From multinational media houses to political analysts, everyone projected the Dutch elections of 2017 to be a litmus test for the rise of populist politics across Europe. After huge victories for Modi in India and Trump in the US, Geert Wilders, the anti-Islam and anti-immigrant leader of the Party for Freedom (PVV), was seen as the new mascot for the global right. The results, however, were a mixed bag. Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s conservative-liberal Party for Freedom and Democracy (VVD) emerged as the largest party with 33 seats despite losing eight seats. PVV came second with 20 seats. The biggest surprise was the complete decimation of the old left and the emergence of the GreenLeft as the new radical alternative. The GreenLeft gained an unexpected 10 seats, taking their tally to 14. What do these results foretell about Dutch politics and the EU? With German and French elections around the corner, has the populist upsurge finally stopped? What happens to the questions of immigrants? To get a sense of all this and more, Amit Kumar talked to historian and scholar Gijs Kessler of the International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam.