Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Dutch politician Mark Rutte.
Last updated on November 25, 2024.
Mark Rutte is a Dutch politician who has served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands since 2010 and Leader of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) since 2006.
I believe on the issue of immigration, you have to deal with it sensibly.
In the Netherlands, we have had a difficult year and we are now getting out of this difficulty. So we have now growth prospects for 2014.
The Netherlands has been severely hit by the debt crisis, and the solution is to lower taxes, get government finances in order, and make room for investment.
Countries themselves need to do everything possible to remain in the euro zone.
I was very much surprised by the Johnson/Gove proposals to make it harder for Europeans to work in the U.K. if Britain were to vote to leave the E.U.
Leadership does matter.
It shouldn't be the asylum seekers wondering which country they want go to. It should be Europe telling them where to be, be it Lithuania, Sweden, or wherever.
Never waste a crisis.
Our ability to create jobs, our future growth, is built on the free market. It's built on open borders.
David Cameron has a lot of credibility and influence.
We need Britain not only to stay in the E.U. but to be very active in it.
The U.K. outside of the European Union will end up being a mid-sized economy, somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, in neither America nor Europe.
The Netherlands and the UK are both seafaring nations and so our ability to create jobs and to generate future growth is built on the free market.
We need not to just kill the boat-smuggling business model: we also need to get rid of this asylum-shopping in the European Union.
I am from the Netherlands, so that means we like to stick to the rules, and we like to stick to the deal, and we like countries to do what they have promised.
We are a trading nation, and we are trading with Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal and Ireland.
Our national prosperity is built on our open borders. However, the reality is that if a points system is introduced in the UK it would be unavoidable for us in the Netherlands to implement similar proposals - and inevitable that many other EU countries would follow suit.
I am absolutely convinced that the E.U. will still be around. I am convinced the U.K. will be sitting at that table and not negotiating an exit, but being there to stay.
We have pension funds with 1.5 trillion euros investments, and they want to find business opportunities in India.
The good thing about the IMF is there is no European politics involved.
Free trade creates jobs and prosperity in the Netherlands at the port of Rotterdam or the airport at Schiphol.
This is what the European Union is all about. A strong market with a strong currency.
As we all know from the Roman empire, big empires go down if the borders are not well-protected.
The U.K. is outward-looking, trade-oriented, growth-oriented, and we do not have enough of that storyline, that tradition, that culture within the European Union.
Before we kill Schengen, we have to make Dublin work.
It's amazing how kind everyone is here in the U.S.
Radical changes will come to the Netherlands. We stand for fundamental choices, and we need to make the right ones.
I believe the United Kingdom will be worse off outside the E.U. It will not have the influence it has in the world today.
No one wants to kill Schengen, but if it is only a fairweather system, then it cannot survive.
Monti is a person who is an expert on both the political and professional level.
I used to walk in the Bowery in the early 1980s, and it was not safe. It went from this to Disneyland under Giuliani and Bloomberg. This is now one of the best-run big cities in the world.
England has collapsed politically, monetarily, constitutionally, and economically. It is not reasonable to demand from them to trigger Article 50.
It's not only the British voters who have doubts about European cooperation. There is skepticism in many other E.U. countries.
This goes back to the main challenge we are facing, because Europe at the moment is not competitive. We have many imbalances and my big worry is that we will slow down in Europe in terms of fiscal consolidations and reforms, whilst we have to step up.
The annual cost of cybercrime to the global economy is more than $4 billion
We are extremely vulnerable because we take too much time to implement the necessary measures. This is a painful process. When you go through a painful process - make it as short as possible