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Electoral systems
and outcomes
The European
Elections of
May 2019
STUDY
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
Kai Friederike Oelbermann
and
Friedrich Pukelsheim
PE 652.037 – July 2020
EN
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The European Elections
of May 2019
Electoral systems and outcomes
This EPRS study provides an overview of the electoral systems and outcomes in
the May 2019 elections to the European Parliament. It analyses the procedural
details of how parties and candidates register their participation, how votes are
cast, how valid votes are converted into seats, and how seats are assigned to
candidates. For each Member State the paper describes the ballot structure and
vote pattern used, the apportionment of seats among the Member State’s
domestic parties, and the assignment of the seats of a party to its candidates. It
highlights aspects that are common to all Member States and captures
peculiarities that are specific to some domestic provisions.
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
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AUTHOR(S)
This study has been written by Kai-Friederike Oelbermann (Anhalt University of Applied Sciences) and
Friedrich Pukelsheim (University of Augsburg) at the request of the Members’ Research Service, within the
Directorate-General for Parliamentary Research Services (EPRS) of the Secretariat of the European Parliament.
The authors acknowledge the useful comments made by Wilhelm Lehmann (European Parliament/European
University Institute) on drafts of this paper.
PUBLISHER
Members' Research Service, Directorate-General for Parliamentary Research Services (EPRS)
To contact the publisher, please e-mail
[email protected]
LINGUISTIC VERSIONS
Original: EN
Manuscript finalised in June 2020.
DISCLAIMER AND COPYRIGHT
This document is prepared for, and addressed to, the Members and staff of the European Parliament as
background material to assist them in their parliamentary work. The content of the document is the sole
responsibility of its author(s) and any opinions expressed herein should not be taken to represent an official
position of the Parliament.
Reproduction and translation for non-commercial purposes are authorised, provided the source is
acknowledged and the European Parliament is given prior notice and sent a copy.
Brussels © European Union, 2020.
PE 652.037
ISBN: 978-92-846-6956-1
DOI:10.2861/129510
QA-04-20-445-EN-N
[email protected]
htto://www.eprs.ep.parl.union.eu (intranet)
htto://www.europarl.europa.eu/thinktank (internet)
htto://epthinktank.eu (blog)
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The European Elections of May 2019
Executive summary
In this study, the European Parliament (EP) elections of May 2019 are analysed with a
particular emphasis on procedural electoral rules: on how votes are cast, how seats are
distributed among the different political parties and how they are distributed afterwards
within the different electoral lists to determine the elected candidates. Ballot structure and
vote pattern, the apportionment of seats among domestic parties, and the assignment of
the seats of a party to its candidates are discussed in detail, separately for every Member
State of the European Union.
Section 2 divides the conversion of votes into seats into three phases: (1) the allocation of
all seats between the Member States; (2) the apportionment of the seat contingent of a
Member State among its domestic parties; and (3) the assignment of the seats of a domestic
party to its candidates. The situations before and after the withdrawal of the United
Kingdom from the European Union are treated, with a total of 751 and 705 EP seats
respectively. For the apportionment of seats among parties, nine different methods were
used at the elections; they are reviewed in a unified manner. The voting patterns in the
Member States comprised various list systems and single transferable vote schemes. The
voting patterns are detailed and labelled in a way that is indicative of how they actually
determine successful candidates. Table 2.3.1 puts together some of the structural data;
Table 2.4.1 shows the Political Groups that formed in the new EP.
Section 3 present pertinent data from the 2019 elections separately for every Member State,
such as number of constituencies or electoral districts, vote pattern, electoral threshold,
parties who participate in the apportionment process, and vote counts that enter into the
calculations. The transition from the parties’ votes to their seats and from the seats of a party
to its successful candidates is followed up so as to identify incumbent Members of the EPs.
Section 4 provides an attempt to see the 2019 elections from a Union-wide perspective. The
actual size of a political group in the EP is compared with the hypothetical number of seats
the group would have been apportioned on the basis of its electoral support. The electoral
support of a group is obtained by summing up the votes of all domestic parties who joined
it. The emerging discrepancies emphasise yet again the political challenges evolving from
trying to raise the implementation of common principles to a higher level at future
European elections.
Section 5 concludes with a brief 'contextualisation' to the history and political impact of the
electoral reform. Important work in electoral-systems research suggests that further
harmonisation of the current system of quasi-national elections analysed in this study will
remain an essential ambition for European decision-makers if they wish to make the
European elections a more effective instrument of Union-wide democratic legitimation.
I
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Table of contents
1. Introduction ______________________________________________________ 1
2. From votes to seats, and from seats to MEPs ____________________________ 3
2.1. Allocation of seats between Member States _____________________________________ 3
2.2. Apportionment of seats among parties _________________________________________ 4
2.3. Assignment of seats to candidates_____________________________________________ 7
2.4. Political Groups in the new European Parliament _________________________________ 9
3. The 2019 elections, by Member State_________________________________ 10
3.1. AT – Republic of Austria ____________________________________________________ 10
3.2. BE – Kingdom of Belgium ___________________________________________________ 12
3.3. BG – Republic of Bulgaria ___________________________________________________ 15
3.4. CY – Republic of Cyprus ____________________________________________________ 17
3.5. CZ – Czech Republic _______________________________________________________ 18
3.6. DE – Federal Republic of Germany____________________________________________ 20
3.7. DK – Kingdom of Denmark __________________________________________________ 22
3.8. EE – Republic of Estonia ____________________________________________________ 24
3.9. EL – Hellenic Republic______________________________________________________ 25
3.10. ES – Kingdom of Spain ____________________________________________________ 27
3.11. FI – Republic of Finland ___________________________________________________ 29
3.12. FR – French Republic _____________________________________________________ 30
3.13. HR – Republic of Croatia ___________________________________________________ 32
3.14. HU – Hungary ___________________________________________________________ 34
3.15. IE – Ireland______________________________________________________________ 35
3.16. IT – Italian Republic_______________________________________________________ 38
3.17. LT – Republic of Lithuania _________________________________________________ 42
3.18. LU – Grand Duchy of Luxembourg___________________________________________ 43
3.19. LV – Republic of Latvia ____________________________________________________ 44
3.20. MT – Republic of Malta ____________________________________________________ 45
3.21. NL – Kingdom of the Netherlands ___________________________________________ 46
3.22. PL – Republic of Poland ___________________________________________________ 49
3.23. PT – Portuguese Republic__________________________________________________ 52
3.24. RO – Romania ___________________________________________________________ 53
3.25. SE – Kingdom of Sweden __________________________________________________ 54
3.26. SI – Republic of Slovenia___________________________________________________ 56
3.27. SK – Slovak Republic ______________________________________________________ 58
3.28. UK – United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland_______________________ 60
4. Citizens and representatives from a Union-wide viewpoint _______________
5. Conclusion ______________________________________________________
6. References ______________________________________________________
7. Appendix: Acronyms, country codes, party tabs, links ___________________
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The European Elections of May 2019
1. Introduction
The ninth European Parliament (EP), with a five-year term from 2019 to 2024 was elected on
23-26 May 2019. This study is devoted to the electoral procedures leading from votes to
parliamentary seats, and from seats to Members of the European Parliament (MEPs). Our focus is on
procedural standards implemented by the Member States of the European Union (EU) at the 2019
elections, rather than on the political consequences of the elections as such.
1
The heterogeneity of electoral regulations is formidable and perplexing.
2
The common principles
which the 2019 elections had to follow are laid down in the 1976 European Election Act. This decrees
a number of general rules to be observed by all Member States, such as to adopt a proportional
representation system, while leaving much leeway for each Member State when incorporating the
common principles into its domestic provisions. Duff (2011) reviews the history of the Election Act
and includes a consolidated version of the 1976 Election Act amended by the 2002 act.
3
Below we compile data on procedures, voters, parties, candidates and MEPs, with as much of a
unified structure and terminology as possible, in an attempt to survey the paths from voters to MEPs
in comparative perspective between Member States.
4
Member States are discussed in the
alphabetical order of their two-letter codes because the latter are language-independent.
5
Section 2 sets out with an overview of general aspects of how seats are allocated between Member
States (Section 2.1), how seats are apportioned among parties (Section 2.2), and how seats are
assigned to candidates (Section 2.3). As political work in the EP is carried out by a few Political
Groups rather than by the plethora of the political parties of the Member States, Section 2.4 lists the
Political Groups in the EP, at the time of the constitution of the new Parliament on 2 July 2019.
Incorporation of the Political Groups enables a united view of the otherwise diverse elections, true
to the Union's motto of 'United in diversity'.
1
We would like to thank Lorenzo Cicchi (Firenze), Svante Janson (Stockholm), Dragana Kopčić (Ljubljana) and officials
from the EP´s information offices in the Member States for valuable help. – All calculations in this paper were carried
out using the software
BAZI – Calculation of Allocations by Apportionment Methods in the Internet
which is freely
available at
www.th-rosenheim.de/bazi.
A compact synopsis is Giulio Sabbati, Gianluca Sgueo and Alina Dobreva (2019): 2019 European elections: National
rules. At a Glance Infographic. European Parliamentary Research Service, PE 623.556. For general analyses see, e.g.,
Donatella M. Viola (Editor) (2016):
Routledge Handbook of European Elections, With a Foreword by J.H.H. Weiler,
Routledge, London. For a specific analysis of the 2019 elections see, e.g., Rudolf Hrbek (2019): Europawahl 2019: neue
politische Konstellationen für die Wahlperiode 2019–2024,
Integration – Vierteljahreszeitschrift des Instituts für
Europäische Politik in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Arbeitskreis Europäische Integration
42, 167–186.
Andrew Duff (2011): Report (A7-0176/2011, 28.7.2011) on a Proposal for a Modification of the Act Concerning the
Election of the Members of the European Parliament by Direct Universal Suffrage of 20 September 1976
(2009/2134(INI)). Committee on Constitutional Affairs of the European Parliament, PE 440.210v04-00. See also Edward
Whitfield (2015): 40
th
Anniversary of the 1976 Act on Direct Elections to the European Parliament, European
Parliamentary Research Service Historical Archive Unit, PE 563.513. Olivier Costa (2016): The history of European
electoral reform and the Electoral Act 1976, Issues of democratisation and political legitimacy, Study, European
Parliamentary Research Service Historical Archive Unit, PE 563.516, and Silvia Kotanidis (2019): European Union
electoral law. Current situation and historical background. European Parliamentary Research Service, PE 642.250.
Similar material for the 2014 elections is provided by Wilhelm Lehmann (2014): The European elections: EU legislation,
national provisions and civic participation, Study for the AFCO Committee, Revised edition, European Parliament, PE
493.047, and Luciano Bardi and Lorenzo Cicchi (2015): Electoral rules and electoral participation in the European
elections: the ballot format and structure. Study for the AFCO Committee, European Parliament, PE 536.464.
See the appendix for a table listing two-letter code, short name and official name of each Member State.
2
3
4
5
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Section 3 is the data section. For every Member State we present some descriptive data, the
transition from votes to seats, and the assignment of seats to candidates (Section 3.1–3.28).
Section 4 adjoins a hypothetical assessment how the Union-wide votes that are accumulated by the
Political Groups relate to the Union-wide seats with which the Political Groups finished under the
current Election Act.
6
Section 5 concludes the study, which has its focus on quantitative aspects, with some remarks of a
more qualitative nature.
References are compiled in Section 6. Acronyms, country codes, party tabs and source links are listed
in an appendix (Section 7).
As a supplement to this study we generated the site
www.uni-augsburg.de/bazi/EP2019Ballots.html
which exhibits facsimiles of ballot sheets, ballot papers, ballot booklets, and ballot interfaces from
the 2019 elections. The variety of designs illustrates the challenge of achieving a broader alignment
of electoral procedures at future EP elections.
6
For surveys of past elections see Kai-Friederike Oelbermann and Friedrich Pukelsheim (2015): European elections
2014: From voters to representatives, in twenty-eight ways.
