René Claassen
René A.B. Claassen (born 13 July 1971) is a Dutch politician representing the Party for Freedom (PVV). He was a member of the Provincial Council of Limburg starting in 2019, and he has served as a member of the House of Representatives since the 2023 Dutch general election. Early life and healthcare careerClaassen was born in Heerlen's Zuyderland Hospital on 13 July 1971. His father was a member of the Labour Party and a senior union leader of Abvakabo.[1] Claassen was raised Catholic, but he has said that he was "cured of Roman Catholicism" after visiting Vatican City at age seventeen, concluding it was a charade.[2] Claassen completed his nursing training in the late 1980s, and he worked as a hospital nurse for over twenty years, successively in a pediatric ward and an intensive care unit. He was employed by the Zuyderland Hospital for most of that period.[1] He switched careers in 2008 and became a healthcare educator and manager at the Zuyd University of Applied Sciences. He also completed a master's degree in applied science at Maastricht University.[1][3][4] Political careerIn a 2024 interview, Claassen described that he was inspired by the rise of right-wing politician Pim Fortuyn. Poverty was rising in Heerlen as a result of the closure of coal mines in the region, and Claassen believe those issues could only be solved by the political right.[1] He was elected to the Provincial Council of Limburg in March 2019 and to the municipal council of Landgraaf in March 2022. He stepped down from both positions in December 2023.[3] During the 2023 Dutch general election, he was elected to the House of Representatives as the PVV's sixth candidate, and he became the party's spokesperson for curative healthcare.[1][5] When the House was considering to expand a pilot program to legalize the cultivation and supply of cannabis, Claassen instead proposed to put it on hold. His motion was not supported by a majority.[6] Claassen introduced two motions in an attempt to prevent the closure of the emergency department and the intensive care unit of the Zuyderland Hospital. Healthcare minister Fleur Agema (PVV) advised against them, and she was unable to keep the departments open.[7] House committee memberships
Electoral history
References
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