Mike Corder and Toby Sterling, The Associated Press, Amsterdam | World | Wed, May 01 2013, 6:06 AM
New Dutch king: Dutch
King Willem-Alexander, Queen Maxima, and their children
Catharina-Amalia (center), Alexia (right) and Ariane take a boat ride in
Amsterdam, The Netherlands, Tuesday. Around a million people are
expected to descend on the Dutch capital for a huge street party to
celebrate the first new Dutch monarch in 33 years. (AP/Vincent Jannink)
Millions
of Dutch people dressed in orange flocked to celebrations around the
Netherlands Tuesday in honor of a once-in-a-generation milestone for the
country's ruling House of Orange-Nassau: after a 33-year reign, Queen
Beatrix abdicated in favor of her eldest son, Willem-Alexander.
At
46, King Willem-Alexander is the youngest monarch in Europe and the
first Dutch king in 123 years, since Willem III died in 1890. Like
Beatrix before him, Willem-Alexander has assumed the throne at a time of
social strains and economic malaise.
Although the Dutch monarchy
is largely ceremonial, he immediately staked out a course to preserve
its relevance in the 21st century.
"I want to establish ties, make
connections and exemplify what unites us, the Dutch people," the
freshly minted king said at a nationally televised investiture ceremony
in Amsterdam's 600-year-old New Church, held before the combined houses
of Dutch parliament.
"As king, I can strengthen the bond of mutual
trust between the people and their government, maintain our democracy
and serve the public interest."
Hopes for the new monarch are high.
For
most of the 2000s, the country was locked in an intense national debate
over the perceived failure of Muslim immigrants, mostly from North
Africa, to integrate. In response, politicians curtailed many of the
famed Dutch tolerance policies.
More recently, this trading nation
of 17 million has suffered back-to-back recessions. European Union
figures released Tuesday showed Dutch unemployment spiking upward toward
6.4 percent. That's below the EU average, but a 20-year high in the
Netherlands.
"I am taking the job at a time when many in the
kingdom feel vulnerable and uncertain," Willem-Alexander said.
"Vulnerable in their work or health. Uncertain about their income or
home environment."
Amsterdam resident Inge Bosman, 38, said she
doubted Willem-Alexander's investiture would give the country much of an
employment boost.
"Well, at least one person got a new job," she said.
Tellingly,
one of Willem-Alexander's first diplomatic missions as king will be to
visit the country's largest trading partner, Germany.
While many
are skeptical that the new king can make a difference where politicians
have failed, the celebrations provided a welcome change from the humdrum
of everyday life, and the popularity of the royal house itself is not
in doubt. A poll commissioned by national broadcaster NOS and published
this week showed that 78 percent support the monarchy.
The royal couple has also been active in the global campaign to fight poverty.
U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon congratulated Willem-Alexander and
praised the royal couple for supporting the promotion of clean water,
sanitation and development. The new king has chaired the
secretary-general's Advisory Board on Water and Sanitation.
Ban
also paid tribute to Beatrix for her "outstanding public service" and
"for the important and positive force the Netherlands has been
throughout her reign, in promoting international law, the rule of law
and peaceful settlement of disputes."
Most say that the House of
Orange-Nassau, which was instrumental in the Dutch war for independence
in the 16th and 17th centuries, is a cornerstone of the national
identity. It represents something that is both quintessentially Dutch,
and above politics.
"I think (Willem-Alexander) is just like his
mum — honest, wants to do a lot for his people inside the country and
also outside the country," said Ron Pols, who was attending celebrations
in Amsterdam.
Willem Alexander's popularity has been steadily rising since his 2002 marriage to an Argentine commoner, Maxima Zorreguieta.
In
an interview shortly before his accession, Willem-Alexander turned in a
relaxed performance, saying he will not be a "protocol fetishist," but a
king who puts his people at ease.
Around 25,000 supporters
thronged Amsterdam's central Dam Square Tuesday, hoping to catch a
glimpse of the new king or the departing 75-year-old queen, now known as
Princess Beatrix.
Millions more watched on television as King
Willem-Alexander, wearing a fur-trimmed ceremonial mantle, swore an oath
of allegiance to the country and the constitution.
Earlier, the
new king gripped his mother's hand and looked briefly into her eyes
after they both signed the abdication document in the Royal Palace on
Dam Square.
Beatrix appeared close to tears as she then appeared
on a balcony decked out with tulips, roses and oranges, overlooking her
subjects.
"I am happy and grateful to introduce to you your new
king, Willem-Alexander," she told the cheering crowd, which chanted:
"Bea bedankt" ("Thanks Bea.")
Moments later, the generational
shift was enacted symbolically. Beatrix left the balcony as King
Willem-Alexander, his wife and three daughters — the children in
matching yellow dresses and headbands — waved to the crowd.
The
highly popular Maxima became Queen Maxima, and their eldest of three
daughters, Catharina-Amalia, became the Princess of Orange, the first in
line to the throne.
At a sparsely attended anti-monarchist
demonstration on the nearby Waterloo Square, protestors dressed in white
instead of orange and carried signs mocking Willem-Alexander.
"Monarchy
is a sexually-transmitted disease," one sign said. "All animals are
equal, but some are more equal than others," said another. It included a
picture of a pig wearing a crown, with a line crossing it out.
Amsterdammer
Jan Dikkers said he attended to show his disapproval for a hereditary
head of state, and Willem-Alexander in particular, who he said Dutch
people only accept because "people like his wife."
He added that Beatrix is overrated.
"People say the queen did a 'good job', but she didn't really do any job," Dikkers said.
One
criticism of the royal house is that it is too expensive, especially in
difficult economic times. University of Ghent professor Herman Matthijs
estimates that it costs €40 million ($52 million) a year to maintain—
slightly more than taxpayers' support for Britain's House of Windsor.
The
difficulties facing the Dutch should be kept in perspective. Per-capita
incomes remain high, the United Nations says Dutch children are the
world's happiest, on average, and the country retains its triple A
credit rating.
The celebrations in Amsterdam Tuesday were lively
but peaceful, a stark contrast to Beatrix's investiture in 1980. Then,
squatters protesting a chronic housing shortage battled police nearly to
the doors of the palace.
The official festivities concluded with
the new king and queen and their daughters taking an evening boat cruise
around the historic Amsterdam waterfront, at one stage climbing out of
their boat to join DJ Armin van Buuren and the Concert Gebouw Orchestra
on stage at a concert.
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