Evropská volební studia – European Electoral Studies
10, 91–
124, and Kai-Friederike Oelbermann, Antonio Palomares and Friedrich Pukelsheim (2010): The 2009 European
Parliament elections: From votes to seats in 27 ways.
Evropská volební studia – European Electoral Studies 5,
148–182.
Erratum,
ibidem
6 (2011) 85.
2
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The European Elections of May 2019
2. From votes to seats, and from seats to MEPs
The Treaty on European Union stipulates that the EP shall be composed of representatives of the
Union's citizens and that representation of citizens shall be degressively proportional (Article 14(2)).
The passage from citizens to representatives may be divided into three phases:
the allocation of all EP seats between the Member States (Section 2.1),
the apportionment of the seat contingent of a Member State among its
domestic parties (Section 2.2), and
the assignment of the seats of a party to its candidates (Section 2.3).
The phases include many particulars specified by domestic provisions in terms and wordings to
which the particular Member State is accustomed. The following review merges these diverse
formulations into a uniform terminology, in order to prepare for a comparative presentation of the
electoral systems of the Member States in Section 3.
2.1. Allocation of seats between Member States
The composition of the ninth EP – i.e. the allocation of all seats between the Union's Member States
on the basis of population figures – was troubled by two issues.
The first problem originated from primary law's stipulation that the Union's citizens shall be
represented degressively. This very sensitive question had been a recurrent theme on the political
agenda.
7
Since the composition of the previous eighth EP had failed to achieve degressive repre-
sentation fully, some action was deemed necessary to rectify the deficiency in the ninth EP.
The second question was what to do following the United Kingdom’s withdrawal from the EU at
which point in time the seventy-three UK seats would fall vacant.
The negotiated solution was a compromise addressing both issues.
8
Up until the withdrawal of the
UK from the EU, the ninth EP would carry on with the composition of the previous eighth EP,
notwithstanding its non-degressivity. Upon the UK's withdrawal, twenty-seven of the vacated UK
seats would be employed to achieve full degressivity, by raising the seat contingents of some
Member States and maintaining the status quo for the others.
The Member States whose seat contingents increase are ES and FR (each by five seats), IT and
NL (three), IE (two), and AT, DK, EE, FI, HR, PL, RO, SE and SK (one). The increments are visualised by
explicit plus-signs '+' in Table 2.3.1 and Section 3.
7
See, e.g., Geoffrey Grimmett, Jean-François Laslier, Friedrich Pukelsheim, Victoriano Ramírez González, Richard Rose,
Wojciech Słomczyński, Martin Zachariasen and Karol Życzkowski (2011): The Allocation Between the EU Member
States of the Seats in the European Parliament – Cambridge Compromise. Note. European Parliament, Directorate-
General for Internal Policies, Policy Department C: Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs, PE 432.760, and Geoffrey
Grimmett, Friedrich Pukelsheim, Victoriano Ramírez González, Wojciech Słomczyński and Karol Życzkowski (2017):
The Composition of the European Parliament. Workshop 30 January 2017. Compilation: Two briefings and one in-
depth analysis. European Parliament, Directorate-General for Internal Policies, Policy Department C: Citizens' Rights
and Constitutional Affairs, PE 583.117.
See Friedrich Pukelsheim and Geoffrey Grimmett (2018): Degressive representation of Member States in the European
Parliament 2019–2024.
Representation – Journal of Representative Democracy
54, 147–158.
8
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2.2. Apportionment of seats among parties
Article 1 of the 2002 Election Act reads as follows: 'In each Member State, members of the European
Parliament shall be elected on the basis of proportional representation, using the list system or the
single transferable vote.' The current section specifies the arithmetical procedures decreed by the
Member States in order to realise the proportional representation imperative. Section 2.3 describes
the list systems and single transferable vote (STV) schemes used in greater detail, together with their
accompanying vote patterns.
Proportional representation systems often set an electoral threshold, i.e. a minimum number of
votes a party must get in order to participate in the seat apportionment process. Eleven Member
States refrain from imposing an electoral threshold (BE, DE, DK, EE, ES, FI, IE, LU, MT, PT, UK).
When a threshold is set, it is usually defined as a percentage relative to the total number of valid
votes. Occasionally, the percentage is referred to the total number of votes cast, i.e. the sum of valid
votes plus blank votes (where applicable) plus invalid votes. Article 3 of the 2002 Election Act states
that the threshold may not exceed five per cent of votes cast.
Thirteen Member States define the threshold to be a percentage of valid votes (AT 4%, CY 1.8%,
CZ 5%, EL 3%, FR 5%, HR 5%, HU 5%, IT 4%, PL 5%, RO 5%, SE 4%, SI 4%, SK 5%). Two Member States
refer the percentages to the number of votes cast (LT 5%, LV 5%). Two Member States (NL, BG) set a
quorum threshold. For NL the quorum amounts to 3.8% of votes cast. For BG the quorum reaches
5.9% of votes cast and exceeds the five per cent ceiling of the Election Act.
In this study a party passing the electoral threshold is called an apportionment party. In other words
the apportionment parties are the parties that participate in the seat apportionment process. A valid
vote that is cast for one of the apportionment parties is called an effective vote. Conversely, an
ineffective vote is a vote which, although valid, has no role to play in the apportionment calculations;
ineffective votes are neglected hereinafter.
Apportionment parties and effective votes by Member State are documented in Section 3. Party
names are abbreviated by the party tabs which appear on the internet site
election-results.eu
and
which are reproduced in the appendix (Section 7).
The apportionment of seats among (apportionment) parties proportionally to (effective) votes is
accomplished by procedures called apportionment methods. Their history of more than two
centuries has provided an abundant supply of procedures.
9
This abundance is reflected not only by
the diversity of methods implemented by the Member States, but also by the diverse descriptions
with which one and the same method is specified in different domestic provisions.
For the purpose of comparability we present the apportionment methods in a unified fashion.
In short, every apportionment method operates in two steps. In the first step a party’s vote count is
scaled down to obtain an interim quotient, by dividing the vote counts of all parties by a common
electoral key. In the second step the interim quotient is turned into the seat number sought, by
rounding the quotient to a neighbouring whole number.
Either step may be instrumental to ensure that the number of seats handed out becomes exactly
equal to the number of seats available. The distinct role played by the two steps is the key to a
classification of apportionment methods into two groups, divisor methods and quota methods.
9
See, e.g., Friedrich Pukelsheim (2017):
Proportional Representation – Apportionment Methods and Their Applications,
With a foreword by Andrew Duff MEP, Second Edition,
Springer International Publishing AG, Cham (CH).
4
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The European Elections of May 2019
A divisor method applies a fixed rounding rule in the second step and, in order to reach the targeted
seat total, invokes flexible electoral keys in the first step. Jargon refers to a flexible electoral key as a
divisor, which is why the methods are called divisor methods. From the ensemble of all flexible
divisors that reach the targeted seat total we quote in every instance a select divisor which has as
many trailing zeros as possible.
Three divisor methods were used at the 2019 elections and will make an appearance in Section 3:
DivDwn
Divisor method with downward rounding (AT, BE, CZ, DK, EE, ES, FI, FR, HU, IE, LU, NL,
PL, PT, RO, SI, UK): Every vote count is divided by the select divisor; all interim quotients
are rounded downwards. This procedure is also known as the method of D’Hondt,
Hagenbach-Bischoff or Jefferson.
Divisor method with standard rounding (DE, LV): Every vote count is divided by the
select divisor; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or upwards according to
whether its fractional part is smaller or larger than one half. This procedure is also
known as the method of Sainte-Laguë, Schepers or Webster.
Swedish modification of the divisor method with standard rounding (SE): Every vote
count is divided by the select divisor; an interim quotient smaller than one is rounded
downwards or upwards according to whether it is smaller or larger than 0.6, and every
other quotient is rounded downwards or upwards according to whether its fractional
part is smaller or larger than one half.
DivStd
Div0.6
The second group of apportionment methods are quota methods. A quota method uses a fixed
electoral key in the first, scaling step and, in order to match the given seat total, invokes flexible split-
points in the second, rounding step. Jargon refers to a fixed electoral key as a quota, thereby
justifying the term quota methods. From the ensemble of all split-points that accomplish the fitting
in the rounding step we quote in each case a select split which has as few decimal digits as possible.
Six quota methods were used at the 2019 elections and will make an appearance in Section 3. Five
of them rely on the Hare-quota and its variants. The proper Hare-quota (HaQ) is the ratio of effective
votes relative to seats. When the Hare-quota is rounded downwards its variant-1 (HQ1) is obtained,
when it is rounded upwards, variant-2 (HQ2). Variant-3 (HQ3) is the integer part of the ratio of valid
votes (i.e. effective votes plus ineffective votes) to seats.
HaQgrR
Hare-quota method with fit by greatest remainders (BG, NL, PL): Every vote count is
divided by the Hare-quota; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or upwards
according to whether its fractional part is smaller or larger than the select split. This
procedure is also known as the method of largest remainders, or method of Hare,
Niemeyer, Hamilton.
Hare-quota variant-1 method with fit by greatest remainders (IT): Every vote count is
divided by the Hare-quota variant-1; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or
upwards according to whether its fractional part is smaller or larger than the select split.
Hare-quota variant-2 method with fit by greatest remainders (LT): Every vote count is
divided by the Hare-quota variant-2; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or
upwards according to whether its fractional part is smaller or larger than the select split.
Hare-quota variant-3 method with fit by greatest remainders (CY): Every vote count is
divided by the Hare-quota variant-3; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or
upwards according to whether its fractional part is smaller or larger than the select split.
HQ1grR
HQ2grR
HQ3grR
5
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HQ3-EL
DQ3grR
Hare-quota variant-3 method with Greek fit (EL): Every vote count is divided by the
Hare-quota variant-3; the interim quotients are evaluated as in Greece (Section 3.9).
Droop-quota variant-3 method with fit by greatest remainders (SK): Every vote count is
divided by the Droop-quota variant-3; an interim quotient is rounded downwards or
upwards according to whether its remainder is smaller or larger than the select split.
The last method involves a variant of the Droop-quota. The proper Droop-quota is the downward
rounding of (V/(S+1)) + 1, where V is the sum of all effective votes and S is the seat total. Its variant-3
(DQ3) is the standard rounding of V/(S+1). The proper Droop-quota itself is used in STV schemes.
STV schemes ask voters to mark on the ballot sheet their preference order of the candidates. A
candidate whose tally of top preferences (first preferences in the first count, first plus lower-order
preferences in later counts) meets or exceeds the Droop-quota is assigned a seat. Surplus ballots in
excess of the quota as well as ballots of eliminated lower ranked candidates are transferred to the
remaining candidates for second and subsequent counts. Two transfer strategies were employed at
the 2019 elections:
STVran
STVfra
STV scheme with random transfers (IE, MT): Surplus ballots and ballots of eliminated
candidates are selected for transfer through a random mechanism.
STV scheme with fractional transfers (Northern Ireland district of UK): Surplus ballots
and ballots of eliminated candidates are transferred through a fractional mechanism.
When the STV results are lifted from the level of candidates to the level of parties, it transpires that
the schemes equip the parties with seat contingents which conform to the goal of the proportional
representation ideal, see the final paragraphs in Sections 3.15 (IE) and 3.20 (MT).
Terms such as vote totals and seat totals depend on the electoral area where the aggregation into
totals takes place. At the 2019 elections twenty-two Member States treated their territory as a single
electoral constituency.
Three Member States established multiple constituencies and evaluated the electoral results
separately within each of them, i.e. without consideration of state-wide totals. BE established
3 constituencies, IE 3, UK 12. To this end the state-wide seat contingent was allotted to consti-
tuencies well ahead of the May 2019 elections.
