Anti-Islam politician Geert Wilders last year tried to claim between €500,000 and €600,000 as parliamentary expenses for legal fees incurred during a trial for inciting hatred, the Volkskrant said on Saturday.
Sources told the paper Wilders’ claim was rejected after discussions between members of parliament’s management committee, known as the presidium and on the advice of an accountant.
Parliamentary parties are allowed to submit expenses claims to the presidium if they are for services needed to support their work.
Civil servants and most members of the presidium decided the legal fees for the trial were private expenses. In addition, the claim itself was ‘not very concrete’, the paper said.
Wilders’ was represented at his trial by celebrity lawyer Bram Moszkowicz who has since been struck off. The bill was not broken down into daily costs and there was no proper explanation of all the charges, a source told the paper.
Evidence
One member of the presidium told the paper: ‘I saw the bill and I thought “well there is someone who understands about expenses”. There was no supporting evidence. It was an amount between €500,000 and €600,000.’
Three other members of the presidium have also confirmed the story, the paper said.
The Volkskrant said PVV MP Martin Bosma, who submitted the claim, could not remember making it and said the bill had been paid.
However, Bosma on Saturday used Twitter to describe the paper’s claims as ‘rubbish’.
The PVV will not say where the money to pay the bill eventually came from. However, the Volkskrant said it has documentary evidence that US anti-Islam campaigner Daniel Pipes has given Wilders more than $100,000 for legal costs.
Wilders will soon face a new trial on inciting hatred and discrimination charges after leading a crowd of supporters in an anti-Moroccan chant. His first trial finally ended in 2011 with a not guilty verdict.