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Dutch Pirate Party Ready To Enter National Parliament

Next week the Dutch will elect their national parliament for the coming four years, and for the second time the local Pirate Party is on the ballot. According to most polls the Pirates have a decent chance of securing at least one seat, a milestone for the movement as it would be the first democratically chosen Pirate in a national parliament. One of the main goals of the Pirates is to fight increased censorship and the growing influence of the copyright lobby.

piratenpartijFounded in 2006, the Pirate Party movement has scored some big and small victories over the years.

Their biggest success came in 2009 when the party scored two seats at the European Parliament. During the last year this was followed by dozens more seats in German state parliaments.

For now, however, the Pirates have yet to be voted into a national parliament. With elections coming up next week the Dutch branch of the Pirate Party (Piratenpartij) has become a surprising candidate to reach this milestone.

The Pirates previously participated in the 2010 elections, but with 0.1 percent of the total vote the results were disappointing. This year the polls are more promising with several surveys listing the Pirates as a serious contender for at least one seat.

“There are several polls in the Netherlands, some put us at ‘almost one seat’ and others at almost two seats. Seeing how the Pirate Party also attracts a lot of first time voters who are not really represented in those polls, we feel that two seats is feasible,” party leader Dirk Poot tells TorrentFreak.

Poot is not the stereotypical pimple-faced geek most outsiders expect to see when they read about the Pirate Party. The 44-year old party leader studied business and medicine, and is currently employed as a programmer developing medical software.

Poot says that the Pirate Party is much-needed in the Netherlands for a variety of reasons, not least as a counterbalance to the growing influences of the copyright lobby. One of the prime examples of the damage this lobby has done is the local Pirate Bay blockade.

“The Netherlands is one of the few countries in the world where access to the Pirate Bay has been blocked. During our recent fight with BREIN over our proxy-service, none of the other political parties voiced any protest over the fact that a political party could be censored by a private lobbying organization,” Poot says.

According to Poot the political establishment is not doing enough to address the issues at hand.

“The Dutch Copyright law has been in effect for exactly 100 years, without any significant update. It has been clear for over 10 years that this law desperately needs an update, but this has also been ignored by the existing parties.”

“They have looked the other way while BREIN was allowed to continue building jurisprudence, resulting in a virtually unchallenged position of this foundation as the de-facto Dutch Internet censor,” Poot says.

When elected, the Pirate Party plans to put these issues on the political agenda. However, the Pirates aren’t limiting themselves to file-sharing issues. The debate over medical patents and their effect on the rising costs of the Dutch medical system also became an issue in the election race, in part thanks to the Pirates.

“It was the Pirate Party that managed to put the need for patent reform on the agenda, and the mere fact that we now are participating in the elections and even polling at one or two seats is forcing other political parties to start voicing concerns over the added healthcare costs as a result of pharmaceutical patents,” Poot says.

Freedom of information is also high on the agenda of the Pirates. Unlike other parties it is willing to take a stand for Wikileaks, and the party is protesting a recent proposal that would limit people’s access to government documents.

By bringing up issues that are important to a large group of voters, they are encouraging other parties to take a stand on issues that were previously ignored.

“The Netherlands needs a Pirate Party to show the existing parties that Internet freedom and the sharing of knowledge and culture is a legitimate concern for many voters; it will force the old and established parties to finally take a stand on these issues,” Poot says.

Skeptics claim that with a single seat in the Dutch parliament (there are 150) the Pirate Party won’t be able to achieve anything of significance, but Poot disagrees.

“Even one seat would put us in a position where we could ask questions from within the system, forcing the government to heed and answer those questions. Too often questions from outside groups have been ignored; a seat in parliament would force the authorities to finally answer these concerns. It might even help the authorities to see ‘the error of their ways’.”

“As Engström and Andersdotter [Pirate Party MEPs] have shown in the European Parliament, even one or two seats can make a big difference in the decision-making process, because we’d also be in a position to inform the other members of parliament, which up until now had to rely solely on lobbyist information,” Poot says.

At a minimum, the first seat in a national parliament will be a huge boon to the dozens of other Pirate Parties worldwide. The Dutch elections will be held next Wednesday and they could mark another milestone for the Pirate Party.

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  • Anameymous

    Wishing the party the best of luck from Denmark!

    Go make history!