Another three Member States subdivided their territory into two or more electoral districts. DE is
subdivided into 16 districts, IT 5, PL 13. These states apportioned their state-wide seats in a two-tier
process. The initial tier, called super-apportionment, is the apportionment of the state-wide seat
contingent among the state’s apportionment parties, without any regard to the district-wise
subdivision. The second tier, called sub-apportionment, comprises, for each party separately, the
apportionment of the party’s overall seats among its various district-lists of candidates.
A two-tier process with super-apportionment and sub-apportionments also evolves in the presence
of list alliances. At the 2019 elections, only DK featured list alliances (4).
The ways in which party votes are determined are contingent on the ballot design and vote pattern
with which voters can express their will. These particulars of a voting system also constitute the core
elements when in the end identifying successful candidates and assigning seats to them.
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2.3. Assignment of seats to candidates
Article 1 of the 2002 Election Act leaves it to the Member States whether to realise the proportional
representation principle by means of a list system or an STV scheme. Twenty-five Member States
choose a list system, IE and MT implement STV schemes, and the UK makes use of both.
The classification of a voting system as a list system has a generic character calling for further
specification. In a system with closed lists, voters can only vote for a list of candidates of a party,
without the possibility to change the order of candidates on the list. In systems with semi-open lists,
voters vote for a party’s list of candidates and, optionally, may add one or more preference votes to
express their particular support for some of the candidates. In systems with open lists, the lists
simply serve as a menu of names presented in alphabetical order, reverse alphabetical order,
random order, or any other arbitrary order. Voters are free to select the candidate whom they wish
to support. Some systems grant each voter multiple votes with the option to cast the votes for
candidates of different parties (panachage).
A related design allows a vote to be cast for a candidate as a person. Only thereafter, implied by the
candidates’ affiliation with a particular party, the vote is credited towards the vote tally of the
candidate’s party. This design puts a demonstrative emphasis on the personalisation component of
an election. Another option of honouring the personalisation aspect is provided by STV schemes. In
yet other instances candidates are independent and contest the election without affiliation to any
of the domestic parties.
The role of parties in list systems needs to be viewed with care. Strictly speaking votes are cast in
favour of a list of candidates rather than in favour of a party. In many instances lists and parties are
in a one-to-one correspondence, and using the terms list and party synonymously is unambiguous.
In other instances several parties team up and together present a joint list of candidates. In these
cases the term party refers to a coalition of parties and their joint candidate list.
To account for the manifold designs of voting systems we distinguish in the sequel between two
vote patterns, list votes and candidate votes. The term list vote (LV) indicates that the vote is cast in
the first place for a list of candidates, notwithstanding the possibility that the voting system may
grant voters additional preference votes to express their particular support for some of the
candidates. The term candidate vote (CV) is used when voters must vote for a person, the attribution
to a party being implied only through the person’s party affiliation.
Vote pattern LV0 designates a list system with closed lists. Citizens vote for a list of candidates and
are granted no (zero) preference votes. The seats are assigned to the top-ranked candidates on the
lists. This is the preferred pattern in larger Member States (DE, ES, FR, HU, PT, RO, UK).
Vote patterns LV1, LV2 and LVm are used for list systems with semi-open lists. With vote pattern LV1,
citizens not only vote for a list of candidates, but may adjoin up to one preference vote (AT, BG, HR,
NL, SE, SI). With vote pattern LV2, up to two preference votes are permitted (CZ, SK). Vote pattern
LVm allows multiple preference votes, how many is at the discretion of the voters (BE).
For voting systems with semi-open lists domestic provisions include a bypass rule specifying when
a candidate’s preference votes tally lets her or him bypass the preordained rank-order on the official
party-list. There are two types of bypass rules. A percentage bypass rule requires the candidate’s
preference votes to meet or exceed a certain percentage of the party’s vote total (AT 5%, BG 15%,
HR 10%, SE 5%). A quorum bypass rule defines a quorum of one sort or another that preference
votes must reach for a candidate to be placed top (BE, NL, SI). When several candidates succeed to
overcome the bypass hurdle they are ranked by their preference votes tallies in decreasing order.
7
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Vote patterns 1CV, 2CV, 3CV, 4CV, 5CV, 6CV, mCV cover voting systems with open lists. They allow
every voter to cast votes for up to 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or more candidates of the same party, with the
implied consequence that this party is considered to be the voter’s party of choice. The seats of a
party are assigned to those candidates who rank top in terms of their preference votes tally. Four
Member States permit just one candidate vote (1CV: DK, EE, FI, PL). Six Member States allow two or
more candidate votes (2CV: CY; 3CV: IT; 4CV: EL; 5CV: LT; mCV: LV). In LU voters can vote for up to six
candidates (6CV) who may belong to different parties.
Vote pattern STV is peculiar to STV schemes. Every voter indicates his or her preference order of the
candidates on the ballot sheet, in terms of first preference, second preference, etc.
Table 2.3.1 provides an overview of essential structural information of the 2019 European elections.
Detailed results per Member State follow in Section 3.
Table 2.3.1: Structural data, 2019 European elections.
Section
3.1
3.2
3.3
3.4
3.5
3.6
3.7
3.8
3.9
3.10
3.11
3.12
3.13
3.14
3.15
3.16
3.17
3.18
3.19
3.20
3.21
3.22
3.23
3.24
3.25
3.26
3.27
3.28
Sum
AT
BE
BG
CY
CZ
DE
DK
EE
EL
ES
FI
FR
HR
HU
IE
IT
LT
LU
LV
MT
NL
PL
PT
RO
SE
SI
SK
UK
Member State
Austria
a
Belgium*3
Bulgaria
Cyprus
Czechia
b
Germany/16
c
Denmark+4
Estonia
Greece
Spain
Finland
France
Croatia
Hungary
a
Ireland*3
b,d
Italy/5
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Latvia
Malta
Netherlands
b
Seat Contingent upon
Withdrawal of the UK
before
after
18
21
17
6
21
96
13
6
21
54
13
74
11
21
11
73
11
6
8
6
26
51
21
32
20
8
13
73
751
+1
19
21
17
6
21
96
14
7
21
59
14
79
12
21
13
76
11
6
8
6
29
52
21
33
21
8
14
Electoral
Threshold
4% of valid votes
none
5.7% of votes
cast
1.8% of valid
votes
5% of valid votes
none
none
none
3% of valid votes
none
none
5% of valid votes
5% of valid votes
5% of valid votes
none
4% of valid votes
5% of votes cast
none
5% of votes cast
none
3.8% of votes
cast
5% of valid votes
none
5% of valid votes
4% of valid votes
4% of valid votes
5% of valid votes
none
Apportionment
Method
DivDwn
DivDwn
HaQgrR
HQ3grR
DivDwn
DivStd
DivDwn
DivDwn
HQ3-EL
DivDwn
DivDwn
DivDwn
DivDwn
DivDwn
STVran
HQ1grR, HQ1grR
HQ2grR
DivDwn
DivStd
STVran
DivDwn
DivDwn, HaQgrR
DivDwn
DivDwn
Div0.6
DivDwn
DQ3grR
DivDwn, STVfra
Vote
Pattern
LV1
LVm
LV1
2CV
LV2
LV0
1CV
1CV
4CV
LV0
1CV
LV0
LV1
LV0
STV
3CV
5CV
6CV
mCV
STV
LV1
1CV
LV0
LV0
LV1
LV1
LV2
LV0, STV
+1
+1
+5
+1
+5
+1
+2
+3
+3
+1
+1
+1
+1
–73
Poland/13
Portugal
Romania
Sweden
Slovenia
Slovakia
a
United
Kingdom*12
705
73+27
a
) Belgium*3 indicating that Belgium establishes 3 constituencies (similarly: Ireland*3, United Kingdom*12).
b
) Germany/16 indicating that Germany subdivides its area into 16 districts (similarly: Italy/5, Poland/13).
c
) Denmark+4 indicating that Denmark features 4 list alliances.
d
) Italian district sub-apportionments are adjusted so as to match the state-wide super-apportionment.
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2.4. Political Groups in the new European Parliament
While MEPs are assigned parliamentary seats via home states and domestic parties, of which there
are plenty, parliamentary business in the EP is organised by Political Groups. At the time of writing,
there were seven Political Groups, plus non-attached MEPs who did not join any of the Political
Groups. The latter are referred to as NI (non-attached MEPs, from the French non-inscrits).
Table 2.4.1 shows the Political Groups in the EP that formed at the constitutive session on 2 July
2019. The then house size was 748 seats since three Spanish MEPs were barred from taking their
seats due to pending litigation.
Table 2.4.1: Political Groups in the EP, constitutive session on 2 July 2019.
Acronym
Political Group
EPP
S&D
Renew Europe
Greens/EFA
ID
ECR
GUE/NGL
NI
Sum
Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats)
Group of the Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats in the EP
Renew Europe Group
Group of the Greens / European Free Alliance
Identity and Democracy Group
European Conservatives and Reformists Group
Confederal Group of the European United Left – Nordic Green Left
Non-attached Members
Size
182
154
108
74
73
62
41
54
748
Section 3 documents the attachment of MEPs to one of the Political Groups or to NI.
In the majority of cases all MEPs of a domestic party join the same Political Group. In these cases we
add the Political Group to the line showing the party name in the tables 'From votes to seats' (i.e.
the second of the triplet tables devoted to a Member State).
In some instances MEPs of a party become members of different groups (DE, ES, NL, PL, SK). In these
instances we mention the Political Group in the tables 'From seats to MEPs' (i.e. the third of the three
tables).
For every Member State the first table 'Base data' collects some basic information, such as number
of seats to be filled, size of the electorate, number of votes (votes cast, valid votes, effective votes –
as applicable), vote pattern, number of parties contesting the election and number of parties
participating in the seat apportionment process, gender distribution, etc. Since the Member States’
electoral systems are so different we do not enforce an identical template for the base data, but
rather confine the tables to the data pertinent for the particular Member State under review.
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3. The 2019 elections, by Member State
3.1. AT – Republic of Austria
Austria has a contingent of eighteen seats, which was raised by one seat after the UK left the EU.
Seven parties campaigned at the election. Parties must submit their list of candidates to the Federal
Election Authority at the latest by 5 p.m. on the forty-fourth day before election day. A party-list
contains a maximum of forty-two candidates.
On the ballot sheet a voter may mark a party (a list vote), or a party’s candidate (a preference vote),
or both. When marking both, a party and a candidate, the candidate marked must belong to the
party marked, otherwise the ballot is invalid. A preference vote is expressed on the ballot sheet by
writing into a designated box either the candidate’s last name, or the candidate’s reference number
in the party-list.
EP2019AT-1
Table 3.1.1: Austria, base data.
18 + 1
6 416 177
1
LV1
3 779 764
7
151 191 (= 4% of valid votes)
5
3 710 438
DivDwn
5% bypass rule
119 female + 145 male = 264
9 female + 9 male = 18
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of four per cent of the valid votes. Thus a party participates in the seat
apportionment process only when garnering 151 191 votes or more (since four per cent of 3 779 764 equals
151 190.56). Two parties failed the threshold, leaving five apportionment parties.
The apportionment of the contingent of eighteen seats is carried out using the divisor method with downward
rounding (DivDwn). Every 180 000 votes justify roughly
10
one seat. The values of the interim quotients indicate
that the next, nineteenth seat will be apportioned to GRÜNE (divisor 170 000).
Table 3.1.2: Austria, from votes to seats.
EP2019AT-2
ÖVP
SPÖ
FPÖ
GRÜNE
NEOS
Sum
Votes
1 305 956
903 151
650 114
532 193
319 024
3 710 438
Quotient
[Divisor]
7.3
5.02
3.6
2.96
1.8
[180 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
7
5
3
2 +1
1
18+1
EPP
S&D
ID
Greens/EFA
Renew Europe
10
The term 'roughly' is taken to be synonymous for 'up to the final step of rounding', here: of rounding downwards.
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The seats apportioned to a party are assigned to its candidates following the rank-order on the
party-list, except that a candidate bypasses the order when satisfying a five per cent bypass rule.
