 Increase 1
  50PLUS 14 4,388 2 Increase 1
  Independent Senate Group 14 2,652 1 Steady
Total 570 169,056 75 Steady
Source: Kiesraad Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
This page was last edited on 3 July 2023, at 09:34
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.