European Parliament Election: May 23-26, 2019
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Author Topic: European Parliament Election: May 23-26, 2019  (Read 160843 times)
Lexii, harbinger of chaos and sexual anarchy
Alex
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« Reply #1075 on: May 25, 2019, 10:50:55 PM »

Slovakia: 500/5940 station counted (Newspaper Aktuality leaked)
Smer-S&D 19% (-5)
PS/S-ALDE/EPP: 18% (+18)
ĽSNS-NI: 13% (+11)
KDH-EPP: 11% (-2)
SaS-ECR: 10 % (+3)
OĽaNO-ECR: 8% (+1)
SR-ENF: 5% (+5) ...
+/- vs. 2014 final election result

Latvia, 70% counted (leaked by skaties): European Election
JV-EPP: 26% (-20)
S-S&D: 18% (+5)
NA-ECR: 16% (+2)
AP!-ALDE: 11% (+9)
LKS-G/EFA: 6.5%
LRA-ECR: 5.5% (+3)
ZZS-EPP/G/EFA: 5.5% (-3)
+/- vs. 2014 election

https://twitter.com/EuropeElects

13% Nazi party, what the hell happened...

Kotleba got 10% in the Presidential elections, so this result wasn't all that unexpected (especially if you add a few Harabin et al voters)
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Classic Conservative
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« Reply #1076 on: May 25, 2019, 11:26:10 PM »

Does anyone have a schedule of when the results will begin to come out?
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1077 on: May 26, 2019, 12:06:46 AM »

Does anyone have a schedule of when the results will begin to come out?

Polls are now open in most countries.

Results will only be released after 11pm European Time (5pm Eastern in the US), because of sh*tty Italy which keeps their polls open that long, but exit polls and the like will be released once each country closes their polls.

In Austria, this is the case at 5pm, in Germany at 6pm.
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smoltchanov
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« Reply #1078 on: May 26, 2019, 12:19:42 AM »
« Edited: May 26, 2019, 12:34:30 AM by smoltchanov »

Slovakia: 500/5940 station counted (Newspaper Aktuality leaked)
Smer-S&D 19% (-5)
PS/S-ALDE/EPP: 18% (+18)
ĽSNS-NI: 13% (+11)
KDH-EPP: 11% (-2)
SaS-ECR: 10 % (+3)
OĽaNO-ECR: 8% (+1)
SR-ENF: 5% (+5) ...
+/- vs. 2014 final election result

Latvia, 70% counted (leaked by skaties): European Election
JV-EPP: 26% (-20)
S-S&D: 18% (+5)
NA-ECR: 16% (+2)
AP!-ALDE: 11% (+9)
LKS-G/EFA: 6.5%
LRA-ECR: 5.5% (+3)
ZZS-EPP/G/EFA: 5.5% (-3)
+/- vs. 2014 election

https://twitter.com/EuropeElects

13% Nazi party, what the hell happened...

Kotleba got 10% in the Presidential elections, so this result wasn't all that unexpected (especially if you add a few Harabin et al voters)

Yeah. And, political correctness aside - immigration is a very serious problem in Europe, which, generally feeds nationalist and far-right vote and parties..  I see it even in Moscow, which is more "Russian" (in old meaning of the word), then London - "English" or Paris - "French".... It will take time before some people will adapt to new realities...
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1079 on: May 26, 2019, 12:22:25 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (local time):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

5pm: Austria, Cyprus

6pm: Germany, Greece

7pm: Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Portugal, Romania, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)
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ON Progressive
OntarioProgressive
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« Reply #1080 on: May 26, 2019, 12:26:49 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (local time):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

5pm: Austria, Cyprus

6pm: Germany, Greece

7pm: Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Portugal, Romania, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)

I don't know about you, but a 2 pm or 3 pm poll closing seems comically early to me.
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1081 on: May 26, 2019, 12:30:11 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (local time):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

5pm: Austria, Cyprus

6pm: Germany, Greece

7pm: Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Portugal, Romania, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)

I don't know about you, but a 2 pm or 3 pm poll closing seems comically early to me.

Well, it's doable if voters are informed and motivated to vote.