The bypass rule demands a candidate’s preference votes tally to meet or exceed five per cent of the
party’s vote total. When the rule is satisfied the candidate advances to the top of the list irrespective
of the initial list place.
In 2019 nine candidates were elected due to their preference vote tallies. Two of them resigned
promptly and did not take their seats. The list places of these candidates were not decisive for the
seat assignment, yet a favourable placement may have been conducive for them to acquire so many
preference votes. In Table 3.1.3 the list places of these candidates are crossed out. The other MEPs
got a seat on the grounds of their rank-place on the party-list, not on the grounds of their preference
votes tallies. This is indicated in Table 3.1.3 by crossing out their preference vote tallies.
Table3.1.3: Austria, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019AT-3
List
Plac
e
Preferenc
e
Votes
ÖVP
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 1 305 956 =
65 298)
1. Karoline E
DTSTADLER
2
115 906
2. Othmar K
ARAS
1
103 035
3. Angelika W
INZIG
3
85 031
4. Simone S
CHMIEDTBAUER
4
64 240
5. Lukas M
ANDL
5
38 605
a
6. Barbara T
HALER
8
38 285
a
7. Alexander B
ERNHUBER
11
30 338
SPÖ
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 903 151 =
45 158)
1. Andreas S
CHIEDER
1
72 863
2. Evelyn R
EGNER
2
12 089
3. Günther S
IDL
3
8 421
4. Bettina V
OLLATH
4
7 738
5. Hannes H
EIDE
5
12 455
FPÖ
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 650 114 =
32 506)
1. Harald V
ILIMSKY
1
64 525
b
2. Petra S
TEGER
3
3 380
3. Georg M
AYER
2
2 514
GRÜNE
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 532 193 =
26 610)
1.
c
Monika V
ANA
3
6 569
2. Sarah W
IENER
2
35 741
+3. Thomas W
AITZ
4
4 742
NEOS
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 319 024 =
15 952)
1. Claudia G
AMON
1
64 341
a
) List places 6, 7 and 9, 10 resigning in favour of preference votes ranking.
b
) Petra S
TEGER
incoming for Heinz-Christian S
TRACHE
(44 751 preference votes, list place 42).
c
) Monika V
ANA
incoming for Werner K
OGLER
(70 821 preference votes, list place 1).
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3.2. BE – Kingdom of Belgium
Belgium is allocated a contingent of twenty-one seats. Candidates had to be nominated by the fifty-
seventh day prior to the election. A total of 316 candidates were named. There were 148 female
candidates and 168 male candidates.
On the ballot sheets voters may mark a party (a list vote), or one candidate or more from the same
party (preference votes), or both. When no party is marked the ballot is attributed to the party to
which the preference candidates belong. When no candidate is marked the ballot is considered to
express support for the party-list as is.
EP2019BE-1
Table 3.2.1: Belgium, base data.
21
8 122 985
3
LVm
none
22
6 732 157
DivDwn
Quorum bypass rule
148 female + 168 male = 316
8 female + 13 male = 21
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
Domestic provisions establish three constituencies for separate evaluation of electoral results:
1. Dutch Electoral College – 12 seats,
2. French Electoral College – 8 seats,
3. German Language Community – 1 seat.
There is no electoral threshold. Seats are apportioned among parties using the divisor method with
downward rounding (DivDwn), in each constituency separately. In the Dutch Electoral College every
270 000 votes justify roughly one seat, in the French Electoral College, 218 000, and in the German
Language Community, 10 000.
Table 3.2.2: Belgium, from votes to seats.
EP2019BE-2
N-VA
VLAAMS BELANG
Open Vld
CD&V
GROEN
sp.a
2 Others
Sum
PS
ECOLO
MR
PTB
CDH
2 Others
Sum
Votes
Quotient
[Divisor]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
ECR
ID
Renew Europe
EPP
Greens/EFA
S&D
1. Dutch Electoral College
954 048
3.5
3
811 169
3.004
3
678 051
2.5
2
617 651
2.3
2
525 908
1.9
1
434 002
1.6
1
230 776
0
4 251 605 [270 000]
12
2. French Electoral College
651 157
2.99
2
485 655
2.2
2
470 654
2.2
2
355 883
1.6
1
218 078
1.004
1
258 348
0
2 439 775 [218 000]
8
S&D
Greens/EFA
Renew Europe
GUE/NGL
EPP
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CSP
6 Others
Sum
3. German Language Community
14.247
1,4
1
26 530
0
40 777
[10 000]
1
EPP
The assignment of seats to candidates relies on a quorum bypass rule. The quorum of a party is the
upward rounding of its vote total divided by its seat number plus one (Droop-quota). A candidate
with more preference votes than required by the quorum of her or his party is assigned a seat.
In addition, in order to aid the upper echelons on a list to bridge a remaining gap between their
preference votes tally and the bypass quorum, the system provides what it calls 'devolution votes'.
The number of devolution votes is taken to be half the number of pure list votes, i.e. votes which do
not include a preference vote for any of the titular candidates. Presumably it is thought that every
second of these voters intends not only to support the party, but also to endorse the sequencing of
candidates on the party-list. Devolution votes, one after the other, are dealt out to candidates who
rank high on their party-list until their preference votes tally reaches the bypass quorum or the
devolution pool is exhausted. The main effect of this action is that the list sequence of candidates,
as submitted by party headquarters, is shielded against the ranking by preference vote tallies that
are induced by the voters.
For example, in the Dutch Electoral College, party N-VA has bypass quorum 238 512. Geert
B
OURGEOIS
, list place 1, garners more preference votes and hence is assigned the first seat. Assita
K
ANKO
, list place 2, has 85 950 preference votes and fails the quorum. From the devolution pool of
246 206 votes, 152 562 are granted to K
ANKO
. Since the sum of 85 950 and 152 562 is 238 512, she
now meets the quorum and is assigned the second seat. The remaining devolution votes, 246 206 –
152 562 = 93 644, benefit Johan V
AN
O
VERTVELDT
on list place 3. His updated tally 198 367 still fails
the quorum, but outperforms all subsequent candidates on the list. Hence V
AN
O
VERTVELDT
is
assigned the third seat.
Table 3.2.3: Belgium, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019BE-3
List
Place
Preference Votes
+ Devolution Votes
1. Dutch Electoral College
N-VA
(Bypass quorum: 238 512; devolution votes:
246 206)
1. Geert B
OURGEOIS
1
343 290
2. Assita K
ANKO
2
85 950 + 152 562 = 238 512
3. Johan V
AN
O
VERTVELDT
3
104 723 + 93 644 = 198 367
VLAAMS BELANG
(Bypass quorum: 202 793; devolution votes: 256 429)
1. Gerolf A
NNEMANS
1
207 054
a
2. Tom V
ANDENDRIESSCHE
substitute
68 871 + 133922 = 202 793
3. Filip D
E
M
AN
3
58 486 + 105 614 = 164 100
Open Vld
(Bypass quorum: 226 017; devolution votes:
129 188)
1. Guy V
ERHOFSTADT
1
342 460
2. Hilde V
AUTMANS
2
63 225 + 129 188 = 192 413
CD&V
(Bypass quorum: 205 884; devolution votes:
126 059)
1. Kris P
EETERS
1
256 822
2. Cindy F
RANNSEN
2
50 014 + 126 059 = 176 073
GROEN
(Bypass quorum: 262 954; devolution votes:
145 957)
1. Petra D
E
S
UTTER
1
143 377 + 119 577 = 262 954
sp.a
(Bypass quorum: 217 001; devolution votes:
116 481)
1. Kathleen V
AN
B
REMPT
1
127 053 + 89 948 = 217 001
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PS
140 818)
1.
b
Marc T
ARABELLA
2. Maria A
RENA
ECOLO
144 273)
1. Philippe L
AMBERTS
2. Saskia B
RICMONT
MR
124 299)
1. Olivier C
HASTEL
2. Frédérique R
IES
PTB
115 826)
1. Marc B
OTENGA
CDH
49 132)
1. Benoît L
UTGEN
2. French Electoral College
(Bypass quorum: 217 053; devolution votes:
substitute
54 154 + 162 889 = 217 053
2
68 981 + 140 818 = 209 799
(Bypass quorum: 161 885; devolution votes:
1
115 922 + 45 963 = 161 885
2
57 261 + 98 310 = 155 571
(Bypass quorum: 156 885; devolution votes:
1
123 331 + 33 554 = 156 885
2
111 477 + 45 408 = 156 885
(Bypass quorum: 177 942; devolution votes:
1
68 033 + 109 909 = 177 942
(Bypass quorum: 109 039; devolution votes:
1
95 783 + 13 256 = 109 039
3. German Language Community
(Bypass quorum: 7 124; devolution votes:
CSP
2 628)
1. Pascal A
RIMONT
1
8 992
a
) Tom V
ANDENDRIESSCHE
, first on list of substitute candidates, incoming for Patsy V
ALET
(51 978 + 150 815 = 202 793).
b
) Marc T
ARABELLA
, first substitute candidate, incoming for Paul M
AGNETTE
(295 339 preference votes, list place 1).
14
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2703145_0021.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.3. BG – Republic of Bulgaria
Bulgaria is allocated a contingent of seventeen seats. Twenty-one parties and six independent
candidates were admitted at the election. A party-list may contain no more than seventeen
candidates. The registration of the candidate lists had to be effected not later than 32 days in
advance of polling day. Altogether 318 candidates were admitted to the election.
On the ballot sheets voters mark either a party (a list vote) or an independent candidate. When
casting a list vote, a voter may adjoin a preference vote by ticking a box with a numeral 1, 2, ..., 17,
thereby endorsing the nominee who has this rank on the marked list.
There is a quorum electoral threshold applying to parties as well as to independent candidates. The
threshold is the valid votes-to-seats ratio and equals 118 548 votes (as 2 015 314 / 17 = 118 547.88).
The threshold exceeds five per cent of votes cast (since 118 548 / 2 095 561 = 5.7 per cent), thus
violating Art. 3 of the 2002 Electoral Act. Five parties passed the threshold, but no independent
candidates did.
EP2019BG-1
Table 3.3.1: Bulgaria, base data.
17
6 838 863
1
LV1
2 095 561
2 015 314
21, plus 6 independent candidates
118 548 (= 5.7% of votes cast)
4 parties plus 1 coalition
1 667 178
HaQgrR
15% bypass rule
93 female + 225 male = 318
5 female + 12 male = 17
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Votes cast
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The seat apportionment is carried out using the Hare-quota method with fit by greatest remainders
(HaQgrR). The Hare-quota is the effective votes-to-seats ratio, 1 667 178 / 17 = 98 069.29. That is,
every 98 069.29 shares of vote justify roughly one seat. Interim quotients with a remainder below
the split .4 are rounded downwards. With a remainder above the split .4 they are rounded upwards.
Table 3.3.2: Bulgaria, from votes to seats.
EP2019BG-2
Coal. GERB
BSP
DPS
VMRO
Demokratichna Bulgaria
Sum
Votes
607 194
474 160
323 510
143 830
118 484
1 667 178
Quotient
[Split]
6.2
4.8
3.3
1.5
1.2
[.4]
Seats
(HaQgrR)
6
5
3
2
1
17
Political
Group
EPP
S&D
Renew Europe
ECR
EPP
The assignment of the seats of a party to its candidates follows the rank-order of the party-list,
except for a fifteen per cent bypass rule to honour preference votes. A candidate advances to the
15
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2703145_0022.png
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
top of the list when his or her preference votes tally meets or exceeds fifteen per cent of the party’s
vote total.
The fifteen per cent bypass rule reinforces the standing of the top-listed candidates of BSP, VMRO
and Demokratichna Bulgaria. It makes no difference to the seat assignment, though it may please
the candidates’ kudos.
Table 3.3.3: Bulgaria, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019BG-3
List
Place
Preference
Votes
GERB
(Bypass hurdle: 15% of 607 194 =
91 080)
1.
a
Emil R
ADEV
8
24 168
2. Andrey K
OVATCHEV
2
9 357
3. Andrey N
OVAKOV
3
9 218
4. Eva M
AYDELL
4
7 432
5. Asim A
DEMOV
5
7 220
6. Alexander A
LEXANDROV
Y
ORDANOV
6
13 752
BSP
(Bypass hurdle: 15% of 474 160 =
71 124)
1. Elena Y
ONCHEVA
1
82 009
2. Petar V
ITANOV
2
3 601
3. Tsvetelina P
ENKOVA
3
2 670
4. Ivo H
RISTOV
4
13 958
5. Sergei S
TANISHEV
5
30 268
DPS
(Bypass hurdle: 15% of 323 510 =
48 527)
1.
b
Iskra M
IHAYLOVA
4
3 565
c
2. Atidzhe A
LIEVA
-V
ELI
5
2 591
3. Ilhan K
YUCHYUK
3
4 377
VMRO
(Bypass hurdle: 15% of 143 830 =
21 575)
1. Angel D
ZHAMBAZKI
1
49 109
2. Andrey S
LABAKOV
4
9 425
Demokratichna Bulgaria
(Bypass hurdle: 15% of 118 484 =
17 773)
1. Radan K
ANEV
1
34 735
a
) Emil R
ADEV
incoming for Мария Ива�½ова Г
АБРИЕЛ
(list place 1, 82 536 preference votes)
and Лиля�½а Павлова П
АВЛОВА
(list place 7, 27 313 preference votes).
b
) Iskra M
IHAYLOVA
incoming for Мустафа Сали К
АРАДАЙЪ
(list place 1, 12 007 preference votes).
c
) Atidzhe A
LIEVA
-V
ELI
incoming for Деля�½ Славчев П
ЕЕВСКИ
(list place 2, 6 306 preference votes).
16
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2703145_0023.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.4. CY – Republic of Cyprus
Cyprus is allocated a contingent of six seats. The date of the nomination must be at least seven days
prior to the election. Thirteen parties and three independent candidates were admitted at the
election. A maximum of six candidates may be listed per party-list.
The ballot sheet format is supportive for voters to cast two candidate votes. Every party occupies a
column displaying the names of its candidates, in alphabetical order. A voter may cast one or two
candidate votes. If voters mark more than two candidates of the same party, their vote is taken to
count towards the party. It is possible to vote just for the party by checking a box that comes last in
the column’s footline.
EP2019CY-1
Table 3.4.1: Cyprus, base data.
6
641 181
1
2CV
280 935
13, plus 3 independent candidate
5 057 (= 1.8% of valid votes)
7
270 323
HQ3grR
18 female + 60 male = 78
0 female + 6 male = 6
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of 1.8 per cent of the valid votes (5 057 votes). Six parties and the
three independent candidates miss the threshold, their 10 612 votes are discarded. The effective
votes (270 323) are cast for seven parties. The seat apportionment uses the Hare-quota variant-3
method with fit by greatest remainders (HQ3grR). The Hare-quota variant-3, the valid votes-to-seats
ratio without fraction, amounts to 46 822 (since 280 935 / 6 = 46 822.5). Every 46 822 votes justify
roughly one seat. Quotients below the split .6 are rounded downwards, above, upwards.
Table 3.4.2: Cyprus, from votes to seats.
EP2019CY-2
DISY
ΑΚΕL
DIKO
EDEK
3 Others
Sum
Votes
81 539
77 241
38 756
29 715
43 072
270 323
Quotient
[Split]
1.7
1.65
0.8
0.63
[.6]
Seats
Political
(HQ3grR) Group
2
2
1
1
0
6
EPP
GUE/NGL
S&D
S&D
The seats of a party are assigned to candidates in the order of preference vote tallies.
EP2019CY-3
Table 3.4.3: Cyprus, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
43 156
39 616
27 063
2. Niyazi K
IZILYÜREK
DIKO
1. Costas M
AVRIDES
EDEK
1. Demetris P
APADAKIS
11 606
21 155
11 789
DISY
1. Loukas F
OURLAS
2. Lefteris C
HRISTOFOROU
ΑΚΕL
1. Giorgos G
EORGIOU
17
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3.5. CZ – Czech Republic
Czechia is allocated a contingent of twenty-one seats. Parties, movements or coalitions must present
their candidate lists to the Ministry of the Interior no later than sixty-six days prior to election day. A
list may exceed the number of MEPs to be elected by one third, i.e. it may include twenty-eight
names. Altogether there were 841 candidates. Independent candidacies were not allowed.
Every party, movement or coalition has a ballot sheet of its own. Voters receive a full set of ballot
sheets. On the ballot sheet of the party of their choice voters may cast up to two preferential votes
for specific candidates. They insert this sheet into an official envelope to go into the ballot box.
EP2019CZ-1
Table 3.5.1: Czechia, base data.
21
8 316 737
1
LV2
2 370 765
39
118 539 (= 5% of valid votes)
7
2 007 357
DivDwn
5% bypass rule
191 female + 650 male = 841
7 female + 14 male = 21
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of valid votes. With 2 370 765 valid votes the threshold
amounts to 118 539 votes. It is missed by thirty-two parties, leaving seven apportionment parties
and coalitions. The seat apportionment is carried out using the divisor method with downward
rounding (DivDwn). Every 83 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.5.2: Czechia, from votes to seats.
EP2019CZ-2
ANO 2011
ODS
Piráti
TOP 09 + STAN
SPD
KDU-ČSL
KSČM
Sum
Votes
502 343
344 885
330 844
276 220
216 718
171 723
164 624
2 007 357
Quotient
[Divisor]
6.1
4.2
3.99
3.3
2.6
2.1
1.98
[83 000]
Seats
(DivDwn)
6
4
3
3
2
2
1
21
Political
Group
Renew Europe
ECR
Greens/EFA
EPP
ID
EPP
GUE/NGL
The seats of a party are assigned to its list nominees in the order exhibited in the list. However, a
candidate bypasses the rank-order of the list and advances to the top when the number of his or her
preference votes meets or exceeds five per cent of the total of the party’s votes.
18
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2703145_0025.png
The European Elections of May 2019
Table 3.5.3: Czechia, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019CZ-3
List
Place
Preference
Votes
ANO 2011
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 502 343 =
25 118)
1. Dita C
HARANZOVÁ
1
53 924
2. Martina D
LABAJOVÁ
2
31 401
3. Martin H
LAVÁČEK
3
5 948
4. Radka M
AXOVÁ
4
11 286
5. Ondřej K
NOTEK
5
3 798
6. Ondřej K
OVAŘÍK
6
6 867
ODS
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 344 885 =
17 245)
1. Jan Z
AHRADIL
1
51 381
2. Alexandr V
ONDRA
15
29 536
3. Evžen T
OŠENOVSKÝ
2
25 644
4. Veronika V
RECIONOVÁ
3
8 460
Piráti
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 330 844 =
16 543)
1. Marcel K
OLAJA
1
15 398
2. Markéta G
REGOROVÁ
2
14 158
3. Mikuláš P
EKSA
3
9 594
TOP 09 + STAN
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 276 220 =
13 811)
1. Luděk N
IEDERMAYER
3
67 430
2. Jiří P
OSPÍŠIL
1
37 231
3. Stanislav P
OLČÁK
2
25 352
SPD
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 216 718 =
10 836)
1. Hynek B
LAŠKO
8
47 505
2. Ivan D
AVID
1
33 055
KDU-ČSL
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 171 723 =
8 587)
1. Tomáš Z
DECHOVSKÝ
2
24 823
2. Michaela Š
OJDROVÁ
3
22 649
KSČM
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 164 624 =
8 232)
1. Kateřina K
ONEČNÁ
1
38 650
19
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2703145_0026.png
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3.6. DE – Federal Republic of Germany
Germany has ninety-six seats to fill. Election proposals must be presented to the Federal Election
Officer by the eighty-third day prior to the election. Independent candidates are not admitted.
Germany divides its area into sixteen electoral districts identical to the sixteen states of the federa-
tion. Parties may register a single federal list, or separate lists by district. All parties with the
exception of CDU and CSU registered a single party-list valid for the whole country. The CSU
registered a list just for the one district in which they campaigned (Bavaria). The CDU chose to
submit separate lists for each of the fifteen districts where the party stood (all districts except
Bavaria). Forty-one parties were admitted at the election, with a total of 1 399 candidates.
Ballot papers vary across the sixteen districts due to distinct district-lists of CDU and CSU. The first
ten (or fewer when enforced by lack of space) names of every list are printed on the ballot sheet.
Every voter has one vote to mark the party of her or his choice. There is no electoral threshold.
EP2019DE-1
Table 3.6.1: Germany, base data.
96
61 600 263
16
LV0
none
41
37 396 889
DivStd, DivStd
483 female + 915 male + 1 divers= 1 399
35 female +61 male =96
Seat contingent
Electorate
Electoral districts
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective party votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The apportionment of seats among parties is a two-tier process due to the fifteen CDU district lists.
Both tiers employ the divisor method with standard rounding (DivStd). The super-apportionment
distributes the contingent of ninety-six seats among all forty-one parties; every 374 000 votes justify
roughly one seat. Twenty-seven parties are left with no seat.
Table 3.6.2: Germany, from votes to seats.
EP2019DE-2
Votes
Quotient
[Divisor]
Seats
(DivStd)
Political
Group
Super-apportionment of 96 seats among 41 parties
CDU
8 438 975
22.6
23
EPP
GRÜNE
7 677 071
20.53
21
Greens/EFA
SPD
5 916 882
15.8
16
S&D
AfD
4 104 453
11.0
11
ID
CSU
2 355 067
6.3
6
EPP
DIE LINKE
2 056 049
5.497
5
GUE/NGL
FDP
2 028 594
5.4
5
Renew Europe
DIE PARTEI
899 079
2.4
2
(see Table 3.6.3)
FREIE WÄHLER
806 703
2.2
2
Renew Europe
TIERSCHUTZPARTEI
542 226
1.4
1
GUE/NGL
ÖDP
369 869
1.0
1
Greens/EFA
FAMILIE
273 828
0.7
1
ECR
VOLT
249 098
0.7
1
Greens/EFA
PIRATEN
243 302
0.7
1
Greens/EFA
27 Others
1 435 693
0
Sum
37 396 889 [374 000]
96
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2703145_0027.png
The European Elections of May 2019
District
CDU sub-apportionment
1. Schleswig-Holstein
2. Hamburg
3. Niedersachsen
4. Bremen
5. Nordrhein-Westfalen
6. Hessen
7. Rheinland-Pfalz
8. Baden-Württemberg
9. Saarland
10. Berlin
11. Brandenburg
12. Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
13. Sachsen
14. Sachsen-Anhalt
15. Thüringen
Sum
Votes
Quotient
[Divisor]
Seats
(DivStd)
of 23 seats among 15 districts
353 020
0.9
1
140 966
0.4
0
1 119 352
2.8
3
64 078
0.2
0
2 237 590
5.6
6
657 886
1.6
2
613 470
1.53
2
1 499 962
3.7
4
161 897
0.4
0
229 352
0.6
1
215 523
0.54
1
184 894
0.46
0
474 730
1.2
1
226 438
0.6
1
259 817
0.6
1
8 438 975 [400 000]
23
The CDU sub-apportionment allots the overall CDU seats (23) among the fifteen CDU district-lists. In
the CDU sub-apportionment, every 400 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Germany uses closed list systems. Seats are assigned to candidates in the rigid sequence given by
party-lists. One MEP of DIE PARTEI is unattached, the other joins the Greens/EFA group.