    • http://twitter.com/MarcaiXavi MarcaiXavi

       Julie implied I’m stunned that some people able to profit $5309 in four weeks on the network. did you look at this(Click on menu Home)

    • http://twitter.com/MarcaiXavi MarcaiXavi

      ….
      goo.gl/8tXC9

    • Guest

       I bet now they (dutch government and MAFIAA) don’t like democracy!

      • http://kristen-r-turner.myopenid.com/ Kristen R Turner

        When his father was a young man, alcohol was under Prohibition in the US. http://Unlimitedjoys.blogspot.com I can guarantee that my fine upstanding pillar of the community grandfather was a criminal in the 1920′s and was never ashamed about it.  

  • http://twitter.com/MAFIAAFire MAFIAAFire

    Good luck PP, kick their butts!

  • 1hhh1

    Hope he sets him aim at Brein.

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  • Strawbear

    Good luck from the UK too, but until the PP become more than a one-policy party they’ll never be taken seriously by the majority of people, which is a shame.

    It would be nice if some of the major parties in all countries took the time to listen to what most of the 99% would like in terms of copyright and well… social justice, rather than just hear what’s whispered by the rich and politically strong.

    • Violated0

      The Pirate Party is NOT a one policy party. You should go and read the many other social subjects they support.

      • si

         They have other policies. But most normal people don’t support those other policies.

      • Hogspace

        Do they support the return of capital punishment for copyright fascists?

      • ehjxgcth

        What about other piracy like stealing ships and the content inside of them? Why should digital content be the only thing liberated? 

    • Anyone

      The Pirate Party has other policies, not just copyright reform

      most have to do with transparency in politics and social justice
      I haven’t read the programme of the dutch pirate party, but I’m sure there is more in there than just the copyright reform and internet freedom

      • si

         They have only one policy that isn’t batshit crazy.

        • Hogspace

          It would be nice if they lobbied to amend the ECHR to enshrine absolute freedom (ex direct incitement) of speech without national veto, and removed all protection for religious waccos. That’s all of them, by definition, BTW

    • ScrewEwe2

      99%…? From what I’ve seen over the last dozen years in P2P, is that we (pirates/file sharers) are an extremely small minority of the 99% and it wouldn’t surprise me if we don’t even come close to 1% of the world’s population. Most sheeple do buy all their media, whether that’s music, movies or software and are too chicken or naive to even try to play pirate games. The MAFFIAA are spending exhorbitant amounts of money and governmental resources on trying to stop a few million people worldwide from trying to get some free music, movies or software. MAFIAA, just fucking Die, Please!

      I don’t support the Asians or people from other 3rd world hell holes trying to pass off cheaply made crap as designer bullshit, or the people trying to get away with producing knock off medications that are more dangerous than not. I take different Heart medications and pain pills, and I want know that what I’m taking is the real thing made by Pfizer and not made by some Pakistani guy named Fizeer. Government, go after those guys distributing fake Viagra and Lipitor and quit kissing Chriss Dodd’s hairy ass. The movie and music industries are not destitute.

      I got no problem’s with street drugs and their manufacture and if you can’t handle your drugs of choice, that’s your problem and falls into the category of “well, that sounds like a personal problem to me”. After 57 years I figured out that reefer is a hell of a lot safer and better for me than alcohol. Altering ones mood or mind is as old as humanity itself and Prohibition doesn’t work. You can not legislate morality PERIOD, whether you are trying to control what people injest, see, hear or feel or how they choose to get it. My old man would come home and drink a few mixed drinks after work, every day That was socially acceptable and legal in his lijetime. I smoke a joint, totally unacceptable and I have a drug problem. I think he was the one with a problem. When his father was a young man, alcohol was under Prohibition in the US. I can guarantee that my fine upstanding pillar of the community grandfather was a criminal in the 1920′s and was never ashamed about it. He dissagreed with a stupid law and went about doing what he was gonna do, and so do I, and i will continue to. End of friggen subject. Half a nice day.

      • ScrewEwe2

        My edit was to take care of the “show more/show less thing with Disqus. I’m glad we have Disqus, but sometimes it’s finicky and sucks.

        • Matías Guzmán

           You’re a retard.

        • ScrewEwe2

          Matías Guzmán. Well ScrewEwe2. I knew sooner or later this alias would come in handy.

      • ehjxgcth

        We’re not sheeple. We just like to pay for what we consume because we want others to pay their fair share of what we build. What goes around, comes around. 

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  • Whatever

    Unfortunetally, the population in the Netherlands is too blind and stupid to see through the sand the other parties are throwing in everyone’s eyes. Throw in a bit of greed and all the ingredients for the pirate party not entering parliament are there.

