After 600 Days Without Government in Capital, Belgian PM Calls for Overhaul

Belgium faces global embarrassment as parties fail to form a coalition in Brussels since the 2024 election.

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Bart De Wever

European Union (cropped).

Belgium faces global embarrassment as parties fail to form a coalition in Brussels since the 2024 election.

On Monday, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever said it was high time to overhaul the complex political system that has left the capital, Brussels, without a functional government for more than 600 days.

Speaking to a local broadcaster, the ‘weak’ Prime Minister stated that the record deadlock in the Brussels-Capital Region—the area encompassing the city—was damaging the country’s reputation.

De Wever told the RTBF radio station:

Wherever I go in the world, in Europe, everyone asks me about it and says: ’What the hell is this mess?’ … Institutional reform is needed; that much is clear.

As the smallest of Belgium’s three regions and home to 1.2 million people, the Brussels-Capital Region has been mired in a political and financial crisis since the elections in June 2024. The vote produced no outright winner, and political parties have since been unable to strike a coalition deal.

To be sworn in, a government must hold a majority in both of the local parliament’s linguistic groups, each of which consists of different parties. This requirement is proving particularly difficult to meet.

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