EP2019DE-3
CDU
1.1. Niclas H
ERBST
3.1. David M
C
A
LLISTER
3.2. Jens G
IESEKE
3.3. Lena D
ÜPONT
5.1. Peter L
IESE
5.2. Markus P
IEPER
5.3. Sabine V
ERHEYEN
5.4. Axel V
OSS
5.5. Dennis R
ADTKE
5.6. Stefan B
ERGER
6.1. Sven S
IMON
6.2 Michael G
AHLER
7.1. Christine S
CHNEIDER
7.2. Ralf S
EEKATZ
8.1. Rainer W
IELAND
8.2 Daniel C
ASPARY
8.3. Andreas S
CHWAB
8.4. Norbert L
INS
10.1. Hildegard B
ENTELE
11.1. Christian E
HLER
13.1. Peter J
AHR
14.1. Sven S
CHULZE
15.1. Marion W
ALSMANN
GRÜNE
1. Ska K
ELLER
2. Sven G
IEGOLD
Table 3.6.3: Germany, from seats to MEPs.
3. Terry R
EINTKE
4. Reinhard Bütikofer
5. Hannah N
EUMANN
6. Martin H
ÄUSLING
7. Anna C
AVAZZINI
8. Erik M
ARQUARDT
9. Katrin L
ANGENSIEPEN
10. Romeo F
RANZ
11. Jutta P
AULUS
12. Sergey L
AGODINSKY
13. Henrike H
AHN
14. Michael B
LOSS
15. Anna D
EPARNAY
-G
RUNENBERG
16. Rasmus A
NDRESEN
17. Alexandra G
EESE
18. Niklas N
IENASS
19. Viola
VON
C
RAMON
-T
AUBADEL
20. Daniel F
REUND
21. Pierrette H
ERZBERGER
-F
OFANA
SPD
1. Katarina B
ARLEY
2. Udo B
ULLMANN
3. Maria N
OICHL
4. Jens G
EIER
5. Delara B
URKHARDT
6. Bernd L
ANGE
7. Birgit S
IPPEL
8. Dietmar K
ÖSTER
9. Gabriele B
ISCHOFF
10. Ismail E
RTUG
11. Constanze K
REHL
12. Tiemo W
ÖLKEN
13. Petra K
AMMEREVERT
14. Norbert N
EUSER
15. Evelyne G
EBHARDT
16. Joachim S
CHUSTER
AfD
1. Jörg M
EUTHEN
2. Guido R
EIL
3. Maximilian K
RAH
4. Lars Patrick B
ERG
5. Bernhard Z
IMNIOK
6. Nicolaus F
EST
7. Markus B
UCHHEIT
8. Christine A
NDERSON
9. Sylvia L
IMMER
10. Gunnar B
ECK
11. Joachim K
UHS
CSU
1. Manfred W
EBER
2. Angelika N
IEBLER
3. Markus F
ERBER
4. Monika H
OHLMEIER
5. Christian D
OLESCHAL
6. Marlene M
ORTLER
DIE LINKE
1. Martin S
CHIRDEWAN
2. Özlem D
EMIREL
3. Cornelia E
RNST
4. Helmut S
CHOLZ
5. Martina M
ICHELS
FDP
1. Nicola B
EER
2. Svenja H
AHN
3. Andreas G
LÜCK
4. Moritz K
ÖRNER
5. Jan-Christoph O
ETJEN
DIE PARTEI
1. Martin S
ONNEBORN
NI
2. Nico S
EMSROTT
Greens/EFA
FREIE WÄHLER
1. Ulrike M
ÜLLER
2. Engin E
ROGLU
TIERSCHUTZPARTEI
1. Martin B
USCHMANN
ÖDP
1. Klaus B
UCHNER
FAMILIE
1. Helmut G
EUKING
VOLT
1. Damian B
OESELAGER
PIRATEN
1. Patrick B
REYER
21
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3.7. DK – Kingdom of Denmark
Denmark has a contingent of thirteen seats which was raised by one seat after the UK left the EU.
Faroe Islands and Greenland, although part of the kingdom, are not part of the EU, hence they are
not included in the electorate. Lists of candidates must be submitted to the Minister for Economic
Affairs and the Interior by noon four weeks prior to election day. A list has a maximum limit of twenty
candidates. A total of ten parties with 135 candidates were admitted to the elections.
Just one party stood at the election on its own. The other nine parties registered four list alliances,
also referred to as election coalitions. List alliances are not in any way indicated on the ballot paper.
Voters have one vote with which they may mark a candidate (personal vote) or a party (list vote).
There is no access for independent candidates to stand at the election.
EP2019DK-1
Table 3.7.1: Denmark, base data.
13 + 1
4 237 550
1
1CV
none
10
2 758 855
4
DivDwn, DivDwn
50 female + 85 male = 135
6 female + 7 male = 13
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
List alliances
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
It is Danish customs that a party is designated by a letter with which it appears on the ballot paper.
There are four alliances: Alliance-1 = A + F, Alliance-2 = B + Å, Alliance-3 = V + C + I, and Alliance-4 =
Ø + N. Parties allying at the election may fork when looking for congenial Political Groups. In
Alliance-1 the MEPs of A joined the S&D group, those of F joined the Greens/EFA group. In Alliance-
3 the MEPs of V are in the Renew Europe group, while the C-MEP joins EPP.
The apportionment method used is the divisor method with downward rounding (DivDwn), both in
the super-apportionment among party and alliances, as well as in the ensuing four sub-
apportionments among the partners of an alliance. In the super-apportionment every 180 000 votes
justify roughly one seat. The values of the interim quotients indicate that the next, additional seat
will be apportioned to Alliance-3 (divisor 170 000) and, within Alliance-3, to party V (divisor 150 000).
Table 3.7.2: Denmark, from votes to seats.
EP2019DK-2
Alliance-1
Alliance-3
Alliance-2
O
Alliance-4
Sum
Votes
957 540
879 440
370 893
296 978
254 004
2 758 855
Quotient
[Divisor]
5.3
4.9
2.1
1.6
1.4
[180 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
5
4 +1
2
1
1
13+1
ID
22
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2703145_0029.png
The European Elections of May 2019
Party
A
F
Sum
B
Å
Sum
V
C
I
Sum
Ø
N
Sum
Votes
Quotient
[Divisor]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
S&D
Greens/EFA
Alliance-1 sub-apportionment
592 645
3.5
3
364 895
2.1
2
957 540 [180 000]
5
Alliance-2 sub-apportionment
277 929
2.8
2
92 964
0.9
0
370 893 [100 000]
2
Alliance-3 sub-apportionment
648 203
3.8
3 +1
170 544
1.003
1
60 693
0.4
0
879 440 [170 000]
4+1
Alliance-4 sub-apportionment
151 903
1.2
1
102 101
0.8
0
254 004 [130 000]
1
Renew Europe
Renew Europe
EPP
GUE/NGL
The presence of alliances causes a discordant seat apportionment. Party O garners twenty-thousand
votes more than party B (296 978 versus 277 929), but is apportioned fewer seats (one versus two).
Without alliances, B would have lost a seat to V.
The seats of a party are assigned to its candidates on the basis of their personal votes.
EP2019DK-3
Table 3.7.3: Denmark, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
2. Kira Marie P
ETER
-H
ANSEN
15 765
O (Dansk Folkeparti)
1. Peter K
OFOD
119 408
B (Radikale Venstre)
1. Morten P
ETERSEN
97 667
2. Karen M
ELCHIOR
17 292
C (Konservativt Folkeparti)
1. Pernille W
EISS
80 140
Ø (Enhedslisten – De Rød-Grønne)
1. Nikolaj V
ILLUMSEN
50 567
V (Venstre, Danmarks Liberale Parti)
1. Morten L
ØKKEGAARD
207 558
2. Søren G
ADE
201 696
3. Asger C
HRISTENSEN
31 347
+4. Linea S
ØGAARD
-L
IDELL
24 153
A (Socialdemokratiet)
1.
a
Marianne V
IND
27 396
2. Christel S
CHALDEMOSE
65 179
3. Niels F
UGLSANG
29 444
F (SF – Socialistisk Folkeparti)
1. Margrete A
UKEN
199 522
a
) Marianne V
IND
incoming for Jeppe K
OFOD
(188 757 personal votes).
b
) Kira Marie P
ETER
-H
ANSEN
incoming for Karsten H
ØNGE
(19 687 personal votes).
At the 2019 election the practiced vote pattern was 1CV. However, legal provisions allow a party to
register its list with the imposition to apply vote pattern LV1. In this latter case, the tallies of personal
votes would need to satisfy a quorum bypass rule, with the Droop-quota as the quorum, to be
placed ahead of the list. Otherwise, the list ranking would be decisive.
23
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2703145_0030.png
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
3.8. EE – Republic of Estonia
Estonia has a contingent of six seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one seat. The
nomination of candidates ends on the fiftieth day before election day at 6 p.m. Nine parties and five
independent candidates contested the election. The total number of candidates was sixty-six.
Voters cast a vote for a specific candidate by writing the serial number of this candidate on the ballot
sheet or by typing it into an electronic device. Sixty-one candidates are affiliated with one of the
nine parties, their candidate votes are aggregated per party. Five candidates remain unattached
and, in the end, are unsuccessful.
EP2019EE-1
Table 3.8.1: Estonia, base data.
6+1
885 417
1
1CV
none
9, plus 5 independent candidates
332 104
DivDwn
21 female + 25
male =
66
2 female + 4 male = 6
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The seats are apportioned between parties and independent candidates using the divisor method
with downward rounding (DivDwn). With six seats, 36 000 votes justify roughly one seat. When
contemplating the interim quotients’ values it becomes visible that the next, seventh seat will be
apportioned to the political party Isamaa Erakond (with divisor 30 000). Four parties gain parlia-
mentary seats, five after the UK left the EU.
Table 3.8.2: Estonia: from votes to seats.
EP2019EE-2
Eesti Reformierakond
Sotsiaaldemokraatlik Erakond
Eesti Keskerakond
Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond
Isamaa Erakond
9 Others (4 parties, 5 indep.)
Sum
Votes
87 160
77 375
47 799
42 265
34 188
43 317
332 104
Quotient
[Divisor]
2.4
2.1
1.3
1.2
0.9
[36 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
2
2
1
1
0 +1
0
6+1
Renew Europe
S&D
Renew Europe
ID
EPP
The seats of a party are assigned to its candidates in the sequence of candidates' vote tallies.
EP2019EE-3
Table 3.8.3: Estonia, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
Eesti Keskerakond
1. Yana T
OOM
26 990
Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond
1. Jaak M
ADISON
22 819
Isamaa Erakond
+1. Riho T
ERRAS
21 477
Eesti Reformierakond
1. Andrus A
NSIP
41 017
2. Urmas P
AET
30 014
Sotsiaaldemokraatlik Erakond
1. Marina K
ALJURAND
65 549
2. Sven M
IKSER
2 886
24
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2703145_0031.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.9. EL – Hellenic Republic
Greece is allocated a contingent of twenty-one seats. Registration of parties ends on the fiftieth day
before election day. Forty parties registered at the election, altogether nominating 1 209 candidates.
Every party or coalition has its own ballot paper. Voters select the ballot paper of the party of their
choice and may express their preferences for up to four of the listed candidates. There is an electoral
threshold of three per cent of the valid votes, setting aside thirty-four parties and leaving six
apportionment parties.
EP2019EL-1
Table 3.9.1: Greece, base data.
21
10 088 325
1
4CV
5 656 119
40
169 684 (= 3% of valid votes)
6
4 468 142
HQ3-EL
513 female + 696 male = 1 209
5 female + 16 male = 21
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The apportionment of seats among parties is one-of-a-kind, by including the sum of the votes of the
forty non-apportionment parties, 1 187 977, to concoct a peculiar fitting process. It is in two phases.
Phase-1 relies on the Hare-quota variant-3, the integer part of the valid vote total divided by the seat
total, 5 656 119 / 21 = 269 339. A party’s vote total is divided by the quota, and the integer part of
the resulting quotient (Quot.-1) signifies the number of seats to be apportioned in Phase-1. Every
269 339 votes justify roughly one seat. Phase-1 deals out thirteen seats, leaving eight to be looked
after in Phase-2.