For example, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Belgium and most smaller cities in Austria always close between noon (!) and 3 pm already and all manage turnouts of 80-90%.
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1082 on: May 26, 2019, 12:33:38 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (adjusted for different time zones, using CEST, Central European Summer Time, as standard):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

4pm: Cyprus

5pm: Austria, Greece

6pm: Bulgaria, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Lithuania

7pm: Croatia, Hungary, Romania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden, Portugal

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1083 on: May 26, 2019, 12:55:29 AM »

EU elections 2019: Country-by-country guide on what to look out for



Austria

The big question in Austria is what impact the so-called Ibiza scandal will have on the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ). Its leader, Heinz-Christian Strache, resigned as Austria’s vice chancellor earlier this month after a secret video appeared to show him trying to trade public contracts for party donations from a woman he thought was the niece of a Russian oligarch. FPÖ came third in 2014's EU elections with 20% of the vote; latest projections suggest it will pick up around 18% this time, but that figure is down from 24.5% before the scandal broke.

Belgium

Belgium isn’t holding just one election on Sunday, but three: federal, regional and European. In the latter, will the greens capitalise on a strong showing in local elections to improve on their 6.6% vote share in 2014? Like many other European countries, Belgium also has a far-right party, Vlaams Belang, which is forecast to get up to 14.8% of the vote in Flanders. Nationally, the party got 4.2% five years ago.

Denmark

There are fears the dramatic campaign for Denmark’s general election — set for June 5 — will overshadow the European Parliament poll and hit turnout. Some are saying Danes are more concerned with the domestic vote, which is predicted to see Stram Kurs, a far-right party advocating the forced deportation of up to 700,000 Muslims, gain seats in parliament. Voter turnout for EU elections in Denmark was 56.32% in 2014, 59.54% five years earlier and 47.89% in 2004.

Estonia

The key question in Estonia is whether anti-EU, far-right party Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond (EKRE) will perform as well in these European elections as it did in March’s national poll. That election saw EKRE come third, winning it a place in the ruling coalition. The party won 4% of the vote in 2014’s European poll; this time around it is forecast to get as much as 17%.

Finland

Finland is another country that is predicted to see a green surge. Forecasts suggest the country’s environmentalist movement is set to get the second biggest share of the vote. Its predicted 17.2% vote share would be more than double its performance in 2014.

France

All eyes will be on whether the party of pro-European president Emmanuel Macron — under pressure domestically from the anti-government “gilets jaunes” (yellow vests) protesters — will be beaten into second place by Marine Le Pen. Le Pen — who lost out to Macron in France’s presidential election — and her National Rally movement is forecast to get the biggest vote share in Sunday’s election. Her previous party, Front National, won the 2014 vote with a 24% share. Macron’s La Republique En Marche! movement did not exist then.

Germany

There has been a surge in support for the German Green Party in federal polls and some are even daring to dream the movement could spawn its first chancellor. In forecasts for the European Parliament elections, it has been polling in second at around 18%, which is an improvement on its 10.70% vote share in 2014. It is worth keeping an eye on the anti-migrant and anti-euro Alternative for Germany (AfD), who won seven seats five years ago and entered the national parliament for the first time in 2017.

Greece

With national elections due in October, Greeks have been concentrating on domestic issues ahead of the EU poll. The country’s economic situation and the name change agreement with North Macedonia have taken precedence over European issues. The ruling Syriza party is trailing the conservative New Democracy movement in opinion polls ahead of the vote. Some have speculated that any win for Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and his Syriza party would prompt him to call a snap general election in June.

Hungary

Hungary’s nationalist prime minister Viktor Orban has frequently clashed with Brussels over rule of law and migration. The conflict has seen his Fidesz party suspended from the centre-right European People’s Party grouping in the parliament. It will, therefore, be interesting to see whether this hostility affects Hungarian voters. In 2014 right-wing anti-EU parties came first and second: Fidesz with a 51.48% vote share and Jobbik on 14.67%. Will it be different this time around?

Ireland

Ireland went to the ballot box on Friday and the Pro-EU Fine Gael party of Prime Minister Leo Varadkar was expected to be the biggest party.

Italy

The future of the Italian government is strictly connected to the outcome of the European Parliament elections. The two ruling parties, The League and the Five Star Movement, have spent the last couple of weeks fighting about every topic on the political agenda. Polls predict Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini's party will come out stronger than ever. His party, then the Northern League, won 6% of the vote in 2014. Latest projections suggest the League will get more than 30% this time around. If he is crowned winner, will he pull the plug and call for new elections, with the aim of forming a right-wing led government and dismiss the despised ally?

