Alexander Pechtold

Alexander Pechtold (born 16 December 1965) is a retired Dutch politician of the Democrats 66 (D66) party and art historian.

Alexander Pechtold
Alexander Pechtold in 2013
Parliamentary leader in the
House of Representatives
In office
30 November 2006  10 October 2018
Preceded byLousewies van der Laan
Succeeded byRob Jetten
Parliamentary groupDemocrats 66
Member of the House
of Representatives
In office
30 November 2006  10 October 2018
Parliamentary groupDemocrats 66
Leader of the Democrats 66
In office
24 June 2006  6 October 2018
Preceded byBoris Dittrich
Succeeded bySigrid Kaag (2020)
Minister without Portfolio
for the Interior
In office
31 March 2005  3 July 2006
Prime MinisterJan Peter Balkenende
Preceded byThom de Graaf
Succeeded byAtzo Nicolaï
Mayor of Wageningen
In office
1 October 2003  31 March 2005
Preceded byGeke Faber
Succeeded byChris Rutten (Ad Interim)
Chair of the Democrats 66
In office
16 November 2002  31 March 2005
LeaderThom de Graaf (2002–2003)
Boris Dittrich (2003–2005)
Preceded byGerard Schouw
Succeeded byJan Hoekema (Ad Interim)
Personal details
Born
Alexander Pechtold

(1965-12-16) 16 December 1965
Delft, Netherlands
NationalityDutch
Political partyDemocrats 66 (since 1989)
Spouse(s)
Froukje Idema
(m. 1997; div. 2018)
Children1 son and 1 daughter
ResidenceScheveningen, The Hague, Netherlands
Alma materLeiden University
(BA, MA)
OccupationPolitician · Civil servant · Auctioneer · Art historian

Pechtold studied Archaeology and History of Dutch Art at the Leiden University obtaining a Master of Arts degree. Pechtold worked as an auctioneer in The Hague from July 1992 until June 1996 and as an Alderman in Leiden from June 1996 until October 2003. Pechtold served as Chairman of the Democrats 66 from 16 November 2002 until 31 March 2005. In September 2003 Pechtold was nominated as the next Mayor of Wageningen taking office on 1 October 2003. Pechtold was appointed as Minister without Portfolio for the Interior in the Cabinet Balkenende II following a cabinet reshuffle taking office on 31 March 2005. After Party Leader Boris Dittrich announced he was stepping down, Pechtold announced his candidacy and was elected as his successor on 24 June 2006. The Cabinet fell just a year later and he resigned on 3 July 2006.

For the election of 2006 Pechtold served as Lijsttrekker (top candidate) and was elected as a Member of the House of Representatives and became Parliamentary leader on 30 November 2006. For the elections of 2010, 2012 and 2017 Pechtold served again as Lijsttrekker and following a successful cabinet formation in 2017 with the Conservative-Liberals and the Christian-Democrats formed the Cabinet Rutte III with Pechtold opting to remain as Parliamentary leader. In October 2018 Pechtold unexpectedly announced his retirement from national politics and stepped down as Leader and Parliamentary leader on 10 October 2018.

Pechtold retired from active politics at just 52 and became active in the public sector as a non-profit director and serves on several state commissions and councils on behalf of the government. In October 2019 Pechtold was appointed as Director-General of the Driving License and Certificates Agency (CBR).

Biography

Early life

Alexander Pechtold was born on 16 December 1965 in Delft in the Dutch province of South Holland. Pechtold and his elder brother Roland Pechtold grew up in the village of Rhoon. He went to a Lyceum in Rotterdam. Pechtold studied art history and archaeology with a specialization in 17th-century painting at the Leiden University, obtaining a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts degree in 1996. During that time Pechtold obtained certification as an auctioneer, and worked for the Van Stockum's Veilingen during his studies.

Politics

Party chair

Pechtold became a member of the Democrats 66 (D66) party in 1989. He was elected as a Municipal councillor in Leiden in 1994, and became an alderman in 1996. On 16 November 2002 he was elected as Chairman of the D66. Pechtold was tasked with reforming the party after its disastrous results in the general election of 2002, and preparing for the upcoming election of 2003.

Mayor of Wageningen

On 1 October 2003, Pechtold was appointed Mayor of Wageningen; he remained Chairman of the D66.

Minister for Government Reform and Kingdom Relations

Thom de Graaf, the D66 Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Government Reform and Kingdom Relations in the Second Balkenende cabinet, resigned on 23 March 2005 after the introduction of democratically elected mayors had been rejected in the Senate. The proposal was especially important; it had become a symbol of the government reform that the D66 had wanted since the party's creation. Pechtold was asked to succeed him as Minister. Pechtold resigned as Chairman and Mayor the same day that he took office as the new Minister for Government Reform and Kingdom Relations, on 31 March 2005.

