Before becoming an MP, Van Dijk had been a member of the Gemert-Bakel municipal council between 2001 and 2018, being her party's lijsttrekker in two elections. She became an alderwoman in 2018 and has also chaired CDA Brabant between 2015 and 2020.
She took a job at Rabobank as internal account manager business relations in 1999 and would continue working for that company until she became an alderwoman in 2018. She served at several branches and at the national office in several positions including product manager.[7] While working for Rabobank, she was a member of the Gemert-Bakel municipal council and volunteered at a number of local organizations including handball club Acritas, where she was a trainer, coach, and board member until 2014.[8]
Van Dijk joined the municipal council in 2001, a few years after the municipalities Gemert and Bakel had merged.[9] She has told that she and her father had campaigned against the reorganization and that she had decided to become politically active because of that experience.[3] She became the CDA's lijsttrekker during the 2014 Gemert-Bakel municipal election, having been eighth on the party list in the previous election.[10] She succeeded Harrie Verkampen, who had been leading the party in Gemert-Bakel for several decades.[9] Her party managed to bring an end to a period of four years without having a plurality in the council.[11] In November 2015, Van Dijk also became the chair of CDA Brabant.[12]
She was again her party's lijsttrekker during the 2018 municipal election.[13] Her party again received a plurality of votes, and Van Dijk vacated her council seat in May to become a full-time alderwoman responsible for economic and sport policy.[14] Because of this position, she quit her job at Rabobank. In July 2019, Van Dijk survived a motion of no confidence. Her coalition was against plans to build a new swimming pool due to the financial risk involved and instead wanted to renovate an existing one.[15] Under her leadership as chair of CDA Brabant, the party formed a coalition with, among other parties, the populist Forum for Democracy in 2020. A majority of CDA Brabant members (56%) had supported the coalition, that was controversial due to ideological disagreements, in a referendum. The previous coalition had collapsed because the CDA had left it.[16][17] In May 2020, one of the four alderwomen of Gemert-Bakel left, and Van Dijk's portfolio changed; she also became responsible for finances and real estate and surrendered sport policy.[18]
House of Representatives (2021–present)
Van Dijk ran for member of parliament during the 2021 general election, being placed fourth on the CDA's party list.[19] In November 2020 – shortly after her position had been announced – she stepped down as CDA Brabant chair.[20] She was elected, receiving 16,851 preference votes, and was sworn into office on 31 March.[21] Van Dijk was the CDA's spokesperson for economic affairs, the interior, finances, and sports, and she is on the Committees for Digital Affairs, Economic Affairs and Climate Policy, Finance, the Interior, Kingdom Relations, and Public Expenditure as well as on the Procedure Committee.[7][19] In the House, she proposed to provide €10 million per year in funding from the national government for local political parties next to the already existing €27 million in funding for national parties.[22] She also wanted to spend part of a fund from the European Union on providing free Internet for people with a low income.[23] In 2023, Van Dijk complained the government was treating sports clubs and other associations too much like commercial businesses, threatening their existence, and she stressed their importance for society. She suggested several measures to aid the organizations such as exempting them from sales tax, increasing the compensation for volunteers, and having the government pay the first year of membership for new inhabitants.[24]
Van Dijk received a second term in a November 2023 snap election as the CDA's fourth candidate. Her specialties to changed to finances, economic affairs, government, sports, and social affairs.[25]
Personal life
Van Dijk has been living in the North Brabant village of Gemert since 2020, where she lives with her partner and three stepchildren. Before that, she resided in Bakel.[6]
Her former home in Bakel became the subject of municipal politics in 2019, because the zoning regulations only allowed the building and the neighboring building to be used as homes accompanying farms. She had tried to change those regulations at the Council of State, but a nearby farmer filed an objection fearing stricter environmental regulations. The municipal council eventually changed the zoning regulations such that both houses could be used as homes without farms.[26]
^"Proces-verbaal verkiezingsuitslag Tweede Kamer 2021" [Report of the election results House of Representatives 2021] (PDF). Dutch Electoral Council (in Dutch). 29 March 2021. pp. 22–60, 162–163. Retrieved 21 December 2023.