BRUSSELS,
Belgium
— Belgium's government collapsed today, unable to
resolve an enduring divide over more self-rule for the
country's Dutch and French-speakers. The gap was so wide
the premier suggested the end of Belgium as a country was
looming.
JOHN THYS/AFP/Getty
Flemish demonstrators
protest against the three French-speaking mayors of the
three Flemish municipalities on June 2, 2008, as their
nomination as mayors have been blocked by the regional
government of Flanders because they sent election
materiel in French, while Flemish law only allows it do
be distributed in Dutch.
King Albert II immediately began political discussions
with lawmakers to try to resolve the situation, talks
expected to take several days. He did not formally accept
the resignation of government offered by Premier Leterme
late yesterday, so Mr. Leterme's government stays on in a
caretaker capacity for now.
In an unusual declaration, the premier said Belgium's
constitutional crisis stems from the fact that
"consensus politics" across Belgium's widening
linguistic divide no longer works.
"The federal consensus-model has reached its
limits," Mr. Leterme said.
Mr. Leterme failed to get his cabinet — an unwieldy
alliance of Christian Democrats, Liberals, Socialists and
nationalist hard-liners from both language camps that took
office March 20 — to agree on a future together by
devolving more federal powers to the Dutch-speaking
Flanders and Francophone Wallonia.
Francophone parties expressed surprise that Mr. Leterme
threw in the towel. The vice-premier, Didier Reynders,
urged him to stay on, saying the government must go ahead
with its social and economic program. The leader of the
Francophone Socialists, Elio di Rupo, said the
constitutional reform negotiations were held in a
"constructive, positive climate."
But mainstream Flemish parties — including Mr. Leterme's
own Christian Democrats — accused French-speaking
parties of not negotiating in good faith.
Granting Belgium's Dutch and French-speaking communities
more self-rule began, gradually, in the 1970s, in such
areas as culture, youth affairs, and sports. Since then
education, housing, trade, tourism, agriculture, and other
areas were shifted from the federal government and
Flanders, Wallonia and bilingual Brussels were given
regional governments and parliaments.
Now Francophone parties accuse Dutch-speakers of trying to
separate themselves completely from French-speaking
Wallonia, where the 15% unemployment rate is triple that
of Dutch-speaking Flanders.
Flemish parties want their more prosperous, Dutch-speaking
northern half of the country to be more autonomous by
shifting corporate and other taxes, some social security
measures, transport, health, labor, and justice matters to
the language regions.
Mainstream Flemish politicians say there is room for more
regional autonomy in one country but hardline nationalist
parties in Flanders advocate the breakup of Belgium.
www.nysun.com/foreign/dutch-french-divide-drives-belgian-governments/81920/