Netherlands

Anti-EU parties, including Geert Wilders' Freedom Party (PVV), were forecast to pick up more than one-third of the vote share.

Poland

Poland’s EU elections kick-off a series of polls in the country: a parliamentary one follows in the autumn before a presidential vote next year. Some say polls point to this being the beginning of the end for the ruling Eurosceptic Law and Justice Party (PiS). With the country at odds with Brussels over the independence of its judiciary, it will be interesting to see if PiS can improve on its 31.78% vote share in 2014. All eyes will also be on Poland’s first openly gay politician Robert Biedroń and the performance of his newly-formed pro-EU party Wiosna (Spring).

Portugal

Portugal is one of the few EU countries without a strongly-performing far-right populist party. This election has seen the emergence of Andre Ventura’s radical-right Basta! (Enough!) movement, which opposes the EU. Campaigning has focussed on the opposition attacking Portugal’s ruling socialists on domestic issues, with an eye on a forthcoming national poll. It will, therefore, be interesting to see whether the pro-EU socialists are able to better their performance from 2014 when they got 34% of the vote.

Romania

The ruling Social Democrats (PSD) have clashed with Brussels over anti-corruption and rule of law reforms. It will be interesting to see if they manage to come out on top, amid conflict with the EU and regular anti-government protests. Running them close will be pro-EU National Liberal Party (PNL). Both parties are predicted to get around 28% of the votes. PNL and other pro-EU parties may be helped by the fact there is a referendum being held at the same time on PSD's controversial reforms.

Slovakia

One of the most interesting things to watch in Slovakia is turnout: just 13.05% voted in 2014, the lowest figure in the EU. Look too at the performance of Progressive Slovakia, the party of newly-elected pro-EU president Zuzana Caputova, and compare it with the anti-Brussels, far-right movement of People's Party - Our Slovakia. Meanwhile, while the ruling social democrats (SMER-SD) are predicted to win, their vote share could fall — from 24% in 2014 — after anti-government protests over the last year.

Spain

One curiosity of Spain’s EU poll is whether ex-Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont — currently exiled in Belgium — will get elected. And, if he does, whether he’ll be able to take up his seat, as Euronews looked at in this article. More widely, will the far-right Vox Party be successful in getting its candidates to Brussels and Strasbourg? Or will it be a repeat of April’s general election? That poll saw an important Socialist majority and a lower-than-expected result for Vox.

Sweden

Will Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg’s climate campaigning across Europe help persuade her compatriots to back environmentally-conscious parties? Sweden’s Greens came second five years ago, with 15.41% of the vote, but may feel they can improve on that this time. Experts also say to look out for the performance of the far-right Sweden Democrats, who have softened their stance on Europe in the light of Brexit. They got two MEPs for their 9.67% vote share last time around.

United Kingdom

Will voters punish the traditional two main parties — Labour and Conservative — for failing to deliver Brexit by switching to the new political movement fronted by anti-EU MEP Nigel Farage? And while the anti-Brexit vote will be split by the Liberal Democrats, the Green Party and Change UK, will it add up to more than that of Farage’s Brexit Party?

---

Some countries like Latvia, Luxemburg, Malta etc. are not mentioned because they are the Wyomings of Europe and nobody really cares about them.
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1084 on: May 26, 2019, 01:05:28 AM »

How Austria's joint media (ORF, ATV, APA) projection for 5pm works:

Quote
High voter dynamics expected

On Sunday, May 26, European Elections take place in Austria for the sixth time since accession in 1995.

First forecast at 17:00

Other than in previous elections, authorities will publish official results from the Austrian polling stations only after 23:00.

Therefore, the national public service station ORF, the private TV-station ATV and the Austria Press Agency co-operate for providing a first forecast at the basis of surveys:

* n=5.200 interviews (4.200 telephone, 1.000 online) are carried out from May 21 until May 26 by three research institutes (SORA, Peter Hajek, ARGE Wahlen)

* The confidence interval of this forecast is expected to be around +/-2,5 percentage points and will be communicated on May 26.

Throughout election night, all SORA forecasts can be found on ORF TV and Internet (orf.at or the ORF news App) and on Twitter via @sora_institut.

