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Elections in the European Union take place every five years by universal adult suffrage. 785 MEPs are elected to the European Parliament which has been directly elected since 1979. No other body is directly elected although the Council of the European Union and European Council is largely composed of nationally elected officials.[1]
[edit] Voting system
- Further information: Apportionment in the European Parliament
There is no uniform voting system for the election of MEPs; rather, each member state is free to choose its own system, subject to three restrictions:[2]
The allocation of seats to each member state is based on the principle of degressive proportionality, so that, while the size of the population of each country is taken into account, smaller states elect more MEPs than would be strictly justified by their populations alone. As the number of MEPs granted to each country has arisen from treaty negotiations, there is no precise formula for the apportionment of seats among member states. No change in this configuration can occur without the unanimous consent of all governments.[3][4]
[edit] Political groups
-
The European Union has a multi-party system. Often no one party has a chance of gaining power alone, and parties must work with each other to form coalitions known as "groups". However it should be noted that as no government is formed as a result of the elections, there are no permanent, formal coalitions.
The two major parties are the conservative European People's Party and socialist Party of European Socialists. They form the two largest groups, (called EPP-ED and PES respectively) along with other smaller parties. There are numerous other groups including Communists, Greens, Regionalists, National Conservatives, Liberals and Eurosceptics. Together they form the seven (from January 2007 to November 2007: eight) recognised groups in the parliament.[5]
MEPs that are not members of groups are known as non-inscrits.
[edit] Voter behaviour
It has been a common belief among analysis that European elections are fought on national issues and used by voters to punish their governments mid-term. Turnout has also been falling steadily since the first elections in 1979 indicating increased apathy about the Parliament despite its increase in power over that period. Political scientists in Cologne have indicated voters may in fact be expressing their view on European integration. As national governments have become more pro-integration, there has been a steady rise in the number of eurosceptic MEPs elected which the scientists predict will only increase after the 2009 election. They also state that dissatisfaction with Europe, not their national governments, is prompting the increasingly low turnouts.[6]
The turnout is an increasingly big issue for some, with some noting that in the UK, 11 million voted in the 1999 European elections while 23 million voted on the Big Brother TV show in 2002. Despite falling below 50% since 1999, turnout is not yet as low as that of the US Midterm elections which usually fall below 40%. However that situation is not criticised so much due to the fact the US President is elected separately, whereas the EU Commission President is appointed. Some such as former Parliament President Pat Cox has also noted that the 1999 election turnout was higher than the previous US Presidential election.[7][8] It is hoped though that by more closely linking that post to the elections, turnout should increase.[9][10][11]
[edit] Results
Historical percentage results in union-wide elections of the three major groups by region.[12]
EP political groups, 1979 to 2004.
| Conservative/Christian Democrat (CD,EPP (79-92),EPP (92-99),FE,EPP-ED) Conservatives only (C,ED,MER) Social Democrats (S,SOC,PES) Communist/Far-Left (COM,LU,EUL,EUL/NGL) Liberal/Centrist (L,LD,LDR,ERA,ELDR,ALDE) National Conservatives (UDE,EPD,EDA,UFE,UEN) |
Greens only (G) Green/Regionalist (RBW (84-89),RBW (89-94),G/EFA) Heterogeneous (CDI,TGI) Independents (NI) Eurosceptics (EN,I-EN,EDD,IND/DEM) Far-Right Nationalist (ER,DR,ITS) |
| REGION |
1979 |
1984 |
1989 |
1994 |
1999 |
2004 |
2009 |
|
3.6 |
6.3 |
6.3 |
22 |
35.3 |
31.2 |
? |
| Northern |
3.6 |
2.7 |
4.5 |
6.8 |
16.7 |
18.1 |
? |
|
23.2 |
33 |
45.5 |
56.8 |
27.6 |
23.9 |
? |
|
|
33.6 |
30.9 |
26.7 |
31.9 |
36.4 |
34.9 |
? |
| Western |
6.5 |
10.6 |
12 |
8.5 |
5.2 |
11.9 |
? |
|
34.1 |
32.7 |
32.7 |
29.9 |
27.9 |
30.2 |
? |
|
|
37 |
34.3 |
29.6 |
25.9 |
39.8 |
38.2 |
? |
| Southern |
6.2 |
4.8 |
9.5 |
8.5 |
5 |
7.9 |
? |
|
16 |
21 |
29.1 |
29.9 |
30.8 |
33 |
? |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
46.4 |
? |
| Eastern |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
14.3 |
? |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
21.4 |
? |
|
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
? |
| Balkan |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
? |
|
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
? |
|
|
26 |
25.3 |
23.4 |
27.7 |
37.2 |
36.9 |
? |
| Total |
9.8 |
7.1 |
9.5 |
7.6 |
8 |
12.4 |
? |
|
27.6 |
30 |
34.2 |
34.9 |
28.8 |
28.3 |
? |
| Turnout |
63 |
61 |
58.5 |
56.8 |
49.4 |
45.5 |
? |
Legend: [ ] Socialist (PES) - [ ] Liberal (ELDR -2004- ALDE) - [ ] People's (EPP -1994- EPP-ED)
| Northern |
Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Sweden and United Kingdom |
| Western |
Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg and Netherlands, |
| Southern |
Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Malta, Portugal and Spain |
