Former Dutch Prime Minister
Born: September 29, 1938;
Died: October 20, 2018
WIM Kok, who has died aged 80, was a former Dutch Prime Minister who inspired a new breed of pragmatic Social Democratic leaders who swept to power in Europe in the 1990s. Prime Minister from 1994 to 2002, he headed a coalition that pushed through socially liberal but pragmatic policies - his government legalised gay marriage, prostitution and euthanasia, but also cut taxes and encouraged privatisation.
Kok hitched his Dutch Labor Party to the right-wing Liberal Party and to the centrist Democrats 66 to form two ruling coalitions that steered the Netherlands to unprecedented economic success. Ahead of his second election victory in 1998, British Prime Minister Tony Blair praised him as one of the greatest people in politics.
Dutch King Willem-Alexander, his wife Queen Maxima and former queen Beatrix issued a statement praising Kok for his integrity and talent for making complex problems manageable. Kok defused public unease about the royal couple’s marriage by persuading Maxima’s father, Jorge Zorreguieta, not to attend the 2002 wedding. Zorreguieta had served as agriculture minister for two years during the 1976-83 dictatorship of Argentine President Jorge Videla.
Later that year, Kok resigned as prime minister along with his entire government following a critical report of the administration’s handling of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre in Bosnia, when Dutch U.N. peacekeepers failed to prevent the slaughter of some 8,000 Muslim men and boys by Bosnian Serb forces.
A government-commissioned report harshly criticised Kok’s administration for sending Dutch soldiers into a danger zone without a proper mandate or the weapons needed to protect about 30,000 refugees who had fled to the Dutch base in eastern Bosnia.
One of Kok’s strongest selling points in a nation that nurtures a strong distrust of authority was his image as an ordinary man made good — a trustworthy, down-to-earth realist.
During the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Kok and his wife Rita decided to see more of the United States. Turning down the Secret Service’s offer of 24-hour protection, the Koks rented a Winnebago and struck out on their own. Their only concession to the security-conscious American authorities was to call the CIA daily from a sheriff’s office to tell them where they were.
Kok, the son of a Dutch carpenter, will be remembered as one of the founding fathers of the “Polder Model.” It refers to the uniquely Dutch brand of consensus politics in which the government, employers and trade unions got together to thrash out pay deals. The policy saw unions agree to belt-tightening measures in harsh economic times as long as employees were allowed to share in the profits when things were going well.
A left-wing leader of the most powerful Dutch union before he moved into national politics, Kok shifted to the right of the political spectrum during his time in government. Despite that, his reputation for political honesty remained unscathed.
“Personally, he drifted from far left to fairly right,” Christian Democrat Bert de Vries, a former colleague, said in a 1998 interview. “I couldn’t pull that off, but he believes in it. He is a survivor.”
After his political career, Kok was a non-executive board member at Dutch multinationals, including Shell and KLM.
A self-made man from a working-class background, Kok studied at the country’s prestigious Nijenrode Business School. After spending the early part of his career working for trade unions, Kok was elected to parliament’s lower house in 1986, serving as parliamentary leader of the left-wing Labor Party.
Three years later, he became finance minister in the third government of ex-Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers. He became prime minister in 1994, when the Labor Party won 37 seats in the 150-seat Parliament, knocking Lubbers’ Christian Democrats out of power for the first time in the party’s history.
Kok is survived by his wife Rita and three children.
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