Phase-2 refers to the unused voting power (UVP) of the parties. For example, the six Phase-1 seats
for ND use 6 x 269 339 = 1 616 034 votes, leaving 1 873 137 – 1 616 034 = 257 103 unused votes. The
unused voting powers, including the ineffective votes, total 2 154 712. This total is divided by the
number of residual seats (8) plus one. The integer part of the resulting quotient is 239 412 (DQ5,
Droop-quota variant-5), it enters into Phase-2. For every party, its unused voting power is divided
by 239 412 to obtain the second quotients Quot.-2. A party’s Phase-1 seat number is augmented by
the integer part of the second quotient (ND: 6 + 1 = 7, SYRIZA: 4 + 1 = 5). This leaves 8 – 2 = 6 residual
seats to finalise the process. They are apportioned by greatest Quot.-2 remainders, first among the
parties who so far did not receive any Phase-2 seats (EL, KINAL, KKE, XA), and then among the others
(SYRIZA, ND).
11
11
The same apportionment emerges when using the divisor method with upward rounding (with divisor 250 000).
25
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Table 3.9.2: Greece, from votes to seats.
EP2019EL-2
ND
SYRIZA
KINAL
KKE
XA
EL
Ineffective
votes
Sum
Votes
1 873 137
1 343 595
436 726
302 603
275 734
236 347
1 187 977
5 656 119
Quot.-1
[HQ3]
6.96
4.99
1.6
1.1
1.02
0.9
[269 339]
Phase-
1
6
4
1
1
1
0
13
UVP
257 103
266 239
167 387
33 264
6 395
236 347
1 187 977
2 154 712
Quot.-2
[DQ5]
1.074
1.112
0.699
0.139
0.027
0.987
[239 412]
Phase-
2
7 +1
5 +1
1 +1
1 +1
1 +1
0 +1
15+6
Seats
(HQ3-
EL)
8
6
2
2
2
1
21
Political
Group
EPP
GUE/NGL
S&D
NI
NI
ECR
Within a party, the seats are assigned to the candidates who performed best in terms of their
preference vote tallies.
EP2019EL-3
Table 3.9.3: Greece, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
198 436
162 974
140 404
180 822
145 650
55 956
34 457
130 488
50 360
27 665
votes).
votes).
4. Stelios K
OULOGLOU
ND
5. Alexis G
EORGOULIS
1. Stelios K
YMPOUROPOULOS
577 114 6. Petros K
OKKALIS
2. Vangelis M
EIMARAKIS
496 600 KINAL
3. Maria S
PYRAKI
319 237 1. Nikos A
NDROULAKIS
4. Elissavet V
OZEMPERGK
-V
RIONIDI
288 427 2. Eva K
AILI
5. Emmanouil K
EFALOGIANNIS
257 819 KKE
6. Anna-Michelle A
SIMAKOPOULOU
225 211 1. Konstantinos P
APADAKIS
7. Georgios K
YRTSOS
196 929 2.
a
Lefteris N
IKOLAOU
-A
LAVANOS
8. Theodoros Z
AGORAKIS
195 264 XA
SYRIZA
1. Ioannis L
AGOS
1. Dimitrios P
APADIMOULIS
272 835 2. Athanasios K
ONSTANTINOU
2. Elena K
OUNTOURA
236 961 EL
3. Konstantinos A
RVANITIS
220 816 1.
b
Emmanouil F
RAGKOS
a
) Lefteris N
IKOLAOU
-A
LAVANOS
incoming for Asimina D
IGENI
(36 170 candidate
b
) Emmanouil F
RAGKOS
incoming for Kyriakos V
ELOPOULOS
(159 319 candidate
26
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2703145_0033.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.10. ES – Kingdom of Spain
Spain has a contingent of fifty-four seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by five seats.
Candidate lists had to be submitted to the electoral authority at the latest ten days after the Royal
Decree announcing the European elections and were published in the Official Journal on 30 April
2019. Thirty-two parties and coalitions contested the election, with a total of 1 917 candidates. Every
party had its own ballot paper. Voters select the ballot sheet of the party of their choice, put it into
an apposite envelope, and cast the envelope into the ballot box.
EP2019ES-1
Table 3.10.1: Spain, base data.
54 + 5
37 248 888
1
LV0
none
32
22 209 330
DivDwn
901 female + 1016 male = 1 917
24 female + 27 male = 51
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The whole country is treated as a single constituency. There is no electoral threshold. The
apportionment of seats among parties is carried out using the divisor method with downward
rounding. Every 360 000 votes justify roughly one seat. Eight parties and coalitions obtain
parliamentary seats, twenty-four parties are left empty-handed. With five added seats, because of
the UK withdrawal from the EU, the electoral key drops to 337 000 votes. Of the additional seats, one
each goes to PSOE, PP, Cs, Vox, and Junts.
Table 3.10.2: Spain, from votes to seats.
EP2019ES-2
PSOE
PP
Cs
Podemos-IU
Vox
Ahora Repúblicas
Junts
CEUS
24 Others
Sum
Votes
7 369 789
4 519 205
2 731 825
2 258 857
1 393 684
1 252 139
1 018 435
633 090
1 032 306
22 209 330
Quotient
[Divisor]
20.5
12.6
7.6
6.3
3.9
3.5
2.8
1.8
[360 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
20 +1
12 +1
7 +1
6
3 +1
3
2 +1
1
0
54+5
S&D
EPP
Renew Europe
(see Table 3.10.3)
ECR
(see Table 3.10.3)
(see Table 3.10.3)
Renew Europe
Spain uses a closed list system. Seats are assigned to candidates in the sequence of the printed party-
lists.
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2703145_0034.png
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
EP2019ES-3
PSOE
21.
a
Estrella D
URÁ
F
ERRANDIS
2. Iratxe G
ARCÍA
P
ÉREZ
3. Lina G
ÁLVEZ
M
UÑOZ
4. Javi L
ÓPEZ
5. Inma R
ODRÍGUEZ
-P
IÑERO
Table 3.10.3: Spain, from seats to MEPs.
PP
1. Dolors M
ONTSERRAT
2. Esteban G
ONZÁLEZ
P
ONS
3. Antonio L
ÓPEZ
-I
STÚRIZ
W
HITE
4. Juan Ignacio Z
OIDO
Á
LVAREZ
5. Pilardel C
ASTILLO
V
ERA
6. Javier Z
ARZALEJOS
7. José Manuel G
ARCÍA
-M
ARGALLO
8. Francisco José M
ILLÁN
M
ON
9. Rosa E
STARÀS
F
ERRAGUT
10. Isabel B
ENJUMEA
B
ENJUMEA
11. Pablo A
RIAS
E
CHEVERRÍA
12. Leopoldo L
ÓPEZ
G
IL
+13. Gabriel M
ATO
A
DROVER
Cs
1. Luis G
ARICANO
2. Maite P
AGAZAURTUNDÚA
3. María Soraya R
ODRÍGUEZ
R
AMOS
4. Javier N
ART
5. José Ramón B
AUZÁ
D
ÍAZ
Podemos-IU
1. Eugenia R
ODRÍGUEZ
P
ALOP
GUE/NGL
2. Sira R
EGO
GUE/NGL
3. Ernest U
RTASUN
Greens/EFA
4. Idoia V
ILLANUEVA
R
UIZ
GUE/NGL
5. Miguel U
RBÁN
C
RESPO
GUE/NGL
6. Manu P
INEDA
GUE/NGL
Vox
1. Jorge B
UXADÉ
V
ILLALBA
2. Mazaly A
GUILAR
3. Hermann T
ERTSCH
+4. Margarita
DE LA
P
ISA
C
ARRIÓN
A
HORA
R
EPÚBLICAS
1.
b
Oriol J
UNQUERAS I
V
IES
2. Pernando B
ARRENA
A
RZA
GUE/NGL
3. Diana R
IBA I
G
INER
Greens/EFA
Junts
1.
b
Carles P
UIGDEMONT
C
ASAMAJ
2.
b
Antoni C
OMÍN
O
LIVERES
+3. Clara P
ONSATÍ I
O
BIOLS
NI
CEUS
1. Izaskun B
ILBAO
B
ARANDICA
6. Ibán G
ARCÍA DEL
B
LANCO
7. Eider G
ARDIAZABAL
R
UBIAL
8. Nicolás G
ONZÁLEZ
C
ASARES
9. Cristina M
AESTRE
M
ARTÍN DE
A
LMAGRO
10. César L
UENA
11. Clara A
GUILERA
12. Nacho S
ÁNCHEZ
A
MOR
13. Mónica Silvana G
ONZÁLEZ
14. Juan Fernando L
ÓPEZ
A
GUILAR
15. Adriana M
ALDONADO
L
ÓPEZ
16. Jonás F
ERNÁNDEZ
17. Alicia H
OMS
G
INEL
18. Javier M
ORENO
S
ÁNCHEZ
19. Isabel G
ARCÍA
M
UÑOZ
6. Jordi C
AÑAS
20. Domènec R
UIZ
D
EVESA
7. Susana S
OLÍS
P
ÉREZ
+22. Marcos R
OS
S
EMPERE
+8. Adrián V
ÁZQUEZ
L
ÁZARA
a
) Estrella D
URÁ
F
ERRANDES
incoming for Josep B
ORRELL
F
ONTELLES
(list place 1).
b
) Oriol J
UNQUERAS I
V
IES
, Carles P
UIGDEMONT
C
ASAMAJ
, Antoni C
OMÍN
O
LIVERES
barred from taking their seats due to pending litigation.
28
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2703145_0035.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.11. FI – Republic of Finland
Finland has a contingent of thirteen seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one seat.
Candidate lists had to be submitted by Thursday 18 April 2019. There are 269 candidates, listed
alphabetically within their parties and identified by a serial number. Voters cast a vote for the
candidate of their choice by writing his or her serial number onto the ballot sheet. The ballot sheet
is frugal, just offering a circle where to jot down the candidate's number.
EP2019FI-1
Table 3.11.1: Finland, base data.
13 + 1
4 504 480
1
1CV
none
18
1 830 045
DivDwn
106 female + 163 male = 269
7 female + 6 male = 13
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
Finland is a single constituency. The votes for the candidates who are affiliated with the same party
are aggregated. There is no electoral threshold. The seat apportionment uses the divisor method
with downward rounding (DivDwn). Every 100 000 votes justify roughly one seat. After the UK leaves
the EU, with fourteen seats, the electoral key drops to 96 000 votes. The fourteenth seat was
apportioned to VIHR. Of the eighteen participating parties, eleven finish with no seat.
Table 3.11.2: Finland, from votes to seats.
EP2019FI-2
KOK
VIHR
SDP
PS
KESK
V
SFP
11 Others
Sum
Votes
380 460
292 892
267 603
253 176
247 477
126 063
115 962
146 412
1 830 045
Quotient
[Divisor]
3.8
2.9
2.7
2.5
2.5
1.3
1.2
[100 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
3
2+1
2
2
2
1
1
0
13+1
EPP
Greens/EFA
S&D
ID
Renew Europe
GUE/NGL
Renew Europe
The assignment of seats to candidates is solely based on their personal vote tallies.
EP2019FI-3
Table 3.11.3: Finland, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
77 588
70 687
64 560
111 714
89 769
13 687
128 234
2. Miapetra K
UMPULA
-N
ATRI
PS
1. Laura H
UHTASAARI
2. Teuvo H
AKKARAINEN
KESK
1. Mauri P
EKKARINEN
2. Elsi K
ATAINEN
V
1. Silvia M
ODIG
SFP
1. Nils T
ORVALDS
68 542
92 760
29 083
68 487
54 627
51 844
46 473
KOK
1. Sirpa P
IETIKÄINEN
2. Henna V
IRKKUNEN
3. Petri S
ARVAMAA
VIHR
1. Ville N
IINISTÖ
2. Heidi H
AUTALA
+3. Alviina A
LAMETSÄ
SDP
1. Eero H
EINÄLUOMA
29
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3.12. FR – French Republic
France has a contingent of seventy-four seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by five seats.
