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Leader of the Labour Party (Netherlands)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Labour Party logo
Then incumbent Leader Joop den Uyl and future Leader Wim Kok in the House of Representatives on 3 June 1986.
Future Leader Lilianne Ploumen, former Leaders Wouter Bos, Wim Kok and then incumbent Leader Job Cohen at a party conference on 1 May 2011.
Newly elected Leader Diederik Samsom and former Leader Job Cohen at a party conference on 21 March 2012.

The Leader of the Labour Party is the most senior politician within the Labour Party (Dutch: Partij van de Arbeid, PvdA) in the Netherlands.

The leaders outwardly act as the 'figurehead' and the main representative of the party. Within the party, they must ensure political consensus. At election time the leader is always the lead candidate of the party list. Outside election time the leader can serve as the Leader of the Opposition. In the Labour Party the party leader is often the parliamentary leader in the House of Representatives. Some leaders became a minister in the cabinet.

List

Leader Term of office Age as leader Position(s) as leader Further position(s) Former
affiliation
Professional 
 background
Lead candidate
Willem Drees
Willem Drees
(1886–1988)
9 February 1946 –
22 December 1958
(12 years, 316 days)
[Retired]
59–72 Minister of Social Affairs
Deputy Prime Minister
(1945–1948)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1946, 1948,
1952, 1956)

Prime Minister
(1948–1958)
Minister of Colonial Affairs
(1951)
Minister of Finance
(1952)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1933–1945)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1939–1945)
Leader of the Social 
 Democratic Workers' Party

(1940–1946)
Chairman of the Social 
 Democratic Workers' Party

(1943–1945)
Minister of State
(1958–1988)
Social Democratic 
 Workers' Party
Accountant
civil servant
Historian
Author
1946
1948
1952
1956
Jaap Burger
Jaap Burger
(1904–1986)
22 December 1958 –
16 September 1962
(3 years, 268 days)
[Resigned]
54–58 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1945–1962)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1952–1962)
Minister for Return Policy
(1943–1944)
Minister of the Interior
(1944–1945)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1951)
Member of the Senate
(1963–1970)
Member of the 
 European Parliament

(1966–1970)
Member of the 
 Council of State

(1970–1979)
Minister of State
(1975–1986)
Social Democratic 
 Workers' Party
Lawyer 1959
Anne Vondeling
Dr.
Anne Vondeling
(1916–1979)
16 September 1962 –
13 September 1966
(3 years, 362 days)
[Resigned]
46–50 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1959–1965)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1962–1965)
Minister of Finance
Deputy Prime Minister
(1965–1966)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1946–1958, 1967–1979)
Minister of Agriculture, 
 Fisheries and 
 Food Supplies

(1958)
Chairman of 
 the Labour Party

(1969–1971)
Speaker of the House of 
 Representatives

(1972–1979)
Member of the 
 European Parliament

(1979)
Free-thinking 
 Democratic League
Agronomist
Agricultural engineer
Civil servant
professor
1963
Joop den Uyl
Joop den Uyl
(1919–1987)
13 September 1966 –
21 July 1986
(19 years, 311 days)
[Retired]
47–66 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1967–1973, 1977,
1978–1981, 1982–1987)

Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1967–1973, 1977,
1978–1981, 1982–1986)

Prime Minister
(1973–1977)
President of the 
 European Council

(1976)
President of the Party 
 of European Socialists

(1980–1987)
Minister of Social Affairs 
 and Employment

(1981–1982)
Minister for Netherlands 
 Antilles Affairs

Deputy Prime Minister
(1981–1982)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1956–1963)
Minister of Economic Affairs
(1965–1966)
Anti-Revolutionary 
 Party
Economist
Civil servant
Journalist
1967
1971
1972
1977
1981
1982
1986
Wim Kok
Wim Kok
(1938–2018)
21 July 1986 –
15 December 2001
(15 years, 147 days)
[Retired]
47–63 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1986–1989, 1994,
1998)

Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1986–1989, 1994,
1998)

Minister of Finance
Deputy Prime Minister
(1989–1994)
Prime Minister
(1994–2002)
President of the 
 European Council

(1997)
Minister of State
(2003–2018)
President of the 
 Club of Madrid

(2009–2014)
Trade union leader 1989
1994
1998
Ad Melkert
Ad Melkert
(born 1956)
15 December 2001 –
16 May 2002
(155 days)
[Resigned]
45–46 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1998–2002)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(1998–2002)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1986–1994)
Minister of Social Affairs 
 and Employment

(1994–1998)
Associate Administrator
of the United Nations 
 Development Programme

(2006–2009)
Special Representative
of the United Nations 
 Assistance Mission 
 for Iraq

(2009–2011)
Member of the 
 Council of State

(since 2016)
Political Party 
 of Radicals
Nonprofit director
Activist
2002
Vacant
(16 May 2002 – 12 November 2002)
Wouter Bos
Wouter Bos
(born 1963)
12 November 2002 –
25 April 2010
(7 years, 164 days)
[Retired]
39–46 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2002–2007)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2002–2007)
Minister of Finance
Deputy Prime Minister
(2007–2010)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1998–2000)
State Secretary for 
 Finance

(2000–2002)
Businessman
Economist
Management consultant
2003
2006
Job Cohen
Dr.
Job Cohen
(born 1947)
25 April 2010 –
20 February 2012
(1 year, 301 days)
[Resigned]
62–64 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2010–2012)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2010–2012)
State Secretary for 
 Education and Sciences

(1993–1994)
Member of the Senate
(1995–1998)
Parliamentary leader
in the Senate
(1996–1998)
State Secretary for 
 Justice

(1998–2001)
Mayor of Amsterdam
(2001–2010)
Jurist
Researcher
Author
Professor
2010
Vacant
(20 February 2012 – 16 March 2012)
Diederik Samsom
Diederik 
 Samsom

(born 1971)
16 March 2012 –
10 December 2016
(4 years, 269 days)
[Defeated]
40–45 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2003–2016)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2012–2016)
Nonprofit director
Activist
Environmentalist
Political consultant
2012
Lodewijk Asscher
Dr.
Lodewijk 
 Asscher

(born 1974)
10 December 2016 –
14 January 2021
(4 years, 35 days)
[Resigned]
42–46 Minister of Social Affairs 
 and Employment

Deputy Prime Minister
(2012–2017)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2017–2021)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2017–2012)
Ad interim
 Mayor of Amsterdam

(2010)
Jurist
Researcher
Professor
2017
Vacant
(14 January 2021 – 18 January 2021)
Lilianne Ploumen
Lilianne 
 Ploumen

(born 1962)
23 January 2021 –
12 April 2022
(1 year, 79 days)
[Resigned]
58–59 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2017–2022)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2021–2022)
Chair of the 
 Labour Party

(2007–2012)
Minister for Foreign Trade 
 and Development 
 Cooperation

(2012–2017)
GreenLeft Nonprofit director
Activist
Social worker
2021
Vacant
(12 April 2022 – 11 June 2022)
Attje Kuiken
Attje Kuiken
(born 1977)
11 June 2022 –
22 August 2023
[Retired]
44 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2010-2023)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2022-2023)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(2006–2010)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2016–2017)
Civil servant
Frans Timmermans
Frans Timmermans
(born 1961)
22 August - Incumbent 62 Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(since 2023)
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
(2023 since)
European Commissioner for Climate Action
(2019-2023)
Minister of Foreign Affairs
(2012-2014)
Member of the House 
 of Representatives

(1998-2007, 2010-2012)
Diplomat 2023
Resigned
Retired
Defeated for reelection

See also

References

External links

This page was last edited on 16 June 2024, at 08:25
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