| Eastern |
Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland Slovakia and Slovenia |
| Balkan |
Bulgaria and Romania |
[edit] List of elections
List of all union-wide elections and by-elections;
- Further information: List of European Parliament elections by state
[edit] Commission President
The third Delors Commission had a short mandate, in order to bring the terms of the Commission in line with that of the Parliament. Under the European Constitution the European Council would have to take into account the results of the latest European elections and, furthermore, the Parliament would ceremonially "elect", rather than simply approve, the Council's proposed candidate. This was taken as the parliament's cue to have its parties run with candidates for the President of the European Commission with the candidate of the winning party being proposed by the Council.[13]
This was partly put into practice in 2004 when the European Council selected a candidate from the political party which won that year's election. However at that time only one party had run with a specific candidate: the European Green Party, who had the first true pan-European political party with a common campaign,[14] put forward Daniel Cohn-Bendit.[13] However the fractious nature of the other political parties led to no other candidates, the People's Party only mentioned four or five people they'd like to be President.[15] The Constitution failed ratification but these amendments have been carried over to the Treaty of Lisbon which is planned to come into force in 2009. There are plans to strengthen the European political parties[11] in order for them to propose candidates for the 2009 election.[10][16] The European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party have already indicated, in their October 2007 congress, their intention for forward a candidate for the post as part of a common campaign.[17]
In February 2008, President Barroso admitted there was a problem in legitimacy and that, despite having the same legitimacy as Prime Ministers in theory, in practice it was not the case. The low turnout creates a problem for the President's legitimacy, with the lack of a "European political sphere", but analysis claim that if citizens were voting for a list of candidates for the post of President, turn out would be much higher than that seen in recent years.[18]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ European Parliament: Welcome europarl.europa.eu
- ^ The European Parliament: electoral procedures europarl.europa.eu
- ^ The election of members of the European Parliament European Navigator
- ^ The European Parliament: electoral procedures europarl.europa.eu
- ^ MEPs by Member State and political group – sixth parliamentary term europarl.europa.eu
- ^ Beunderman, Mark (2007-09-04) More euroseptic MEPs to be elected in future, experts predict, EU Observer
- ^ Mulvey, Stephen (2003-11-21) The EU's democratic challenge BBC News
- ^ Q&A: European elections, BBC News 2004-07-21
- ^ Spongenberg, Helena (2007-02-26). "EU wants to dress up 2009 elections on TV". EU Observer. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
- ^ a b Palmer, John (2007-01-10). "Size shouldn't matter". The Guardian. Retrieved on 2007-06-28.
- ^ a b Mahony, Honor (2007-06-27). "European politics to get more political". EU Observer. Retrieved on 2007-06-28.
- ^ Europe Politique: Parlement européen (in French)
- ^ a b Hughes, Kirsty. "Nearing Compromise as Convention goes into Final Week?" (PDF). EPIN. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^ "European Greens Found European Greens". Deutsche Welle (2004-02-23). Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^ "The EP elections: Deepening the democratic deficit". Euractiv (2004-06-16). Retrieved on 2007-07-27.
- ^ "Leadership of the EU". Federal Union. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.
- ^ "RESOLUTION ELDR CONGRESS IN BERLIN 18-19 OCTOBER 2007". ELDR party (2007-10-24). Retrieved on 2008-01-04.
- ^ Mahony, Honor (2008-02-28). "Barroso admits legitimacy problem for commission president post". EU Observer. Retrieved on 2008-02-29.
[edit] Statistics
|
European Parliament election, 1979 - Statistics |
| Area |
Dates |
Seats |
Electorate |
Turnout |
Previous |
Next |
Election methods |
Sources |
European Community
(EC-9) |
June 7,10
1979 |
410 |
191,783,528 |
63% |
Inaugural |
1981 |
All PR, except UK (not NI)
which used FPTP |
[1][2] [3] |
|
European Parliament election, 1994 - Statistics |
| Area |
Dates |
Seats |
Electorate |
Turnout |
Previous |
Next |
Election methods |
Sources |
European Union
(EU-12) |
June 9,12
1994 |
567 |
269,261,000 |
56.8% |
1989 |
1995 |
All PR, except UK (not NI)
which used FPTP |
[11] [12] |
|
European Parliament election, 1999 - Statistics |
| Area |
European Union (EU-15) |
Sources |
| Dates |
• Thursday June 10: Netherlands, United Kingdom, Denmark
• Friday June 11: Ireland
• Sunday June 13: Austria, Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Portugal, Spain, Sweden |
[13][14] |
| Seats |
626 |
[15][16] |
| Candidates |
over 10,000 |
[17] |
| Electorate |
288 million |
[18] |
| Turnout |
49.8% |
[19] |
| Previous |
European Parliament election, 1994 |
n/a |
| Next |
European Parliament election, 2004 |
n/a |
| Election methods |
All proportional representation. |
[20] |
| Preference voting allowed? |
• Yes, via open list: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Italy, Luxembourg (with panachage), Netherlands, Sweden.
