A rump cabinet is a cabinet from which one or more coalition partners have withdrawn and which has minority support in parliament.
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In the Netherlands a rump cabinet is not the same as a demissionary cabinet where the entire cabinet resigns and the full existing coalition runs the country until a new cabinet takes power after elections have been held.
With a demissionary cabinet parliament decides which issues are controversial, which bars the cabinet from drafting legislation concerning them.
A rump cabinet can take care of such issues but it does not have a majority in parliament and thus needs approval by opposition parties, which make it likely that the rump parliament will take great care dealing with controversial issues.
Generally the rump cabinet will only take care of going government concerns (as a caretaker cabinet) as well as preparing for elections.
For the formation of a rump cabinet the Monarch will appoint an informateur and later a formateur, just like with a regular cabinet formation after elections.
The politics of the Netherlands take place within the framework of a parliamentary representative democracy. A constitutional monarchy, the country is organised as a decentralised unitary state. The Netherlands can be described as a consociational state. Dutch politics and governance are characterised by a common striving for broad consensus on important issues, within both of the political community and society as a whole.
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