The Guardian
 
 
Front National wins European parliament elections  in France
Elections  return record number of MEPs opposed to EU project, with far 
right winning in  France, Denmark and Austria

Ian Traynor
May 25,  2014




European politics were  jolted as seldom before on Sunday when France's 
extreme nationalists triumphed  in the European parliament elections, which 
across the continent returned an  unprecedented number of MEPs hostile or 
sceptical about the _European Union_ (http://www.theguardian.com/world/eu)  in 
a 
huge vote of  no confidence in _Europe_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/europe-news) 's political  elite. 
France's Front National won the election there with a projected 25% of the  
vote, while the governing socialists of President François Hollande 
collapsed to  14%, according to exit polls. 
In Britain the Nigel  Farage-led insurrection against Westminster was also 
expected by all three main  parties to deliver a victory for Ukip in the 
election, albeit with a lower lead  than some opinion polls had been predicting 
in recent weeks. Turnout in Britain  was 36%, higher than at the last 
_European  elections_ (http://www.theguardian.com/politics/european-elections)  
in 2009. 
Four days of elections  across 28 countries returned a record number of 
MEPs opposed to the EU project.  Voters delivered a string of sensational 
outcomes, according to exit polls, with  radical and nationalist anti-EU forces 
scoring major victories both on _the far right_ 
(http://www.theguardian.com/world/far-right)  and the hard  left. 
In _Greece_ (http://www.theguardian.com/world/greece) , Alexis Tsipras led  
the Syriza movement to a watershed victory for the left over the country's 
two  traditional ruling parties – currently governing in coalition – the 
New  Democracy conservatives and the Pasok social democrats. The neo-fascists 
of  Golden Dawn took about 10%. 
Exit polls suggest the nationalist anti-immigrant Danish People's party won 
 by a similar margin in Denmark.
 
In Austria the far-right Freedom party was projected to take a fifth of the 
 vote. In Hungary, the neo-fascist Jobbik movement took around 15%. 
On the hard left, Sinn Féin  did well in Ireland, and Die Linke took about 
8% in _Germany_ (http://www.theguardian.com/world/germany) . In Germany,  
Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) scored an expected easy  
victory, but the EU's most powerful state, also returned its first 
Eurosceptics  in the form of the Alternative for Germany as well as its first 
neo-Nazi MEP  from the Hitler apologists of the National Democratic party of 
Germany,  according to German TV projections. 
Merkel's party dropped several points while the Social Democrats (SPD) made 
 significant gains, narrowing the gap between the two big parties to about 
eight  percentage points. 
The election mattered more than ever because the Strasbourg-based 
parliament  has gained greater powers, meaning it will have a strong say in 
most EU  
legislation over the next five years and will also shape the outcome of the  
battle for the most powerful post in Brussels, the new head of the EU 
executive,  the European Commission. 
But its mandate to exercise those powers was dented by the low turnout of  
roughly 43%, raising renewed questions about the parliament's legitimacy. 
Europe's Christian Democrat bloc, led by Merkel's CDU, were expected to  
emerge as the biggest grouping of MEPs, albeit forfeiting some 50 seats, with  
the Social Democrats improving their performance to come second. 
The two big pro-EU blocs can easily muster a majority between them in the  
751-seat chamber and may club together in the form of a Berlin-style grand  
coalition to prevent legislative gridlock. 
But after five years of currency and debt crisis, recession, and savage  
austerity, the results exposed a Europe of division: extremely volatile,  
fragmented, with voters disenchanted and those choosing to vote cutting their  
support for the mainstream in favour of fringe parties. 
Average turnout across the EU was put at just over 43%, the same as the 
last  election in 2009 which was the lowest ever for a parliament that has 
steadily  accrued greater powers.
 
For Europe's political class, the result in France was the most shocking. 
Le  Pen promptly described the vote as support for "France for the French", 
called  on the government to resign and for Hollande to dissolve the French  
parliament. 
Whether voters opted for the far right, hard left, or opposition, the  
anti-incumbent backlash was felt in most parts of Europe and is likely to have 
a 
 profound impact on national politics everywhere as well as on the conduct 
of  policy-making at the EU level. 
Despite the low turnout, a spokesman for the European parliament described  
the voter participation as "historic", arguing that the trend towards lower 
 turnout since the first direct elections in 1979 had been reversed. 
The immediate impact of the election will vary. The performance of Le Pen  
will have unknown consequences for French politics while in Italy the 
expected  victory of the new prime minister, Matteo Renzi, will be seen as a 
mandate for  his proposed reforms despite the fact that his administration is 
unelected. 
The results will bring pressure for early national elections in Greece and  
Bulgaria while a sweeping victory of social democrats and Greens in Sweden  
signals a thorough defeat for the governing conservatives in September. 
As the political elite licks its wounds and considers it options, attention 
 will promptly shift to the formation of coalitions of voting blocs in the  
parliament and infighting over how the top jobs in Brussels are to be  
distributed over the coming months. 
Leading Christian Democrats predicted they would be the biggest bloc by a  
margin of around 20 seats and laid claim to the post of the new head of the  
European commission being filled by Jean-Claude Juncker, the former prime  
minister of Luxembourg. However, his rival, Martin Schulz, a German Social  
Democrat, was feted last night in Berlin as the moral victor of the 
election.  Both camps will now seek to lure smaller parties and independent 
MEPs to 
their  side to try to muster an absolute parliamentary majority needed to 
endorse a new  commission chief. 
National government leaders are to gather in Brussels on Tuesday evening to 
 plot their next moves. Hollande will be the weakest figure at the summit, 
while  David Cameron will seek to exploit the impact of the electoral 
earthquake to  bolster his case for deep seated reform of the EU.
 
Despite the National Front triumph, it remains to be seen whether Le Pen 
will  be able to cobble together enough parties from enough countries to form 
a voting  bloc in the new parliament. That requires a minimum of 25 MEPs 
from at least  seven countries. While she will easily muster the MEP numbers, 
potential allies  in Belgium and Slovakia may not get into the parliament, 
making it more  difficult to get seven countries. Le Pen's biggest ally, Geert 
Wilders and his  Freedom Party in The Netherlands, did less well than 
expected. 
It also remained to be seen whether Cameron would be able to maintain his  
breakaway faction of European Conservatives and Reformists. His Polish 
allies  were projected to take 19 seats, suggesting they would supplant the 
Tories as  the biggest national contingent in the bloc. 
In Greece victory for Syriza would appear to reflect popular frustration 
with  the harsh spending cuts the government has adopted in recent years to 
meet the  terms of its economic rescue programme.
 
The surge in support for the far left raises doubts about how much longer 
the  centre-right government can last with a parliamentary majority of just 
two  seats, although government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou said there was no 
question  that the government would not finish its four-year term. 
"It's easy for people to cast a protest vote in European elections," he 
told  Greek television. "The political scenario of a government collapse, which 
Syriza  was trying to paint, has not been borne out by the facts." 
In a first for Greece, neo-Nazi party Golden Dawn looks set to elect at 
least  two out of Greece's 21 MEPs. 
The party ranks third with up to 10% of the vote, despite an ongoing 
criminal  investigation and the fact that several of its leading members are in 
pre-trial  detention.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to