Final forecast shortly after 23:00

After official results from polling stations (excl. postal vote) are communicated at 23:00, SORA adds a forecast of the postal vote. The remaining confidence interval of this final forecast will be at +/- 0,5 percentage points. The official election result is expected for Monday evening after the postal vote has been counted.

Analyses and motives

Who voted for what party and for what reasons? On Monday, May 27, SORA provides the results of voter transition analyses and the ORF/SORA/ISA election day survey among 1.200 voters online here.

https://www.sora.at/nc/en/news-press/news/news-single-view/news/eu-election-in-austria-904.html
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1085 on: May 26, 2019, 01:56:30 AM »

The weather today is cloudy/rainy in the ÖVP- and Green-areas in the West, but sunny and warmer in the traditional SPÖ- and FPÖ-areas in the East and South:

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Swedish Rainbow Capitalist Cheese
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« Reply #1086 on: May 26, 2019, 03:24:46 AM »

EU elections 2019: Country-by-country guide on what to look out for



Sweden

Will Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg’s climate campaigning across Europe help persuade her compatriots to back environmentally-conscious parties? Sweden’s Greens came second five years ago, with 15.41% of the vote, but may feel they can improve on that this time. Experts also say to look out for the performance of the far-right Sweden Democrats, who have softened their stance on Europe in the light of Brexit. They got two MEPs for their 9.67% vote share last time around.

If the Greens improve on their 2014 showing, it would be a huge upset considering they almost fell out of parliament in the General election last year and most polls are predicting they'll lose between 5-6% compared to 2014. The Greens would also be very pleased to not lose more since they were pretty much DOA a few months ago.   

A much better thing to look out for is the performance of the Liberals. They've historically done much better in EP-elections than other elections (2014 they achieved 9,9% and 2 seats)  but polls show they're on a knife's edge of losing all their seats. If they fall below 4% that might be seen as a huge rejection of the deal they struck with the government in January and might mean the party pulls out of supporting the Social Democratic government, leading to the government potentially falling apart before the next general elections in 2022.   
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Tender Branson
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« Reply #1087 on: May 26, 2019, 03:39:11 AM »

H.C. Strache (FPÖ) could be elected to the EU parliament today:

He's ranked #42 on the FPÖ's EU party list, but if enough FPÖ voters outfit him with preference votes (!) today, he would be elected.

Tongue
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Andrea
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« Reply #1088 on: May 26, 2019, 03:52:49 AM »
« Edited: May 26, 2019, 04:15:24 AM by Andrea »

Slovakia seats should be

PS 4 (they got 20.1%)
Smer 3 (down to 15.7%)
ĽSNS-NI 2 (12% in the end)
SaS 2
KDH 1+1 after Brexit
OĽaNO 1

Rest 0

Latvia has reported 90% of the votes cast
According to newspaper Skaties, seats assured are
JV 2
S 2
NA 1
AP! 1
LKS 1


last seat in play between second NA seat, a seat for ZZS and third JV seat


First tallies from Malta indicate a 56-38% in favour of Labour according to Times of Malta.
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Umengus
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« Reply #1089 on: May 26, 2019, 04:37:48 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (local time):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

5pm: Austria, Cyprus

6pm: Germany, Greece

7pm: Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Portugal, Romania, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)

I don't know about you, but a 2 pm or 3 pm poll closing seems comically early to me.

Well, it's doable if voters are informed and motivated to vote.

For example, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Belgium and most smaller cities in Austria always close between noon (!) and 3 pm already and all manage turnouts of 80-90%.

In Lux and Belgium, the vote is an obligation.
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Diouf
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« Reply #1090 on: May 26, 2019, 04:51:36 AM »

In Denmark, turnout at 10.00 is 11%, up from 9% in 2014. Five years ago, the final turnout was 56.32%. The rise is mostly due to more early voting this time, so we will see where the final turnout ends. I voted shortly after the polls opened at 09.00.
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Keep Calm and ...
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« Reply #1091 on: May 26, 2019, 05:06:33 AM »

Does anyone have a schedule of when the results will begin to come out?

The offical timetable:

PDF:
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/resources/library/media/20190521RES52073/20190521RES52073.pdf
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LAKISYLVANIA
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« Reply #1092 on: May 26, 2019, 05:10:09 AM »

Poll closing times for the 21 countries that are voting today (local time):

2pm: Luxemburg

3pm: Belgium

5pm: Austria, Cyprus

6pm: Germany, Greece

7pm: Bulgaria, Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Hungary, Lithuania, Slovenia

8pm: Denmark, France, Portugal, Romania, Spain

9pm: Poland, Sweden

11pm: Italy (needs to be nuked for such a time)

I don't know about you, but a 2 pm or 3 pm poll closing seems comically early to me.

