European Parliamentary Elections

17.06.2024

From 6 to 9 June 2024, elections for 720 members of the European Parliament (MEPs) were held in the 27 EU Member States. These elections are held every five years.

The distribution of MEPs per country is as follows:

Germany - 96, France - 81, Italy - 76, Spain - 61, Poland - 53, Romania - 33, Netherlands - 31, Belgium - 22, Greece - 21, Czech Republic - 21, Sweden - 21, Portugal - 21, Hungary - 21, Austria - 20, Bulgaria - 17, Denmark - 15, Finland - 15, Slovakia - 15, Ireland - 14, Croatia - 12, Lithuania - 11, Slovenia - 9, Latvia - 9, Estonia - 7, Cyprus - 6, Luxembourg - 6, Malta - 6.

As a result, six countries dominate in terms of representation: Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Poland and Romania.

The European Parliament consists of seven political groups:

  • European People's Party (EPP) group,
  • The Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D),
  • The Renew Europe Group (Liberals),
  • The Greens and the European Free Alliance,
  • European Conservatives and Reformists Group,
  • The Identity and Democracy Group,
  • The Left Group.

Around 400 million voters were eligible to vote and their choice will determine the direction of the EU for the next five years. In recent years, right-wing and Eurosceptic parties have gained a lot within the EU. This shift to the right has influenced the outcome of the elections and thus the future composition of the European Parliament.

Liberals and pro-American forces believe that some right-wing parties are linked to Russia and are spreading Russian influence in the EU. Although historically it has been left-wing parties that have been linked to Moscow.

Voter interest in the elections this time was much higher than five years ago. The top priorities for EU citizens, according to the polls, are fighting poverty, supporting public health, achieving energy independence, creating new jobs, ensuring food security, dealing with migration and asylum issues, and maintaining effective defence and security.

Overall, the trend showed that after every five-year term there is a sharp increase in Euroscepticism in the EU institutions. The EU is not led by top politicians, as is evident from the nominations for the European Parliament and then the European Commission.

These European Parliament elections are crucial. They will determine whether supporters of sovereignty, federalism or confederation will gain strength or whether the EU will choose a different direction. This will be strongly influenced by the member states that are net recipients of EU funds (states that receive more from the EU budget than they contribute).

The EU elections, given the current geopolitical and geostrategic circumstances and interests, carry additional weight. The EU administration is led by technocrats who act as a fully bureaucratized apparatus. In fact, it is unelected officials who decide the fate of states. The European Parliament is the only institution directly elected through a democratic process.

In the context of SMO and US influence on European countries, it should be noted that destructive policies come from some EU member states or groups of member states. With Britain's exit from the EU, Germany's position vis-à-vis France is threatened, as their relations have not been this low for a long time.

The differentiation of political parties has also been dynamic. During the financial crisis, there was a marked split in the left-wing political spectrum, separating the traditional social democratic and socialist parties from the extreme left: parties such as Syriza in Greece are an example of this. The European People's Party (EPP), which is the largest political group in the European Parliament, is going through a process of differentiation between the traditional conservative and Christian Democrat parties and the extreme right. This process will lead to a change in the balance of power between the political groups in the European Parliament.

Analysts have noted that the European Parliament elections will be characterized by a confrontation between the so-called “Sorosoids” and “Orbanoids”, referring to political parties that draw inspiration and support from George Soros and Viktor Orban respectively. This confrontation is particularly prevalent in Central and Southern Europe.

There is a growing rift between EU member states, with some favoured and others marginalized. In other words, there are Eurosceptics. They can also be called Eurorealists; they do not accept the agenda of neoliberal cartels and transatlanticism, which destroys historical European values. At the other pole are the self-proclaimed euro-optimists, although in reality they are euro-idiots. They are the implementers of US policy and Karl Popper's crazy ideas about the 'open society', including LGBT, eating insects, legalizing drugs and increasing migration flows.

In the end, the euro-realists won, although the overall gap with the euro-idiots is not that big.

Germany. The current governing coalition in Germany was defeated. The Greens of Robert Habeck and Annalena Berbock lost 8.5% of the vote. The right-wing party Alternative for Germany came second with over 16%. The BSW (Sarah Wagenknecht's Union), with a similar program, obtained 5.5%. The Social Democratic Party of Germany, represented by Chancellor Olaf Scholz, gained 14% and lost 1.8 percentage points compared to the 2019 elections.

Austria. In Austria, the Freedom Party won with 27% of the vote, 3.5% more than the governing party OVP.

France. The right-wing Rassemblement Nationale party also won the European Parliament elections in France. It obtained more than 32% of the vote, twice as much as the ruling Renaissance party (15.4%). French President Macron announced the dissolution of the National Assembly and wants to call early legislative elections. The first round is scheduled for 20 June, the second for 7 July. The planned elections were to be held in 2027. For Marine Le Pen, this is a chance to win the national elections as well.

Belgium. The liberal party of Belgian Prime Minister Alexandre de Croo Open Vld was also defeated in the elections for the federal and regional parliament of Flanders. The right-wing Flemish Interest party is ahead.

As far as parliamentary groups are concerned, the EPP has the most seats with 186 (adding 10). The Social Democrats are in second place with 133 seats (minus 6). The Renewers gained 82 (losing 20) and the Greens 53 (losing 19). The Conservatives added one seat and gained 70, while the Identity Group added 11 (for a total of 60).

Now it will be a question of whether the winners will take the right path. Will they adapt to the Brussels bureaucracy and continue with the silent reforms. Or favour sovereignty, which is what their voters want. The latter case would automatically mean withdrawing support from Ukraine and following US policy in the region, something the neoliberals particularly fear. Incidentally, Viktor Orban stated on Sunday that it would be possible to count on a solution to the conflict in Ukraine in the event of a victory for the pacifist forces. This will also be an indicator for the winning parties.

Translation by Costantino Ceoldo