06/05/24View in Browser

Looking back before we vote

By Georgi Gotev

One month before the EU elections, it is useful to look back and see how the nine previous votes have exemplified historical developments and the changing balance of power in our union.

The first European elections were held in 1979, as a series of parliamentary elections across the nine (at the time) European Community member states. They were also the first international elections in history.

This was done in accordance with the 1957 Treaty of Rome, which established the European Communities and specified that the European Parliament must be elected by universal suffrage using a common voting system.

The European Parliamentary Assembly first met in 1958 while the European Parliament, under this name, dates back to 1962. Until 1979, member states appointed members to the European Parliament from their national parliaments.

The 1979 campaigns varied. The former Social Democrat German Chancellor Willy Brandt took an international campaign to France, Italy, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands to boost the Socialist group. And it was the social democrats who won the largest number of MEPs (113, leaving behind the Christian democrats with 107).

This was the beginning of a centre-left domination that lasted 20 years.

France’s Simone Veil, a Holocaust survivor and women’s rights activist and politician best known for the 1975 law that legalised abortion, was elected as the first president of the elected Parliament and the first female president since it was established in 1952.

Continue reading...
Engage with someone of a different political persuasion 

Join 'Europe Talks 2024' and debate with another EU citizen with different political and social views to your own. Engage in challenging conversations to build understanding across borders.

Sign up now!
Photo of the day

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz visited Latvia for meetings with the Prime Ministers of three Baltic states, Latvian Prime Minister Evika Silina, Lithuania's Ingrida Simonyte and Estonia's Kaja Kallas. This so-called '3+1' format has become a tradition in which the leaders of the Baltic states discuss current issues with the German chancellor. The heads of government discussed security and defense issues, topical issues of the European Union's agenda, support for Ukraine in the fight against Russian aggression, as well as economic cooperation and the development of regional projects in the fields of energy and transport. EPA-EFE/TOMS KALNINS

Would you like to sponsor The Brief? Contact us
The Roundup

The European Commission announced on Monday its decision to close Article 7 against Poland, arguing commitments from the new Donald Tusk government have now addressed previously identified risks to the country’s rule of law.

A group of EU member states, led by Czechia and Denmark, are preparing a letter to the European Commission calling for migrants trying to reach the EU to be transferred to selected third countries before reaching the bloc’s shores – a procedure experts say is likely to be difficult to enforce under current EU migration law.

North Macedonia appears set to be on a collision course with its EU neighbours Greece and Bulgaria with double-header elections Wednesday (8 May) poised to return the country’s nationalist opposition to power.

Look out for…

  • Commissioner Kadri Simson participates in “Europe – transforming the future” of the 16th European Economic Congress in Katowice, Poland, on Tuesday.
  • Foreign Affairs Council (Development) on Tuesday.
  • Employment, Social Policy, Health and Consumer Affairs Council on Tuesday.

Views are the author’s

[Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic/Alice Taylor]

Twitter
Instagram
Facebook
Website
LinkedIn
Spotify
Copyright © 2024 Euractiv Media BV, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to receive email newsletters from Euractiv.

Our mailing address is:
Euractiv Media BV
Karel de Grotelaan 1 bus 1
Brussel 1041
Belgium

Add us to your address book


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from ALL emails from us.