CNN… many others too, it's like they wrote the articles upfront and before publishing only had to edit whether far-right won a majority, or won the race in a multiparty system where they don't have anything near a majority, or if that's not the case, made gains. While it's alarming regardless, I posted quite a lot about several areas in this thread where it's looking increasingly bad, the various scenarios are typically of a different order.
To put it in perspective... well, first a reminder that the EU level 'parties' are groups of parties from different members states. So the socialist parties from usually more than few countries form a group, so to the liberals, the greens, the superlefties, far-right.... Every EU nation gets a number of people to represent them in EU parliament, and these elections determine which parties get to send them and how many. It does not directly change compositions in national politics, but in practice, well, the headline in the screenshot above isn't technically wrong either.
Far-right gets 58 seats in EU parliament, out of 720 total. Add what they call hard-right 'soft euro-sceptic', aka the conservatives, and they have a total of 130 combined.
In fact... compared to last election 5 years less people voted for parties in the far-right 'ID' group and a the hard-right conservatives. About 8% is 'unattached'/independents and I don't know how many of those are part of far-right parties on a national level. Overall they made some gains but are divided themselves.
Obviously 58 too many in any case. Center-right (christian democrat folks like Ursula) remains largest. As I pointed out in this or another thread, on the EU level now the center has the same choice, work with the left, again, or work with far right in attempt to stop losing votes to them like has happened on a national level in several member states.
Some national examples:
- nothing shocking in NL, Wilder's Freedom party made large gains but that's partly cause they only had 1 seat. AND, the 'green-left-labor' party 'won' nr 1 spot. The latter didn't actually win anything, NL got more seats because of Brexit but unlike in last year's national election far right is no longer largest party.... in theory.
- In Austria, another self-proclaimed Freedom party, did become the largest but got less than expected.
- In Germany, 1 out of 6 voted AfD nazi party, 1 out of 3 CDU (christian democrats, currently not ruling since Merkel quit). Lower than expectations, however, largest than Scholz's party so prominents are calling for new elections on national level too.
- Almost 30% in Italy voted for "former-fascist" PM Meloni's party.
- Orban in Hungary having a bad day, an opposition party who wants to 'eject' him got 30%, Orban's party still in the 40s but far less than expected.
- Sweden Democracts, with neonazi roots: "
We are going to need to think about why we aren’t growing,”
- France... tf France... Macron throws towel in ring... shattering the image I wanted to have of him (hey you gotta try something in these times...). France voted twice as much far right as Germany, less than 1 out of 6 voted for Macron's party and thus Renew group (same group I indirectly voted for), and nearly 1 out of 3 voted Le Pen's far-right.
“We’re ready to exercise power,” veteran far-right radical Marine Le Pen declares.
www.politico.eu
- Belgium similar situation, PM just resigned in tears. They had various national/local elections too, far-right didn't win but conservative right did.