Irish voters yesterday picked up the baton on day two of marathon EU elections, after the Netherlands kicked off the ballot with a strong showing by the far right.
Ireland’s 37-year-old prime minister, Simon Harris, voted near his home in the village of Delgany south of Dublin just after polls opened at 7am, before a whistlestop tour to canvass for both local and European Parliament elections.
“I admire his energy, although I don’t vote for his party,” said Keith O’Reilly, a 41 year-old information-technology worker, on his way out of the polling station.
Photo: Reuters
“They’re getting so many things wrong, the migration issue for one thing,” he said.
For the first time in an Irish EU vote, many candidates are running on an anti-immigration platform, either as independents or for fringe nationalist parties.
Polls in the Czech Republic were to open later at 10am, ahead of Sunday’s main election day when most of the EU’s 27 nations — including powerhouses Germany and France — are to vote.
Exit polls after the vote in the Netherlands showed the Freedom Party (PVV) of anti-immigration Dutch euroskeptic Geert Wilders getting a boost in the incoming EU legislature, in second place with seven seats.
Polls have pointed to a string of gains for the far-right across the bloc — up to a quarter of the EU’s 720 parliament seats.
However, the tight Dutch result — in which Frans Timmermans’ Green-left alliance looked set for first place — might provide some comfort for centrists hoping to maintain their majority.
That was the early assessment of Eurasia Group’s managing director Mujtaba Rahman.
“There’ll be lots of noise over next few days about the far right surge in EU. The reality is more boring,” he wrote on X, predicting that “the center will largely hold.”
The EU vote comes at a time of major geopolitical instability almost two-and-a-half years into Russia’s war on Ukraine. The far right is looking to tap into grievances among the bloc’s 370 million eligible voters, fatigued by a succession of crises from the COVID-19 pandemic to the fallout of Moscow’s invasion.
In Ireland, with about 20 percent of the population born outside the country and record levels of asylum seekers, anti-migrant sentiment has escalated.
The main question though remains whether Harris’s center-right Fine Gael would win a bigger vote share than the main opposition party Sinn Fein, with local elections held the same day.
“It’s Election Day! If you want CHANGE vote Sinn Fein today,” the party posted in an early morning message.
Support for the leftist-nationalist Sinn Fein has declined sharply, with its progressive and pro-migration stances appearing at odds with many of its core working-class voters.
At EU-level, the prospect of a lurch to the right has rattled the European Parliament’s main groupings, the conservative European People’s Party (EPP) and the leftist Socialists and Democrats.
They remain on course to be the two biggest blocs, but European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, of the EPP, might need support from part of the far right to secure a second term.
With an eye on the horse-trading that might be needed, Von der Leyen has been courting Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who heads the post-fascist Brothers of Italy party.
To the east, Czech politicians face widespread apathy to the EU vote, after the country had the second-lowest turnout last time around in 2019 at 28.72 percent.
Polls put the centrist ANO movement of billionaire former prime minister Andrej Babis in the lead, ahead of a center-right coalition.
In a message to voters early yesterday, Babis urged them to “expel from the European Parliament the green fanatics and the pro-migration enthusiasts who have settled down there.”
Fears of Russian meddling were also raised in the vote run-up after Czech authorities busted a Web site alleged to be a Kremlin front pushing Russian propaganda.
The probe into the Voice of Europe Web site has since spread to Belgium — home of the European Parliament — after allegations EU lawmakers were paid by the outlet.
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