On 2 July 2024, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte calmly handed over power to his successor, the former intelligence chief Dick Schoof; he then left the Binnenhof government building in The Hague on a bicycle after 14 years as PM. He waved to the small crowd of cheering Dutch supporters, then pedalled off into the city. It just seemed so very Dutch. If only all transfers of power were like this.
The Netherlands has by no means been the only country that has changed its leadership in recent weeks. In India, Narendra Modi must now learn to govern in coalition, which is a new experience for him in his third term.
Western elections
In Britain, the Conservatives’ 14-year reign ended with a wipe-out, as they lost 251 MPs, including 12 cabinet ministers and one former prime minister. The Labour Party was the big victor and now governs with a huge parliamentary majority.
In Iran, the reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian won the presidential election run-off, called after former President Ebrahim Raisi died in a helicopter crash. Analysts say that little substance will change while the Supreme Leader remains in place.
In France, the polls shocked everyone, returning a left-wing coalition as the strongest by number of seats and the much-vaunted far-right National Rally coming third. Now, they must broker deals for a ruling coalition, which the French are not used to.