In France, the outcome of the European elections has certainly given little cause for satisfaction in our ranks. The turnout was very low. As the opposition had hoped, the ‘punishment’ vote we saw in the regional elections was repeated, even if the advance of the left has been halted.
Within the majority, the UDF has managed to rally the equivalent of half the UMP votes. Yet the UMP managed to increase the number of its MEPs in Strasbourg (17 against 12 RPR and DL in 1999), at a time when the quota allocated to France has fallen to make room for the new Member States (78 French MEPs instead of 87). There are finally signs of a fall in the eurosceptic vote, on both the right and the left.
We are not so blinkered as to rejoice at the way the socialists and the UDF immediately spoiled their electoral victory. Although they now form the largest national delegation within the PES Group, thanks to their sectarianism, French Socialist Party MEPs performed the amazing feat of turning their colleagues against them to the point that they actually handed over the presidency of Parliament to a Spaniard and the chair of the Group to a German. As for our UDF partners, they could not find anything better to do than leave the EPP Group at the very time that Group had won the day with regard to the draft Constitution and confirmed its position as the dominant group in the newly elected Parliament! The political result is that, if the UDF had stayed, French MEPs would have been in second place within the EPP Group, just behind the Germans, whereas they are now in sixth place, behind the English, Spaniards, Italians and even Poles. Meanwhile, the UDF sits in a small and diverse group, next to passionate supporters of Turkey’s application and total opponents of public services à la française. It beggars belief…
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