Center-right wins EU vote, Eurosceptic advance
Europe's mainstream political parties took a hit in
elections on Sunday but held off a strong surge by the populist right of Marine
Le Pen, Matteo Salvini and Nigel Farage.
In one of the world's biggest democratic votes, the main
centre-right and centre-left groups lost their combined majority in the
European Parliament in the face of a challenge by eurosceptic and nationalist
forces.
The symbolic clash of the campaign saw French far right
leader Le Pen's National Rally on course to come in just ahead of President
Emmanuel Macron's centrist movement, damaging his drive for deeper European
integration.
In Britain, Farage's one issue Brexit Party appeared to have
trounced the main parties and he will send a large contingent of British
eurosceptics to a parliament they want to leave in a few months.
And in Italy, Salvini's far-right League achieved a similar
result, strengthening its role at the core of a vocal populist faction in the
EU's legislature.
The advance of the right was less pronounced in Germany --
where a strong showing by the Greens was reflected in a "green wave"
in many countries -- but the anti-immigrant AfD broke the 10 percent barrier.
"We are facing a shrinking centre," said German
conservative Manfred Weber, lead candidate for the centre-right European
People's Party (EPP) to replace Jean-Claude Juncker as European Commission
chief.
- 'Big win' -
Turnout EU-wide was estimated at 51 percent, the highest in
20 years, suggesting more than 200 million citizens across the 28-nation bloc
voted in a poll billed as a battle between populists and pro-European forces.
Across Europe, according to a projection prepared by the
parliament, the EPP is on course to have the most seats in the assembly with
180, down sharply from 216 in 2014.
With the centre-left Socialists and Democrats (S&D)
projected to win 152, down from 185, the two mainstream parties will no longer
have a majority and will have to reach out to liberals to maintain a
"cordon sanitaire" and exclude the far-right from decision making.
The various populist, Eurosceptic and right-wing parties won
more than 150 seats, but form no coherent coalition.
The Europe of Nations and Freedom -- composed mainly of the
French National Rally and Salvini's League -- saw their share rise from 37 to
55 seats.
Salvini tweeted a photo of himself with a sign saying
"top party in Italy" while standing in front of a bookshelf featuring
a Make America Great Again baseball cap and a picture of Vladimir Putin.
The Europe for Freedom and Direct Democracy -- which
includes the Britain's Brexit Party -- went from 42 seats to 53.
"It looks like it's going to be a big win for the
Brexit Party," Farage said, after an election held against a backdrop of
disarray including the resignation of Prime Minister Theresa May and the
postponement of Britain's EU exit.
- 'Save the EU' -
Each previous EU election since the first in 1979 has seen
turnout fall, but turnout figures from across the 28-nation bloc were up,
suggesting this year's culture clash has mobilised both populists and those who
oppose them.
In Belgium the far-right Flemish separatist Vlaams Belang
was on course to triple its previous score.
And in Finland, the far-fight Finns Party increased its vote
share and retained its two EU seats. The Sweden Democrats were on course to
increase their share from 9.67 to 16.9 percent.
Dutch anti-Islam leader Geert Wilders was however set to
lose all his Freedom Party's seats, although there was a strong showing by
upstart populist Thierry Baudet.
In his home country of Poland, European Council chief Donald
Tusk expressed confidence that voters would not succumb to "radical
political movements" but admitted that the priority was to "save the
EU as a project."
In France, Macron had taken it upon himself to act as figurehead
for the centrist and liberal parties, and Le Pen took up the 41-year-old's
challenge.
"It is up to the president of the republic to draw
conclusions, he who put his presidential credit on the line in this vote in
making it a referendum on his policies and even his personality," Le Pen
said.
An aide to Macron however said the result was
"respectable", with exit polls showing his centrist alliance on
22.5-23.0 percent, just behind Le Pen's 24-24.2 percent.
Another nationalist party, the Fidesz of Hungary's Prime
Minister Viktor Orban, was on course for a massive 56 percent victory,
according to a poll conducted Sunday.
The mainstream parties are vying between themselves for
influence over the choice of a new generation of top EU officials, including
Tusk and Juncker's replacements.
EU leaders have been invited to a summit on Tuesday to
decide how to choose the nominee. The EPP is insisting on Weber for the
Commission, but Macron and some others want a higher-profile candidate.