The European elections that take place this Sunday, although in some countries they already vote this Saturday, may bring with them a very different composition of the European Parliament to the one we have had until now.
Usually there has been a bipartisan dominance, of the popular Europeans and the social democrats, but Great growth is expected from the two radical right groups. This will mean that the votes in this legislature will be much closer and, therefore, we will see much more disparate agreements.
“It will be a legislature with a lot of negotiation in the European Parliament and very mixed. In other words, for example, the European People’s Party sometimes votes with the liberals and the social democrats, but other times with the radical right,” says Emilio Ordiz, journalist for ’20 Minutes’ and ‘El Orden Mundial’.
And in turn, this disparity of aspects will mean that much more disparate agreements can be reached andn the different issues that the European Union must address in this legislature, as can be the incorporation of new states and the approach of a structural reform long-term.
On the other hand, and although the European Migration Pact has recently been approved, this issue will continue to have a lot of weight. And, of course, as we have seen in recent months, the debate on the defense industry will be so important that could overshadow other issues.
“This does not mean that we are going to engage in a warmongering speech or that they are going to send us to war, far from it. But the reality is that other issues are going to be put aside or other issues are going to be of lesser importance, such as, for example, the Green Pact or the fight against climate change,” says Ordiz.
Source: Lasexta

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