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Ordinary and Dull - and Next to Lead NATO

An everyday man who has been called "Teflon-Rutte", as scandals seem to just roll off him. When Mark Rutte, by all accounts, takes over the leadership of Nato – in the midst of a raging war – it may become harder to dodge the crises. But the 57-year-old Dutchman is described as an extremely polished diplomat.

» Updated: 03 October 2024, 08:18

» Published: 20 June 2024

Ordinary and Dull - and Next to Lead NATO
Photo: Petr David Josek/AP/TT

A everyday man who has been called "Teflon-Rutte", as scandals seem to slide right off him.

When Mark Rutte is about to take over the leadership of NATO – in the midst of a raging war – it may become harder to dodge the crises. But the 57-year-old Dutchman is described as an extremely skilled diplomat.

The year is 2022 and the Netherlands' Prime Minister is facing a vote of no confidence in The Hague. The newspaper De Volkskrant has revealed that Mark Rutte has been deleting SMS messages about official matters for years. Allegations of concealing government activities are pouring in.

Rutte's fondness for ancient technology becomes his salvation. The messages made his loyal servant's phone – a Nokia 301 from 2013 – too slow, he claims – and he emerges unscathed from the vote.

The Cycle to the King

The year before, he had survived another scandal. Thousands of families were then forced to repay child benefits after false accusations of fraud and deception, and the government resigned to make amends to the affected. In true Dutch style, Rutte takes his bicycle to King Willem-Alexander to hand in his resignation, writes Politico.

But the voters' trust remains intact. Barely a year later, he is sworn in for the fourth time as the Netherlands' leader. The coalition government consists of Rutte's liberal-conservative VVD and three other parties.

As a person, Rutte has always been described as normal, dutiful, and almost boring. As a lifelong bachelor, he lived with his mother for a long time, and every week he would go out to eat Indonesian food with her. But when Mother Mieke died in a nursing home in 2020, at the age of 96, her son was not there. The Prime Minister followed his government's pandemic restrictions and did not visit his dying mother, according to AFP.

No Visionary

Father Izaak had passed away much earlier – in 1988, when Mark was just 19. The same year, he took over as chairman of the VVD's youth association. His reported ability to cooperate with almost anyone took him to the VVD's party top – and from there to the Prime Minister's post.

Now "Teflon-Rutte" remains the sole candidate for NATO's top job. How he handles the defence alliance – in a time marked by the war in Ukraine, Cold War winds, and a Middle East in flames – remains to be seen. The Dutchman has made a name for himself as a smooth diplomat who has previously managed to wrap around his finger, among others, USA's former President Donald Trump, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and Hungary's Viktor Orbán, writes Politico. Rutte is also described as one of Ukraine's most faithful allies – and one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's sharpest critics.

No innovative moves are expected, however. The 57-year-old Rutte is not exactly known as a visionary. In political conversations, he often quotes the former West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, who said that "those who have visions should see a doctor".

Dutchman Mark Rutte (born 1967) is expected to take over the role of NATO's Secretary-General on 1 October, after the only remaining opponent, Klaus Iohannis, threw in the towel.

Between 2006 and 2023, Rutte was the party leader of the liberal-conservative VVD (People's Party for Freedom and Democracy) and the Netherlands' Prime Minister between 2010 and 2 July 2024, when his successor Dick Schoof was formally sworn in.

He is thus the Dutch leader who has sat longest in his post, and also the second-longest in the EU after Hungary's Viktor Orbán.

Father Izaak Rutte (1909-88) was active in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) and lost his first wife, with whom he had three children, in a Japanese internment camp in 1945. He then married her sister Mieke (1923-2020) and had four more children, including Mark.

One of the siblings, brother Wim, died of AIDS in the 1980s. In interviews, Rutte has described the loss of his father and brother as life-changing.

The 57-year-old Rutte is unmarried and has no children.

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By TTThis article has been altered and translated by Sweden Herald

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