Quote from Rantany:
So it seems former MinFin Jan Kees de Jager was the real FTT-opponent. Too bad he is gone. I never trusted PM Rutte on this one, but that he changed his mind so quickly in the negotiations with his new coalition partner is unbelievable. So all his former statements about the danger that this would hurt the relatively big financial center of Amsterdam turn out useless.
Elections matter and we are only one election away from FTT in any given EU country. If Labor or the left gains power in an EU election and in forming a new coalition government, they can demand FTT to join that coalition government. Consider Finland, they just had an election and the National Coalition ruling center-right party did very well. Hopefully, they can continue to hold off efforts from the Social Democrat FM who has been pushing hard for FTT. Losing the Netherlands to FTT hurts here. Hopefully, there will be some major blow back. The left has maximum power to insist on FTT in joining a government versus already being in it - but some power there, too.
If Labour took back control of the UK, a la Gordon Brown, they would rush back to Brussels and maybe pass EC FTT, too. One election away. If the US Dems ever sweep and Republicans don't have a filibuster, and the Treasury Secretary is Elizabeth Warren-like, it could even happen in the US. We finally have some power and that's our vote on Tuesday.
It's fair to say that FTT is gaining ground. Let's see the actual final laws pass and how they work.