National politics Following a long career working for the
Dutch Ministry of Justice he was elected in 2002 as a member of the
Christen-Democratisch Appèl for the
municipal council of
Zoetermeer. In 2002, Nawijn became an early supporter of the openly
gay, populist Dutch politician
Pim Fortuyn and was contacted by fellow former CDA member and Ministry of Justice employee
Joost Eerdmans who encouraged Nawijn to lend support to Fortuyn's ambitions for parliament due to his legal experience. When Fortuyn founded the
Pim Fortuyn List (LPF) Nawijn joined the LPF 24 hours after he had been elected as a councilor for the CDA and earned a place on the party's list for the
2002 Dutch general election. Nawijn's quick defection to the LPF caused some controversy and in a subsequent interview he maintained that the CDA and LPF were not too far apart ideologically and that he agreed with much of Fortuyn's political analysis. Despite the
assassination of Fortuyn by an
animal rights activist, which happened days before the election, the LPF emerged with a successful result, thus bringing Nawijn into the Dutch
House of Representatives. He was appointed Minister for Integration and Immigration in the
first Balkenende cabinet. In government, Nawijn sought to drastically overhaul the immigration policy of the Netherlands. He proposed the
One-off Regulation 2003 which would pardon existing asylum seekers who had been in the Netherlands for several years while freezing asylum intake and economic migration for a period and called for reforms to the
14-1 letter process by which grants residency to foreign nationals in difficult situations. He promised to grant residency to foreign nationals "in very exceptional cases" who had previously been denied residency. Future Immigration Minister
Rita Verdonk would later adopt some curtailed versions of Nawijn's policy ideas. Due to the instability of the LPF following Fortuyn's assassination, the first Balkenende cabinet lasted briefly, leading to early elections in 2003. Nawijn had been considered by the LPF as the
Lijsttrekker or leader for the 2003 election, but due to his controversial
conservative positions such as his support of the
death penalty, which horrified many people in the Netherlands and was opposed by the LPF, he was placed at the bottom of the LPF's electoral list. This should have made it almost impossible for Nawijn to be reelected, however, the same statements which made him so unpopular to the political establishment won him a following among voters. On election day Nawijn received enough individual votes to once again enter the House of Representatives. Nawijn also voiced support for the reunification of
Flanders and the Netherlands. Despite still being a member of the LPF, Nawijn often was at odds with the party. In January 2005, he left the fragmented LPF with the goal of founding his own political party which conceptually would lean closer towards the ideas of the
far-right Flemish party
Vlaams Belang. Together with one of the leaders of Vlaams Belang,
Filip Dewinter, in June 2005 he announced the founding of a
think tank during a controversial meeting with Dewinter in the former house of murdered politician Pim Fortuyn. The think-tank was initially named the
Marnix van St Aldegonde Foundation but the name could not be used due to a legal challenge by an existing organisation. The idea caused displeasure within the LPF. Marten Fortuyn, Pim Fortuyn's brother, called this action provocative, and
"I had expected otherwise from Nawijn." The influential Dutch magazine
Elsevier wrote: "According to (the LPF member of parliament)
João Varela (politician), it was widely known that Pim Fortuyn wanted nothing to do with Dewinter, whose party
Vlaams Blok (resurrected as Vlaams Belang) had the previous year been forbidden due to racism." In August 2006, Nawijn announced the formation of the
Party for the Netherlands to contest the
2006 Dutch general election. The party also recruited former LPF politicians
Gerard van As,
Paul Meijer and
Willem van der Velden. According to Nawijn, the new party would follow the ideas of
Pim Fortuyn,
William of Orange and
Desiderius Erasmus in its platform. However, the party won less than 1% of the vote and did not see any candidates elected. In the aftermath, Nawijn said he would retire from national politics.
Local politics In the
Dutch municipal elections of 2006, Nawijn managed, with his own new party, to gather 5 out of 39 seats in his hometown
Zoetermeer. Later that year he entered the
2006 Dutch election with a new party, the
Partij voor Nederland (
Party for the Netherlands), but obtained no seats. During his campaign, Nawijn voiced his support for accepting
CIA black sites into the Netherlands in an interview in October 2006 in the Dutch newspaper
Spits. ==Later career==