Opinion On The European Elections The New York Times

The Quietly Momentous Upshot Of Europe S Elections Could Be Seismic Millions of europeans will go to the polls this year in a test of the right wing movements that surged in 2024’s historic elections — and of the liberal order that so many disgruntled europeans. In a recent poll across member states, 74 percent of respondents said they feel like citizens of the european union — the highest level in more than two decades. two years ago, 72 percent said.

Opinion On The European Elections The New York Times Analysts have leaped to the conclusion that the european union must have done something wrong. it didn’t. the specific policy grievances that drove the election results were national, not. Voters across europe spent the weekend sending a message to the eu’s political class: a nationalist and populist shift is happening across the continent. the european parliamentary election. German voters will head to the polls this weekend to elect new leadership, marking a decisive election that will help shape how europe responds to the new trump administration. Europe, but particularly france and germany – the two motor nations of the continent – are holding their collective breath for the outcome of tuesday’s american presidential election.

Opinion What Do Europeans Really Want The New York Times German voters will head to the polls this weekend to elect new leadership, marking a decisive election that will help shape how europe responds to the new trump administration. Europe, but particularly france and germany – the two motor nations of the continent – are holding their collective breath for the outcome of tuesday’s american presidential election. Voters in the 27 european union member states sent a stern warning to mainstream political powers, wreaking havoc on french and, to a lesser degree, german politics and rewarding hard line. Bargaining over coalitions, positions and policies in the european union will proceed apace now that the european parliament election results are in. The rampant resurgence of radical right populism across europe marks these elections out as very different to anything we have seen in nine previous elections to the european parliament. The decision by dutch right wing parties to negotiate a technical coalition excluding far right leader geert wilders from the premiership despite his winning most votes in last year’s general.
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