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European elections were supposed to be the far right’s day. But the center held.

The results for European Parliament elections are mostly in, and the projected hard-right surge turned out to be more of an inching.

Centrist parties will continue to hold a vast majority of the 720 seats in Parliament – at least 400, or 450 including green parties. And the far right will take barely more than a dozen new seats, says Jacob Kirkegaard, political economist and senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund. “This was really a continuity election at the European level,” he says.

Why We Wrote This

Going into European Parliamentary elections, most expected a big result for the far right. It did gain – but not nearly as much as anticipated. Instead, continuity ruled the day.

The relative status quo means that Ursula von der Leyen, the current president of the European Commission, will likely be reelected by the new EU Parliament to another term.

Still, there will be significant domestic ramifications from the far right’s gains in the biggest EU countries. France’s far right under Marine Le Pen did so well that President Emmanuel Macron has called risky snap elections for June 30, which could effectively end his ability to take any governmental action.

And the overall boost in presence that the nationalist parties will enjoy in Brussels will have repercussions, as centrist parties may need to make concessions on issues such as migration policy and funding for Ukraine.

The results for European Parliament elections are mostly in, and the projected hard-right surge turned out to be more of an inching.

Centrist parties will continue to hold a vast majority of the 720 seats in Parliament – at least 400, or 450 including Green parties. And the far right will take barely more than a dozen new seats, says Jacob Kirkegaard, political economist and senior fellow at the German Marshall Fund.

“This was really a continuity election at the European level,” Dr. Kirkegaard says. “But what will be different, is that it’s clear these elections have caused significant shifts in a number of the national political systems in member states.”

Why We Wrote This

Going into European Parliamentary elections, most expected a big result for the far right. It did gain – but not nearly as much as anticipated. Instead, continuity ruled the day.

EU elections notoriously gather little interest, with voter turnout at about 50% across the bloc. But they matter immensely at the national level, producing repercussions that have only begun. While hard-right nationalists showed major gains in France, Italy, and Germany, they petered out in many countries.

In Poland, the center-to-center-right coalition led by Donald Tusk cemented the turn away from the hard-line conservatives they’d triumphed over in October’s parliamentary elections.

Notably, in Hungary, authoritarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s party still drew the largest share of votes, but close behind was a center-right party that garnered 30%, representing the first “really serious domestic political challenge to Orbán in over a decade,” says Dr. Kirkegaard.

Denes Erdos/AP

A woman casts her ballot for the European Parliamentary election at a polling station in Budapest, Hungary.

The hard right also didn’t do as well as expected in the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal, Sweden, and Belgium.

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