    The big parties use the same 4 subjects over and over again any every election, they try to make people afraid of their opponents, are afraid of “the markets” and make a mockery of voting for a small party. Also the memory of most of the people seems to be very short indeed so it will happen over and over again.

    In the end the votes will be led by the (daily?) polls which instills fear in the people that the wrong party wins and so will choose the biggest opposition party (“strategic” voting ) instead of what they would have voted for in the first place.

    But one can only hope that they will win as The Netherlands seems to be changing into a “bananen republiek”. (Dutch, don’t know if it is the same in English)

    • DeyRail

      True enough. I was one of the few people that bothered protesting against ACTA. Over 10.000 people agreed to be there, we ended up protesting with barely a few hundred people. 

      When it’s their wallets they’ll voice a complaint, but when it’s their rights or lifestyle that’s ‘under attack’ they quite frankly don’t care. Not until after it’s too late that is. Something which is unfortunately becoming true for most European countries.
      I’m already dreading what kind of lunatic will be ‘ruling’ the country this time around. They’re acting extremely immature to begin with, continuously whining about who they don’t want to work with. As if anyone else gets the option to choose their co-workers. Any and all party that doesn’t belong to the big 4 are indeed ridiculed and despised the second they make any kind of progress. And naturally everything that’s despised must be made to look ridiculous.This year around I keep hearing about how confused people are and how they don’t know who to vote for, so chances are that they’ll end up going for the popular vote. Good times…Naturally they’ll vote for the ones that promise to provide them with the best financial deal. Because budget cuts and the like are fine ‘just as long as it doesn’t affect me’.(And yes, it’s banana republic).

  • Anonymous

    best of luck to the Dutch Pirate Party. let’s face it, Holland deserves some serious changes to be made. even worse than the banning of TPB, was the banning of the use of proxies that could be used to access TPB. even worse than that is the allowing of corrupt judges to continue in positions of handing out so-called legal decisions when they are obviously biased, working for the very industries they have ruled in favour of. that is a disgraceful way for any democratic country’s legal system to operate but not as disgraceful as letting it continue once exposed!

  • Anyone

    time for BREIN to get some BRAIN
    the netherlands is in dire need for some balance, to kick the censors out

    • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/RKKPBJMHI22ZE7BO2BHOFA3TMM Volker

       ”time for BREIN to get some BRAIN”

      In this case, Abandon All Hope

  • Violated0

    The Pirate Party getting a seat in the Dutch Parliament is very important. While they of course lack power to shape Government policy they at least have a voice where there was previously none. A voice of sound reason can of course prove quite convincing when it gets heard by 149 others.

    So I can only say VOTE PIRATE PARTY and make their enemies walk the plank.

  • Anon

    Gotta love how government gives the Pirate Party a genuine fair chance, and all they can gather is the tiniest minority and perhaps a single seat. If that. Bravo billions of pirates. 

    Maybe now you’ll get it that defying and breaking the law regarding digital infringement is no path to anywhere worth going, if you would like to keep your rights. Pirates are morons. Governments are prying our privacy wide open for digital infringement and pirates brag about having so many harddrives of movies their lifetime won’t be long enough to view them all. And pirates say the industry is greed. Right. I think we see where this is eventually going.

    • Guest

       We are just now beginning to see the first generation to grow up with the internet become old enough to start seriously running for political office.  You’ll note that the pirate party already has some seats in Germany and in the European Parliament.  A few years ago they didn’t have that.  Now they do.  Also, each time there is a notable action of censorship enacted, pirate party participation and membership increases.  Now, tell me, Anon:  what do you think will happen as more children that grew up with the Internet come of age and more 60-something politicians die out?
      Also remember:  At one time alcohol was deemed illegal in the US.  Now, it is not.

    • Blabla

      ”Gotta love how government gives the Pirate Party a genuine fair chance”

      they do, and must do . here in holland at least. 

      ”all they can gather is the tiniest minority and perhaps a single seat. If that.”

      when you are a small party, you will lack the media exposure , which bigger and more settled parties enjoy. 

      ”Bravo billions of pirates.”

      yep. it is a damn good result  for starters.  you should know how many small  parties have tried before and failed.

      ”Maybe now you’ll get it that defying and breaking the law regarding
      digital infringement is no path to anywhere worth going, if you would
      like to keep your rights.  ”

      what are you talking about?

      leave them alone. go after the people who make some serious money with it.