On 29 June 2006 the D66 retracted its support for the Second Balkenende cabinet. The next day, Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende offered the resignation of the full cabinet to Queen Beatrix. Pechtold resigned as Minister for Government Reform and Kingdom Relations on 3 July 2006. His fellow D66 cabinet member Laurens Jan Brinkhorst, the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Economic Affairs, resigned on 7 July 2006.

House of Representatives

Pechtold was elected the Leader of the D66 on 24 June 2006 in the leadership election of 2006, defeating Lousewies van der Laan, the party's Parliamentary leader in the House of Representatives. Van der Laan had only a few months earlier succeeded Boris Dittrich, who had resigned as party leader and parliamentary leader in the House of Representatives on 3 February 2006.

In 2007 the parliamentarian press chose Pechtold with 31% of the votes as the "Dutch politician of the year 2007".

For the Dutch general election of 2006 Pechtold became lijsttrekker (top candidate) and the Democrats 66 lost three seats and became an opposition party. For the Dutch general election of 2010, Pechtold again as Lijsttrekker won ten seats but the Democrats 66 remained an opposition party. With the following Dutch general election of 2012, Pechtold again as lijsttrekker won two seats with the Democrats 66 again remaining an opposition party.

During the Fourth Balkenende cabinet administration Pechtold served as government opposition leader. After the Dutch elections of 2010, the D66 won seven-seats in the House of Representatives which journalists claimed was due to Pechtolds leadership during the Fourth Balkenende cabinet time.[1] After the 2010 Dutch cabinet formation the D66 again remained in opposition. In 2012, Pechtold published Henk, Ingrid, & Alexander, which ostensibly aimed to break through the populism that has dominated Dutch politics in the previous decade, "Henk" and "Ingrid" being the generic names proposed by Geert Wilders and other Party for Freedom politicians to represent the average Dutch couple, by engaging everyday people in conversation. The book was panned in de Volkskrant as a "cheap PR-stunt without any value to it."[2]

During a debate with Mark Rutte in 2010, Pechtold championed the cause of social liberalism, noting that the government “needs to offer services where fairness is more important than efficiency, such as education and healthcare," while accusing Rutte of pursuing policies that hurt the most vulnerable in Dutch society.[3]

After the shootdown of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 in July 2014, Pechtold explicitly voiced his support for economic expediency over ethical correctness by stating: "We are a small country, dependent on our exports, and unlike the United States, we cannot always react from our moral high grounds." [4]

In December 2017, it was revealed that Pechtold received an apartment valued at 135,000 euros from Serge Marcoux, a former Canadian ambassador, that was not listed on the gift register of the House of Representatives, with Pechtold justifying the lack of report by saying that he knew Marcoux from outside politics and that the apartment was a private gift which did not fall under the purview of the register.[5]

On October 6, 2018, Pechtold announced his resignation as D66 leader and from the parliament.[6] As chairman of the parliamentary party, Pechtold was succeeded by Rob Jetten on 9 October.[7]

References

  1. (in Dutch) Het Pechtold-effect goed voor D66
  2. Fretz, Johan (8 February 2012). "'Ik mis Hans van Mierlo opeens zo'". de Volkskrant. Retrieved 8 February 2012. Pechtold kijkt koddig in de lens van de NOS en noemt de populistische titel van zijn boek 'gewoon een knipoog'. Ik vind het een goedkope PR-stunt zonder onderliggende waarde.
  3. Emilie van Outeren, "Will the real liberal please stand up". Archived 2012-09-21 at the Wayback Machine
  4. "The Netherlands, a Nation in Mourning but Mindful of Ties to Russia".
  5. Raoul du Pré (18 December 2017). "Pechtold kreeg Schevenings appartement van bevriende oud-ambassadeur en noemt die gift een privékwestie". de Volkskrant. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  6. "Alexander Pechtold weg als partijleider, vertrekt dinsdag uit Kamer". NOS (in Dutch).
  7. "Rob Jetten nieuwe fractievoorzitter D66". NOS (in Dutch). 9 October 2018. Retrieved 9 October 2018.
Official
Party political offices
Preceded by
Gerard Schouw
Chair of the Democrats 66
2002–2005
Succeeded by
Jan Hoekema
Ad interim
Preceded by
Boris Dittrich
Leader of the Democrats 66
2006–2018
Succeeded by
Sigrid Kaag
Preceded by
Thom de Graaf
2003
Lijsttrekker of the
Democrats 66

20062010
20122017
Succeeded by
Sigrid Kaag
2021
Preceded by
Lousewies
van der Laan
Parliamentary leader of the
Democrats 66 in the
House of Representatives

2006–2018
Succeeded by
Rob Jetten
Political offices
Preceded by
Geke Faber
Mayor of Wageningen
2003–2005
Succeeded by
Chris Rutten
Ad interim
Preceded by
Thom de Graaf
Minister without Portfolio
for the Interior

2005–2006
Succeeded by
Atzo Nicolaï
Civic offices
Preceded by
Petra Delsing
Director-General of the
Driving License and
Certificates Agency

2019–present
Incumbent
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