• Yes, via STV: Ireland, United Kingdom (NI only)
• No: the rest |
[21][22] |
| Cutoff? |
• 5%: France, Germany
• 4%: Austria, Sweden
• 3%: Greece
• none: the rest |
[23] |
| Seat allocation |
• Sainte-Laguë method: Sweden
• STV method: Ireland, United Kingdom (NI only)
• Hare-Niemeyer method: Germany
• Pro-rata: Greece
• Largest remainder method: Italy
• D'Hondt method: the rest |
[24][25][26] |
| Constituency boundaries |
• Member state subdivided into multiple constituencies: Belgium (3), Ireland (4), Italy (5), United Kingdom (12)
• Mixture: Germany (candidate lists at Länder or national level), Finland (candidate lists at electoral district or national level)
• Member state as single constituency: the rest |
[27][28][29] |
| Minimum voting age |
18 |
[30][31] |
|
European Parliament election, 2004 - Statistics |
| Area |
European Union (EU-25) |
Sources |
| Dates |
• Thursday June 10: Netherlands, United Kingdom,
• Friday June 11: Czech Republic, Ireland
• Saturday June 12: Czech Republic, Italy, Latvia, Malta
• Sunday June 13: Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden |
[32] |
| Seats |
732 |
[33][34] |
| Candidates |
over 14,600 |
[35] |
| Electorate |
342 million |
[36][37][38] |
| Turnout |
45.6% |
[39] |
| Previous |
European Parliament election, 1999 |
n/a |
| Next |
European Parliament election, 2009 |
n/a |
| Election methods |
All proportional representation. |
[40] |
| Preference voting allowed? |
• Yes, via open list: Austria, Belgium, Lithuania, Luxembourg (with panachage), Netherlands, Slovenia, Slovakia, Sweden.
• Yes, via STV: Ireland, Malta, United Kingdom (NI only)
• No: the rest |
[41][42][43] |
| Cutoff? |
• 5%: Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia
• 4%: Austria, Sweden
• 3%: Greece
• none: the rest |
[44][45][46] |
| Seat allocation |
• Sainte-Laguë method: Latvia, Sweden
• STV method: Ireland, Malta, United Kingdom (NI only)
• Highest averages method: France
• Largest remainder method: Italy
• Pro-rata: Greece
• Droop method: Slovakia
• Hare-Niemeyer method: Germany
• Hare-Niemeyer method and D'Hondt method: Poland
• D'Hondt method: the rest |
[47][48][49][50][51] |
| Constituency boundaries |
• Member state subdivided into multiple constituencies: Belgium (3), France (8), Ireland (4), Italy (5), Poland (13), United Kingdom (12)
• Mixture: Germany (candidate lists at Länder or national level)
• Member state as single constituency: the rest |
[52][53][54] |
| Minimum voting age |
18 |
[55] |
| Presidential election |
• First round: Josep Borrell, 388 votes; Bronisław Geremek, 208 votes; Francis Wurtz, 51 votes
• Josep Borrell, having achieved a majority of valid votes in the first round, was elected President of the European Parliament |
[56] |
|
European Parliament election, 1979 - Delegation at 17 July 1979 |
| Group |
Description |
Details |
% |
MEPs |
| |
SOC |
Social Democrats |
West Germany 35, Belgium 7, Denmark 4, France 22, Ireland 4, Italy 13, Luxembourg 1, Netherlands 9, UK 18 |
28% |
113 |
| |
EPP |
Christian Democrats |
West Germany 42, Belgium 10, France 8, Ireland 4, Italy 30, Luxembourg 3, Netherlands 10 |
26% |
107 |
| |
ED |
Conservatives |
Denmark 3, UK 61 |
16% |
64 |
| |
COM |
Communists and the Far Left |
Denmark 1, France 19, Italy 24 |
11% |
44 |
| |
LD |
Liberals and Liberal Democrats |
West Germany 4, Belgium 4, Denmark 3, France 17, Ireland 1, Italy 5, Luxembourg 2, Netherlands 4 |
10% |
40 |
| |
EPD |
National Conservatives |
Denmark 1, France 15, Ireland 5, UK 1 |
5% |
22 |
| |
CDI |
Heterogeneous |
Belgium 1, Denmark 4, Ireland 1, Italy 5 |
3% |
11 |
| |
NI |
Independents |
Belgium 2, Italy 4, Netherlands 2, UK 1 |
2% |
9 |
| Sources: [57] [58] [59] [60] |
100% |
410 |
|