Some call it a āpolitical earthquakeā, while others consider it a trend to be observed in Europe for a longer time.
It still wonāt be enough to have a majority, but far-right, populist and āanti-Europeanā parties will see record gains in the next European Parliament elections.
Moreover, the two main mainstream parties, the Peopleās Party and the Socialists, will not have a majority together.
This follows from the analysis of the European Council on Foreign Relations (ECFR), a think tank based in Germany, which was published last week.
The experts were based on available public opinion polls, but also on possible transfers of individual parties between factions. Slovakia found itself in the category of countries where there is a risk that āpopulist, anti-European or far-right partiesā will win the majority in the European elections. Apparently, they also include Smer and SNS.
Elections to the European Parliament are scheduled in all member countries for June 6 to 9 this year (Saturday, June 8 in Slovakia).
(Graphs of how the distribution of power in the European Parliament will change, below in the article)
The climate and support for Ukraine will suffer
āThe results of our analysis should serve as a warning signal for
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