      ”Pirates are morons.”

      noted. now it is my turn: you are an idiot too.

      ”governments are prying our privacy wide open for digital infringement”

      thx to the mighty lobbyists. it is sad but true.

      ”and pirates brag about having so many harddrives of movies their lifetime won’t be long enough to view them all.”

      some do yes. all lost sales right?

      ”And pirates say the industry is greed. Right.”

      that surely  is the case.  and they have a lot of power too, too much for a too long time imo. btw most people are a bit greedy. it is the force that drives capitalism.

        remember when machines were taking over human labour in factories. did the economy collapse , did they world end?

      ” I think we see where this is eventually going.”

      we cannot predict where this is going, it is too complicated.

       luckily they stopped demanding millions from poor souls who shared 34 songs or so. that was really a very sad affair. also disconnecting people from the internet is way over the top.. imo/

       

       

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  • ScrewEwe2

    I just spent the last 15 minutes looking around the US Pirate Party site, and it’s a total friggen joke. The US Pirate Party is doomed before it can even get up and running IMO. Check out their forums section, mostly spam. I wish the Euro Pirate Parties success, but the US Party is all suck at this point. Very disappointing.

    http://pirate-party.us/

    • Anyone

      the US system doesn’t allow a third party anyway
      until the election system is reformed you are stuck with two slightly different flavors of shit

      • Guest
        • ScrewEwe2

          I saw Dr.Jill Stein, and I think Cheri Honkala speaking at an event on CSpan recently. I’ll have to give them a closer look. I’ve got a little bit of a libertarian streak in me, but Ron Paul is a little more fiscally aggressive in his view of lowering the cost and avaliability of governmental support and a safety net for some people that need help, but there are also issues of liberty and freedom that I’m in full agreement with.

      • ScrewEwe2

        I agree with you about the two slightly different flavors of shit that we are being served in this cuntry, but more than two parties are always possible and usually probable but unfortunately implausible. Since most people in this country are more apt to be willing to stick with the two party system, we will alway’s be stuck in this sine wave, that is our two party system. There are far more people that see themselves as middle of the roader’s than wingnuts, so people predictably tend to wander slightly back and forth between both parties. Just like the sexes are give or take a little from being evenly split at 50%, so are their voting habits. Landslide elections are really rare unless you call 53% in the executive branch a landslide. In the somewhat distant past there have been times when there were more than two viable interests at play for gaining control of society and it”s governence. To end on the subject of shit, there have been numerous times when I have said after a good meal “Man, that was some good shit, anymore left?”. Politics today doesn’t make for a very satisfying meal.

        • Whatever

          Too see that sine wave you need a magnifying glass. Otherwise you won’t see the difference.

      • tetridae

         Well many countries with many-party-systems end up in two-bloc coaltitions sooner or later so americans really aren’t alone in the “one” vs “the other” way of thinking. In practice we have the same in Sweden, which is very sad. It creates an illusion that there is an epic battle between the two blocks that is everything that matters and that any “outsider-party” is insignificant. Very sad.

    • Arjen Kamphuis

      The US has two (sort of) political parties. One more than North Korea and the absolute minimum needed for performing the rituals that make it look like a democracy. Leave if you can.

      • ScrewEwe2

        I’m afraid I couldn’t afford a Bus ticket out, and besides, I kind of like it here, if not the politics.

    • Guest

       The “First Past the Post” voting system in American politics works wonders in discouraging any significant political input from non-entrenched parties

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  • http://mijnopenid.nl/is/reinouts reinouts

    I wish them good luck, but I can’t help but wonder what new things they bring to the table. Copyright reform, open source in the public sector, internet freedom, privacy, etc. all have been advocated vigorously by the Dutch Green party (GroenLinks) for the past decade or so. The lobby group Bits of Freedom even puts GroenLinks on top of the list of digital freedom-loving parties. Check http://2012.groenlinks.nl/standpunten/cultuur-internet/digitale-vrijheid for more info (Dutch).

  • fluorospace

    although  a Pirate Party is a natural response to the actual political situation , what we need is a political project to finish all politics : The Anarchy Party

  • fluorospace

    btw politics is a mental disease, just ask any psychologist

  • Ghostcock

    rock on dutch whores &pot now pirates in office awesome

  • Guest

    yay, lets hope Pirate Party gets a seat in Belgium next month!!!

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  • llin457

     http://tinyurl.com/c8b8a7y

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