Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
The Rutte IV Cabinet at the marathon parliamentary debate on the 2023 Budget, 21 September 2022
The Rutte IV Cabinet at the marathon parliamentary debate on the 2023 Budget, 21 September 2022 - Credit: Tweede Kamer / Tweede Kamer - License: All Rights Reserved
Politics
Rutte IV
gender equality
women in politics
Women Inc. Stem op een vrouw
Mariëlle Paul
Wednesday, 19 July 2023 - 08:40

Share this article:

Women make up a majority of Dutch Cabinet members for first time ever

Once VVD parliamentarian Marielle Paul is sworn in as Minister for Primary and Secondary Education, the Dutch Cabinet will consist of more women than men for the first time ever. The caretaker Rutte IV Cabinet has a total of 29 Ministers and State Secretaries. Fifteen of them are women, NOS reports.

That puts the Netherlands among a small group of countries with a majority of women in their governments. At the start of this year, there were 13 such countries worldwide, including Spain, Rwanda, Canada, and Colombia. On average, less than a quarter of government ministers worldwide are women, according to figures from the United Nations.

When it took office, the Rutte IV Cabinet already had the most female politicians in Dutch parliamentary history. It was a goal of outgoing Prime Minister Mark Rutte. Paul is succeeding Dennis Wiersma, who stepped down after multiple accusations of inappropriate behavior. "I am very happy that she said yes, she is a very good one. She also knows the terrain well," Rutte said on Tuesday. "And for the first time, a Council of Ministers with eleven women and only nine men. You know, we continue to look for gender parity, but only with equal suitability."

Devika Partiman of the Stem op een Vrouw foundation, which translates to Vote for a Woman, called a female successor to Wiersma a good sign. “There is always a risk that such an almost equal distribution between men and women will not last,” she told NOS. “That after a while, it will fall into the old pattern of putting men forward for a job as Minister or State Secretary. That is not happening now.”

According to the interest group Women Inc., having more women than men in the Cabinet will have two effects. “First of all, they are an example for others. If a girl or young woman sees all those women standing on the platform, she might think: hey, that’s something for me too,” spokesperson Cecile Wansink told the broadcaster.

Second, female government members are more likely to make policies that promote gender equality, Women Inc. said. “In recent years, there have been bills on, for example, closing the wage gap and abolishing the mandatory reflection period for abortion. Proposals that were made by women and that other women have championed.”

Despite the central government’s achievement, women are still underrepresented in other levels of Dutch politics. Around 35 percent of city council members are women. And the new coalitions formed after the Provincial Council elections have the lowest number of female deputies in twelve years. The provincial governments in Zeeland and Flevoland are entirely men. “That while local and provincial politics is a breeding ground for political talent that becomes active at a national level,” Partiman said.

Female politicians also face online criticism and harassment much more than their male counterparts. Deputy Prime Minister and D66 leader Sigrid Kaag said the “hate, harassment, and threats” she faced, and its impact on her family were behind her decision to step down and leave politics.

Today, Corinne Ellemeet became the fourth prominent female politician to announce her imminent departure in two weeks. She spoke out several times about the “enormous hatred on social media” aimed at female politicians in particular.

More like this

Image
Woman working on a laptop
Record number of women took top jobs at Dutch companies last year
Image
King Willem-Alexamder and the Schoof I Cabinet on the steps of Huis ten Bosch palace immediately after their swearing-in ceremony, 2 July 2024
Two Deputy PMs in last Dutch gov’t wanted headscarves declared as hindering emancipation
Image
Back view of children in a primary school classroom raising their hands to answer the teacher's question
Dutch education standards continue to lag despite repeated warnings
Image
A voter casting their ballot in Amsterdam for the municipal elections on 18 March 2026
504 women elected to city councils with preferential votes
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Kids Top 20 returns to TV with AI presenter, without disclaimer that “she” isn’t real
  • Heat strokes at marathons: Runners sick in Amersfoort, Utrecht, Houten; two reanimated
  • Nonalcoholic beer grew even more popular in 2025 as traditional lager sales fall
  • Regulator fines online auction site Ticketveiling.nl €270,000 over hidden bidding bots
  • Heat emergency declared at Groningen Marathon after several runners fall ill

Top stories

  • Heat strokes at marathons: Runners sick in Amersfoort, Utrecht, Houten; two reanimated
  • Heat emergency declared at Groningen Marathon after several runners fall ill
  • Body found in residential garden after passenger jumps from hot air balloon over Zundert
  • Unusually early heat in Netherlands gives way to cooler start of June
  • Police seek "older man in blue shirt" after fatal rail accident near Twello

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content