We have mandatory voting, Closing time is 2pm, and 4pm for electronic voting, but it's a sunday.
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Zinneke
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« Reply #1093 on: May 26, 2019, 05:12:44 AM »

Yeah I remember last time out in the locals it closed at noon. Think a lot of young people were still recovering from the previous night.
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Tirnam
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« Reply #1094 on: May 26, 2019, 05:13:54 AM »

Turnout in France at noon: 19.26%
In 2014 it was 15.70%
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tomhguy
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« Reply #1095 on: May 26, 2019, 05:22:44 AM »

Quote
United Kingdom

Will voters punish the traditional two main parties — Labour and Conservative — for failing to deliver Brexit by switching to the new political movement fronted by anti-EU MEP Nigel Farage? And while the anti-Brexit vote will be split by the Liberal Democrats, the Green Party and Change UK, will it add up to more than that of Farage’s Brexit Party?

The big story of the night will be how well the conservatives do in terms of percentage of the vote. If they are around 15%, they are doing better than people expected. If they are around 10%, they are doing worse. If the Greens beat them as might happen, that is an extremely bad sign for them. Whilst the polls say differently, I expect the Lib Dems to beat Labour (narrowly). The Lib Dems have momentum (pun intended) over Labour, who have been consistently been dropping in the polls. If the Brexit party get more than 35%, they will be doing better than expected, yet anything under 30% and many will say that they have really failed based on what was expected. Looking at turnout figures, it seems that the remain voters are coming out, whilst the leave voters are disenfranchised and don't seem to want to come out. This means that the nationwide popular vote will be worse than the overall seats for the Brexit party. They will probably still get as many seats as people expect though because the leave areas and the remain areas are largely concentrated in particular areas. As for areas to look at, the South East and London are where a lot of the remain vote is. To work out who will come second (Labour or Lib Dems), who is winning here will give a strong indication as to who will be the overall second place winner. If the Labour party are holding their ground in the north (These are where the early results come in), they may have a good night. If the Lib Dems are doing very well in the South West (Where I'm from), this could be a good sign for them. Hope my knowledge on the UK helps!
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Umengus
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« Reply #1096 on: May 26, 2019, 05:23:27 AM »

Turnout in France at noon: 19.26%
In 2014 it was 15.70%

interesting. Pollsters estimated the 2019 turnout just a little better than in 2014.
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« Reply #1097 on: May 26, 2019, 05:30:23 AM »

People are going to mostly focus on LSNS in Slovakia, but it's worth noting that PS's victory breaks an unending pattern of Smer plurality wins in elections (presidential results aside) since 2004
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Mike88
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« Reply #1098 on: May 26, 2019, 05:33:21 AM »

All polling stations have open in Portugal at 8am, with only one polling station in the North, in Morgrade parish, Montalegre, being boycotted by the population because of the government's decision to approve a mine of lithium in that parish. Meanwhile, the polling station in the parish has opened but no one is voting.

There are 10,761,156 registered voters for these elections: 9,329,331 in Portugal itself and 1,431,825 abroad. There are fears the turnout rates will drop to a record low, below 30%, because of the high rate of registered voters.

Portugal

Portugal is one of the few EU countries without a strongly-performing far-right populist party. This election has seen the emergence of Andre Ventura’s radical-right Basta! (Enough!) movement, which opposes the EU. Campaigning has focussed on the opposition attacking Portugal’s ruling socialists on domestic issues, with an eye on a forthcoming national poll. It will, therefore, be interesting to see whether the pro-EU socialists are able to better their performance from 2014 when they got 34% of the vote.

Good summary, Tender. Just a small correction, the PS got 31.5% in 2014, not 34%. In Portugal, blank/invalid ballot count for the overall total.
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Umengus
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« Reply #1099 on: May 26, 2019, 05:43:48 AM »

France

Turnout

 Pas-de-Calais : 24,9% (+10,3)
Aisne : 20,9% (+7,7)

It's good for RN but:

Alpes maritimes : 13 (-1,5)
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