The Spreidingswet (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈsprɛidɪŋsʋɛt], lit.'Distribution act') is a Dutch statute intended to better distribute asylum seekers across municipalities. Introduced by Minister for Migration Eric van der Burg, it was passed by the House of Representatives in October 2023 and by the Senate in January 2024.

Spreidingswet
States General of the Netherlands
  • Wet gemeentelijke taak mogelijk maken asielopvangvoorzieningen
Passed byHouse of Representatives
Passed10 October 2023
Passed bySenate
Passed23 January 2024
First chamber: House of Representatives
Introduced byEric van der Burg
Voting summary
  • 81 voted for
  • 68 voted against
Second chamber: Senate
Committee responsibleCommittee for Immigration & Asylum / Justice and Home Affairs Council
Voting summary
  • 43 voted for
  • 27 voted against
Status: In force

Contents edit

The bill has made municipalities co-responsible for sheltering asylum seekers. To ensure a fair distribution, the cabinet member in charge of immigration should once per two years assess per province the accommodation necessary to house all refugees. The King's commissioner facilitates negotiations within a province between municipalities to determine a distribution of the required capacity. Municipalities receive financial incentives for sheltering special groups of asylum seekers and for providing more accommodation than required.[1] The baseline for the latter is determined by a combination of the municipality's population and socio-economic score.[2] The bonus for additional sheltering is intended to prevent downscaling of capacity in times of a low influx of refugees. If no agreement is reached within nine months, the national government can compel municipalities to take on a specified number of asylum seekers.[1]

In the Nederlands Juristenblad [nl], several jurists questioned the government's ability to force the sheltering of additional refugees. Besides, Van der Burg clarified to the Senate that agreements would not be enforced if municipalities unable to fulfill their obligations indicated their challenge in a timely manner.[1]

Legislative history edit

Minister for Migration Eric van der Burg (VVD) announced the Spreidingswet in the summer of 2022, as too few municipalities were volunteering to shelter refugees.[3] He introduced it in the House of Representatives on 28 March 2023.[4] In order to secure support from the VVD, a coalition party, Van der Burg replaced obligations for municipalities to shelter asylum seekers by financial incentives: upon opening a location housing at least 100 refugees for at least five years, they would receive €2,500 per refugee.[1] However, the revised bill did not receive enough support, and the fourth Rutte cabinet collapsed in July 2023 as a result of disagreements over immigration reform.[1][5] The CDA, a coalition party until the collapse, successfully attempted to remove most financial incentives from the bill in late September.[1] The Spreidingswet was passed by the House of Representatives on 10 October with 81 out of 149 votes in favor.[4] The VVD voted in opposition, arguing measures would first have to be taken to reduce the number of refugees entering the Netherlands.[6]

The bill subsequently moved to the Senate, where it was set to be voted on in January 2024.[1] Following the November 2023 general election, a House motion by VVD leader Dilan Yeşilgöz was carried calling on the Senate to suspend its consideration of the bill in order to not interfere with the ongoing cabinet formation. The motion was co-sponsored by the other parties involved in the process (PVV, BBB, and NSC), while being fiercely criticized by the opposition.[3] The VVD's ten-member parliamentary group in the Senate announced a week before the vote it would support the bill, saying it trusted the newly elected House of Representatives would tackle inflow issues.[6] The bill was approved on 23 January with 43 out of the 70 senators present voting in favor, and it went into effect on 1 February.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Gunst, Jakko (15 January 2024). "Debat spreidingswet nadert eindelijk ontknoping" [Debate about Spreidingswet finally reaches climax]. Reformatorisch Dagblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  2. ^ Slomp, Priscilla (23 January 2024). "Eerste Kamer stemt in met spreidingswet: zo werkt de verdeling van asielzoekers" [Senate votes in favor of Spreidingswet: This is how the distribution of refugees will work]. NU.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 25 January 2024.
  3. ^ a b Al Ali, Wafa (14 January 2024). "Senaat wacht spannend debat over spreidingswet, hangt op twee stemmen" [Senate awaits tense debate about Spreidingswet, depends on two votes]. NRC (in Dutch). Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Wet gemeentelijke taak mogelijk maken asielopvangvoorzieningen ('Spreidingswet')" [Act municipal task enabling asylum centers ('Spreidingswet')]. House of Representatives (in Dutch). Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Dit is wat we nu weten over de val van kabinet-Rutte IV" [This is what we now know about the collapse of the fourth Rutte cabinet]. NOS (in Dutch). 8 July 2023. Retrieved 16 January 2024.
  6. ^ a b Slomp, Priscilla (16 January 2024). "Spreidingswet asielopvang komt er: genoeg steun in Eerste Kamer" [Spreidingswet for sheltering refugees will pass: Enough support in the Senate]. NU.nl (in Dutch). Retrieved 17 January 2024.
  7. ^ Keultjes, Hanneke (23 January 2024). "Nu definitief: na mislukte uitstelpoging PVV stemt ook Eerste Kamer voor spreidingswet" [Now definitive: Senate passes Spreidingswet following failed postponement attempt by PVV]. Algemeen Dagblad (in Dutch). Retrieved 23 January 2024.