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Conservative Parties
Cheer Victory in EU Parliamentary Elections
By Lisa Bryant
08 June 2009
Conservative
parties across Europe are cheering their victory, following four days of
voting for the E.U. Parliament that resulted in heavy losses for the
left.
Governing parties in a dozen European countries began the week on a down
note, after suffering humiliating defeats in the European parliament
elections. That included Britain, where the ruling Labor party marked
its lowest score in decades, with about 16 percent of the vote. British
Prime Minister Gordon Brown was scheduled to meet later Monday with
parliament members from his party.
Governing conservatives in France, Germany, Italy and Poland emerged
winners in the voting to select the European Parliament's 736 deputies.
Leftist lawmakers like Martin Schulz, president of the parliament's
Socialist group, say they are bitterly disappointed with the results.
Schulz says the vote marks a sad period for socialists in Europe. But he
says the themes of the left - social values, more market regulation and
fighting climate change - are as relevant as ever.
Analysts
say voters wanted to punish the left for what they perceived as its
inadequate response to the financial and economic crisis. Domestic
issues also topped the agenda in countries like Britain, where the
already unpopular Labor party is reeling over a scandal over lawmakers'
perks.
In some countries, such as Italy, Britain and the Netherlands, far-right
parties running on anti-immigration and Euro-skeptic platforms scored
gains in the elections, as did the Greens party in France. But voter
apathy ruled the day, with only 43 percent of Europeans casting their
ballot - a record low.
EU lawmaker Francis Wurtz of France says the rate of voter abstention
showed lack of confidence in the European Union. Polls indicate many
Europeans have little faith in the European Union and believe EU
parliament members are overpaid and detached from their daily problems. |