THE HAGUE, Netherlands — Populist far-right lawmaker Geert Wilders plunged Dutch politics into turmoil Tuesday by withdrawing his party's ministers from the ruling coalition in a dispute over a crackdown on migration. The remaining ministers will run a caretaker administration until new elections can be organized.
The decision means the Netherlands will have a caretaker government when it hosts a summit of NATO leaders in three weeks.
Prime Minister Dick Schoof held an emergency Cabinet meeting to discuss the crisis and then visited King Willem-Alexander to offer him the resignations of ministers from Wilders' Party for Freedom.
Schoof, a career civil servant who was handpicked by Wilders a year ago to lead the government, said he had repeatedly told coalition leaders in recent days that bringing down the government would be ''unnecessary and irresponsible.''
''We are facing major challenges nationally and internationally and, more than ever, decisiveness is required for the safety of our resilience and the economy in a rapidly changing world,'' Schoof said.
No date for a new election has been set, but it is unlikely before the fall.
Schoof's 11-month-old administration goes down in history as one of the shortest-lived governments in Dutch political history.
Wilders announced his decision early Tuesday in a message on X after a brief meeting in parliament of leaders of the four parties that make up the fractious administration.