Senate has Plasterk carry on with islands Electoral College
THE HAGUE--The special Electoral College (Kiescollege) for the Caribbean Netherlands to secure the voting rights of Dutch citizens in Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba for the First Chamber of the Dutch Parliament without any influence of foreign residents of the islands is still on the radar.
The First Chamber, or the Senate, has prompted Minister of Home Affairs and Kingdom Relations to go back to the Second Chamber to discuss the possibility of establishing an Electoral College so Dutch nationals on the islands can indirectly elect the members of the First Chamber through this special body.
The minister sent a letter to the Second Chamber on Friday in which he offered to enter discussions, but added that he only considered this "useful" if there was a majority support to adapt the law proposal which arranges the voting rights on the three islands and which was already approved by the Second Chamber last year.
Plasterk's move is the result of a February 10, 2015, decision of the Senate's Permanent Committees for Home Affairs, the High Councils of State/General Affairs and the Royal House, and for Kingdom Relations.
The two committees decided to defer the handling of the law proposal to adapt the voting rights of non-Dutch residents of the Caribbean Netherlands Read more
Candidates in this article: