DENK (2016) Simons has told that she decided to publicly speak out against
institutional racism following a May 2015 incident and the reactions it had brought about, which included fierce criticism on social media: in an episode of , presenter
Martin Šimek used the word (darkies) in a discussion about immigrants, causing Simons to question him on his usage of the word. The described 2015 as the year in which Simons had become the figurehead of the Dutch black community because of this event and her opposition to , whom she had protested at the national arrival of in
Meppel. at
De Balie in late 2016 She joined the
left-wing minority rights party
DENK on 18 May 2016, and it was simultaneously announced that she would run for member of the
House of Representatives in the
2017 general election. DENK had been founded the year before by Turkish-born Dutch politicians
Tunahan Kuzu and
Selçuk Öztürk after they had left the
Labour Party (Partij van de Arbeid, PvdA). Simons indicated an interest in
anti-racism,
decolonizing education, and
empowering women. Prime Minister
Mark Rutte and Minister
Lodewijk Asscher condemned the reactions, calling them "disgusting", and Simons filed a police report. DENK announced in November 2016 that Simons was receiving protection following a threat video on
Dailymotion. It combined the
carnival song , the lyrics of which ask her to leave the country, by
Rob van Daal with a picture of
lynched African Americans, whose faces had been replaced by the one of Simons. 22 people were prosecuted in April 2017 for threats and insults including the creator of the video, leading to at least twenty of them receiving fines of up to €450 and
community-service orders of up to 80 hours. The
Public Prosecution Service stated that it did not have the resources to investigate all 40,000 comments that were identified as possibly illegal.
Own party and 2017 general election Simons left DENK on 24 December 2016 to establish a party of her own called
Artikel 1 to participate in the 2017 general election. Simons told that she wanted to belong to a party where she felt safe. She criticized DENK for being more concerned with celebrating media attention than with Simons's well-being when she received protection. Besides, she called the party's tactics polarizing, although she praised its goal of putting racism on the political agenda. She also said that there was not enough space at DENK to stand up for women's and
LGBT rights because of its conservative supporters. She founded her new party, which was named after
the constitution's article addressing
equality before the law and prohibiting discrimination, with DENK's campaign manager Ian van der Kooye. Following her departure, DENK demanded €62,000 in damages from Simons for violating her employment contract's confidentiality clause and
notice period. A court determined that DENK instead owed €5,000 in wages to Simons, which she later declined. Ahead of the 2017 general election, Artikel 1 released its
election program, in which it advocated
single-payer healthcare, more female and immigrant cabinet members, a prohibition of in public spaces and on public television, an investigation into
racial profiling, and a new national holiday to celebrate the abolition of slavery. Besides, the party pledged to strive for a world in which people could live and work wherever they want. Simons also co-wrote a book ahead of the election called (Article 1: A new politics of equality). Simons was the
lead candidate of Artikel 1, and its
party list contained more women than men, several people from the LGBT community, and both the youngest (18) and oldest (82) candidate of the election. The party received 0.27% of the vote in the March 2017 election – not enough for a seat in the House of Representatives. Artikel 1 changed its name to BIJ1 (Together) in October after a court had ruled in June that the original name was too similar to that of Art.1, a discrimination expertise center. The party reiterated its commitment to be "against the current politics, which is full of
hatred of Muslims,
xenophobia, gender inequality, racism, socioeconomic exclusion, gender discrimination, division, exclusion, and exploitation".
Amsterdam municipal council (2018–2020) In March 2018, Simons participated in the
municipal election in Amsterdam as her party's lead candidate. She campaigned on a platform of
economic justice, radical equality, and the importance of
intersectionality, and she told that she wanted Amsterdam to maintain its inclusivity. She also refused to participate in a debate after learning that she would have to debate
Annabel Nanninga (
FVD) one-on-one. BIJ1 won one out of 45 seats in the election and Simons was sworn into the municipal council on 29 March. Her party was most popular in
Amsterdam-Zuidoost. A documentary by Ingeborg Jansen about her campaign called (Sylvana, demon or diva) premiered in November 2018 at the
International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. in
Utrecht following the
murder of George Floyd Following the killing of Michael Fudge by police officers in February 2019, Simons requested a debate about the incident, which was described as a
suicide by cop by the media. She said there had been excessive and unnecessary police violence and told that teenagers of color lived in an understandable fear of the police. Councilor Nicole Temmink (
SP) said it would have been better to await the results of an investigation by the and Simons's comments were denounced by the rest of the council as well as by Mayor
Femke Halsema. Simons also introduced
motions to stop the municipality from fining homeless people for sleeping in the streets and to provide
white privilege training for civil servants. Both passed the council. During the
COVID-19 pandemic, she opposed plans of the
municipal executive to raise local taxes, which would compensate for financial setbacks. Newspaper wrote that Simons was able to influence the council's agenda during her time in office despite having only one seat. According to the article, her party's competition with
GroenLinks caused that party to focus more on
identity politics in Amsterdam. Simons also played a role in getting the city to apologize for its history of slavery, in making the toilets of the
Stopera unisex, and in getting the city to proclaim a
climate crisis.
2021 general election and House of Representatives In January 2020, BIJ1 signaled its intention to participate in the
2021 general election. Simons gave up her seat in the Amsterdam municipal council in early November to focus on the campaign. She called her party's platform the country's "most leftist, greenest, and most inclusive". It included a rise in the minimum wage to €14 per hour, the introduction of a Ministry of Equality, and "taking control of the economy's most important industries". She rejected
capitalism, saying that it is based on the illusion of endless economic growth and that it leads to poverty, exploitation, and exclusion. According to Simons, an alternative economic system has to be designed and created with the participation of everyone. Her election occurred amidst the anti-racism movement
Black Lives Matter gaining traction following the
murder of George Floyd in the United States by a police officer in May 2020. In the House, Simons focused on education, the interior, economic affairs, climate policy, social affairs, and kingdom relations, while cooperating on many issues with
Caroline van der Plas (
BBB) and
Liane den Haan (independent) because of their positions as fellow one-person
caucus leaders. In the House, Simons has criticized the cabinet's strategy to fight the
COVID-19 pandemic, saying that stricter measures such as longer and more stringent
lockdowns were required to contain the virus. She filed a motion in July 2021 in which she argued that the cabinet's strategy of "letting [the virus] run wild in a controlled way" had led to 30,000 deaths. No other parties in the House supported her motion, and Prime Minister
Mark Rutte called the accusation "brazen and uncivilized". Another motion by Simons, which called for an investigation into establishing a
constitutional court in the Netherlands, was adopted by the House. Simons also described her family history of slavery when potential apologies for the Netherlands' history of slavery were discussed in a House debate in 2021. Mark Rutte cited the moment as one of the reasons that made him decide to issue an apology on behalf of the government the following year. Simons was less active in debates during the last period of her term due to her membership of the Parliamentary Inquiry into Fraud Policy and Public Service, initiated as a result of the
Dutch childcare benefits scandal. On several occasions, the media reported on clashes between Simons and fellow politicians.
Renske Leijten asked Simons in October 2021 whether she considered her to be a racist as a result of online comments directed at Leijten by BIJ1 members, and
Ockje Tellegen rebuked Simons while chairing a legislative meeting a month later, when Simons wanted to address comments that she described as intimidating. House Speaker
Vera Bergkamp later defended Tellegen's actions in a letter after Simons had filed a complaint. Following a 2022 riot in
Staphorst against anti- protestors, Simons denounced the police's handling and asked Minister of Justice and Security
Dilan Yeşilgöz why she resisted a broad investigation into racism in the police force. In turn, Yeşilgöz criticized Simons's description of police officers as using unwarranted violence against citizens. When the collapse of the
fourth Rutte cabinet triggered a
November 2023 snap election, Simons announced on 24 July that she would not run for re-election. Two BIJ1 Amsterdam councilors had left the party weeks earlier because of what they alleged to be a toxic and unsafe climate in the party. They mentioned Simons had not supported them enough – a characterization Simons vehemently denied. The party had seen several other internal struggles in the preceding years. Simons also cited her health and well-being reasons for her decision not to run. She was succeeded as party leader by
Edson Olf, BIJ1's vice chair. For her work, Simons had received the Ally Award from queer lifestyle magazine Winq in 2022 and the Black Achievement Award from the organization of the Black Achievement Month in 2023. == Personal life ==