Just as we had warned in the run-up to the European elections – and England’s UKIP victory in local elections had suggested; Anti-European-Union parties are showing strongly in this weekend’s elections. Anxiety is spreading among the status quo as Greece’s anti-austerity party SYRIZA wins and perhaps even more worryingly in supposed core of the union France’s Nationalist party is leading in a “political earthquake” success:
- EUROPEAN GOVERNMENTS MUST RESPOND TO CITIZENS’ ANGER: VALLS
- FRANCE’S VALLS SAYS ‘SITUATION IS GRAVE FOR FRANCE, EUROPE’
- DRAGHI SAYS PEOPLE VOTING ACROSS EUROPE ARE CLEARLY DISENGAGED
Disengaged? – or totally pissed off with promises that never materialize and wealth that only trickles down to the uber-richest and uber-elitest.
No wonder France is worried…
#France – Ipsos seat projection: Front National 23-25 seats, UMP 18-21, Socialist Party 13, UDI/MoDem 6-8. #EP2014 http://ift.tt/1h307H2
— Open Europe (@OpenEurope) May 25, 2014
Anti-establishment parties were gaining ground in other parts of the EU too (following UKIP’s lead in the UK).
In France, exit polls setting the anti-immigrant, far right National Front up for its first success in a national election.
In
Greece, exit polls had the far-left SYRIZA party leading with 26-30 per
cent of the vote, ahead of the ruling conservative New Democracy Party.
SYRIZA, whose leader, Alexis Tsipras, is running for European
Commission president, has campaigned vociferously against the austerity
that was part of the EU’s response to its economic crisis.
In
Austria, the right-wing FPOe came in third with 20 per cent, while the
anti-immigrant Danish People’s Party was set to take the biggest share
of the vote in that Nordic country, according to exit polls and initial
projections.
In Finland, the anti-immigrant True Finns party was
projected to win two of the country’s 13 seats in the European
Parliament, adding one seat to its previous tally.
In Germany,
the far-right National Democratic Party – which has many overtly
neo-Nazi supporters – could be on course to win its first seat in the
legislature, according to projections. Germany’s anti-euro Alternative
fuer Deutschland (AfD) is also set to make its debut in the parliament
after capturing 6.5 per cent of the German vote, a public television
exit poll showed.
In Belgium: *FLEMISH NATIONALISTS LEAD IN BELGIAN ELECTION, 1ST RESULTS SHOW
But it’s not just France, Anti-EU parties are winning across Europe…
h/t @WikiGuido
Who coulda seen that coming?
Charts: Bloomberg
via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1h2ZXzq Tyler Durden