Thirty-four parties contested the election, nominating a total of 2 618 candidates. Candidacies had
to be declared to the Electoral Bureau of the Ministry of the Interior between Monday 23 April, and
Friday 3 May, during opening hours. By law every list must alternate between female and male
candidates. This secures gender parity among elected MEPs since France uses fixed lists (vote
pattern LV0). Indeed, of the seventy-four MEPs thirty-seven are female and thirty-seven are male.
EP2019FR-1
Table 3.12.1: France, base data.
74 + 5
47 345 328
1
LV0
22 655 174
34
1 132 759 (= 5% of valid votes)
6
18 173 102
DivDwn
1 297 female + 1 321 male = 2 618
37 female + 37 male = 74
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
Previously France established eight constituencies for separate evaluation of the election results. At
the 2019 election France is taken to be a single constituency. There is an electoral threshold of five
per cent of valid votes. With 22 655 174 valid votes, the threshold amounts to 1 132 759 votes.
Twenty-eight parties stay below the threshold. Their votes accumulate to a remarkable share of
twenty per cent of the valid votes (4 482 072 / 22 655 174 = 19.8%). That is, of five votes, just four
become effective, and one is discarded as ineffective.
The divisor method with downward rounding determines the apportionment of seats among
parties. Every 237 000 votes justify roughly one seat. With seventy-nine seats after the UK leaves the
EU, the divisor becomes 220 600. The five additional seats will be handed out to RN (1), LREM (2), Les
Verts (1), and PS (1).
Table 3.12.2: France, from votes to seats.
EP2019FR-2
Rassemblement national
LREM, MoDem et al.
EE Les Verts et al.
Les Républicains et al.
La France insoumise et al.
Parti socialiste et al.
Sum
Votes
5 286 939
5 079 015
3 055 023
1 920 407
1 428 548
1 403 170
18 173 102
Quotient
[Divisor]
22.3
21.4
12.9
8.1
6.03
5.9
[237 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
22 +1
21 +2
12 +1
8
6
5 +1
74+5
ID
Renew Europe
Greens/EFA
EPP
GUE/NGL
S&D
The assignment of seats to candidates strictly follows the sequencing how candidates are listed in
the registered party-lists.
30
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The European Elections of May 2019
EP2019FR-3
Table 3.12.3: France, from seats to MEPs.
4. Jérémy D
ECERLE
5. Catherine C
HABAUD
6. Stéphane S
ÉJOURNÉ
7. Fabienne K
ELLER
8. Bernard G
UETTA
9. Irène T
OLLERET
10. Stéphane B
IJOUX
11. Sylvie B
RUNET
12. Gilles B
OYER
13. Stéphanie Y
ON
-C
OURTIN
14. Pierre K
ARLESKIND
15. Laurence F
ARRENG
16. Dominique R
IQUET
17. Véronique T
RILLET
-L
ENOIR
18. Pascal D
URAND
19. Valérie H
AYER
20. Christophe G
RUDLER
21. Chrysoula Z
ACHAROPOULOU
+22. Sandro G
OZI
+23. Ilana C
ICUREL
EE Les Verts
1. Yannick J
ADOT
2. Michèle R
IVASI
3. Damien C
ARÊME
4. Marie T
OUSSAINT
5. David C
ORMAND
6. Karima D
ELLI
7. Mounir S
ATOURI
8. Caroline R
OOSE
9. François A
LFONSI
10. Salima Y
ENBOU
11. Benoît B
ITEAU
12. Gwendoline D
ELBOS
-C
ORFIELD
+13. Claude G
RUFFAT
Les Républicains
1. François-Xavier B
ELLAMI
2. Agnès E
VREN
3. Arnaud D
ANJEAN
4. Nadine M
ORANO
5. Brice H
ORTEFEUX
6. Nathalie C
OLIN
-O
ESTERLÉ
7. Geoffroy D
IDIER
8. Anne S
ANDER
La France insoumise
1. Manon A
UBRY
2. Manuel B
OMPARD
3. Leïla C
HAIBI
4. Younous O
MARJEE
5. Anne-Sophie P
ELLETIER
6. Emmanuel M
AUREL
Parti socialist
1. Raphaël G
LUCKSMANN
2. Sylvie G
UILLAUME
3. Éric A
NDRIEU
4. Aurore L
ALUCQ
5. Pierre L
ARROUTUROU
+6. Nora M
EBAREK
Rassemblement national
1. Jordan B
ARDELLA
2. Hélène L
APORTE
3. Thierry M
ARIANI
4. Dominique B
ILDE
5. Hervé J
UVIN
6. Joëlle M
ELIN
7. Nicolas B
AY
8. Virginie J
ORON
9. Jean-Paul G
ARRAUD
10. Catherine G
RISET
11. Gilles L
EBRETON
12. Maxette P
IRBAKAS
-G
RISONI
13. Jean-François J
ALKH
14. Aurélia B
EIGNEUX
15. Gilbert C
OLLARD
16. Julie L
ECHANTEUX
17. Philippe O
LIVIER
18. Annika B
RUNA
19. Jérôme R
IVIÈRE
20. France J
AMET
21. André R
OUGÉ
22. Mathilde A
NDROUËT
+23. Jean-Lin L
ACAPELLE
LREM, MoDem
1. Nathalie L
OISEAU
2. Pascal C
ANFIN
3. Marie-Pierre V
EDRENNE
31
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3.13. HR – Republic of Croatia
Croatia has a contingent of eleven seats which, after the UK leaves the EU, will be raised by one seat.
List proposals must be received by the State Electoral Commission at the latest within fourteen days
of the day of calling the election. Domestic law requires the lists to contain at least forty per cent
female candidates. Thirty-three parties contested the election, with a total of 404 candidates. On the
ballot sheets voters mark a party (a list vote) and, optionally, a candidate (a preference vote). A pure
preference vote is attributed to the candidate's party.
EP2019HR
-1
Table 3.13.1: Croatia, base data.
11 + 1
3 696 907
1
LV1
1 073 954
33
53 698 (= 5% of valid votes)
6
738 039
DivDwn
10% bypass rule
162 female + 242 male = 404
4 female+ 7 male = 11
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of the valid votes total, 53 698. Twenty-seven parties
miss the threshold, turning their aggregate 335 915 votes ineffective (which is almost a third of all
valid votes). The divisor method with downward rounding is used. Every 53 000 votes justify roughly
one seat. After the UK leaves the EU the key will be 50 000 votes, the twelfth seat being apportioned
to SDP.
Table 3.13.2: Croatia, from votes to seats.
EP2019HR-2
HDZ
SDP
HKS
MK
�½Z
A
Sum
Votes
244 076
200 976
91 546
84 765
60 847
55 829
738 039
Quotient
[Divisor]
4.6
3.8
1.7
1.6
1.1
1.1
[53 000]
Seats
(DivDwn)
4
3 +1
1
1
1
1
11+1
Political
Group
EPP
S&D
ECR
NI
NI
Renew Europe
The seat assignment to candidates takes account of the preference votes by means of a ten per cent
bypass rule. That is candidates whose preference votes meet or exceed ten per cent of their party’s
vote total jump to the top of the party-list, in decreasing order of their preference vote tallies.
32
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The European Elections of May 2019
Table 3.13.3: Croatia, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019HR-3
HDZ
24 408)
1. Karlo R
ESSLER
1
52 859
2. Dubravka Š
UICA
2
31 791
3. Tomislav S
OKOL
3
4 573
4. �½eljana Z
OVKO
4
9 861
SDP
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 200 976 =
20 098)
1. Biljana B
ORZAN
2
64 736
2. Tonino P
ICULA
1
50 921
3. Predrag Fred M
ATIĆ
3
13 371
+4. Romana J
ERKOVIĆ
4
1 368
HKS
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 91 546 =
9 155)
1. Ruža T
OMAŠIĆ
1
69 989
MK
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 84 765 =
8 477)
1. Mislav K
OLAKUŠIĆ
1
68 883
�½Z
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 60 847 =
6 085)
1. Ivan Vilibor S
INČIĆ
12
18 314
A
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 55 829 =
5 583)
1. Valter F
LEGO
1
21 228
List
Preference
Place
Votes
(Bypass hurdle: 10% of 244 076 =
33
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3.14. HU – Hungary
Hungary is allocated a contingent of twenty-one seats. Party list nomination lasted from 19 April
2019 to 23 April 2019. 20 000 valid voter recommendations were needed for putting forward a party
list. Nine parties and coalitions contested the election, with a total of 292 candidates. On the ballot
sheets voters mark a party-list showing the first five nominees.
EP2019HU-1
Table 3.14.1: Hungary, base data.
21
38 008 353
1
LV0
3 470 566
9
173 528 (= 5% of valid votes)
5
3 175 548
DivDwn
61 female + 231 male = 292
8 female + 13 male = 21
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of valid votes which, quite unusually, is rounded
downwards (173 528). Four parties miss the threshold, leaving five apportionment parties. The seat
apportionment uses the divisor method with downward rounding (DivDwn). Every 135 000 votes
justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.14.2: Hungary, from votes to seats.
EP2019HU-2
Fidesz–KDNP
DK
Momentum
MSZP–P
JobbikK
Sum
Votes
1 824 220
557 081
344 512
229 551
220 184
3 175 548
Quotient
[Divisor]
13.5
4.1
2.6
1.7
1.6
[135 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
13
4
2
1
1
21
EPP
S&D
Renew Europe
S&D
NI
Hungary employs the fixed list system. Seats are assigned to candidates in the sequence presented
on the party-list.
EP2019HU-3
Fidesz–KDNP
1. László T
RÓCSÁNYI
2. József S
ZÁJER
3. Lívia J
ÁRÓKA
4. Tamás D
EUTSCH
Table 3.14.3: Hungary, from seats to MEPs.
5. András G
YÜRK
11. Andor D
ELI
3. Sándor R
ÓNAI
6. Kinga G
ÁL
12. Balázs H
IDVÉGHI
4. Attila A
RA
-K
OVÁCS
7. György H
ÖLVÉNYI
13. Edina T
ÓTH
Momentum
8. Enikő G
YŐRI
DK
1. Katalin C
SEH
9. Ádám K
ÓSA
1. Klára D
OBREV
2. Anna Júlia D
ONÁTH
10. Andrea B
OCSKOR
2. Csaba M
OLNÁR
a
) István U
JHELYI
incoming for Bertalan T
ÓTH
(list place 1).
MSZP–P
2.
a
István U
JHELYI
Jobbik
1. Márton G
YÖNGYÖSI
34
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The European Elections of May 2019
3.15. IE – Ireland
Ireland has a contingent of eleven seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by two seats. The
period for the nomination of candidates is set at constituency level, starts about six weeks before
polling day and lasts one or two weeks, depending on the nationality of the candidate. Fifty-nine
candidates contested the election, of whom twenty-six figured as non-party candidates, i.e. they
were not affiliated with one of the twelve contesting parties.
On the ballot sheet voters mark their preferences by writing 1 next to the candidate of their first
choice, 2 next to the candidate of their second choice, and so on.
EP2019IE-1
Table 3.15.1: Ireland, base data.
11 + 2
3 526 023
3
STV
1 678 003
12 + 26 independent candidates
STVran
24 female + 35 male = 59
5 female + 6 male = 11
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
Domestic provisions establish three constituencies for separate evaluation:
1. Constituency of Dublin – 3 seats which, after the UK leaves the EU, will be raised to 4,
2. Constituency of Midlands–North-West – 4 seats,
3. Constituency of South – 4 seats which, after the UK leaves the EU, will be raised to 5.
Within each constituency ballots are evaluated using the single transferable vote scheme with
random transfers (STVran). The applicable electoral key is the Droop-quota which, up to rounding,
is the quotient of vote total and seat total plus one. However, in the constituencies of Dublin and
South the seat totals differ for the periods before and after the UK leaves the EU, whence the induced
Droop-quotas would differ too.
Unfortunately, STV schemes may fall victim to an awkward instance of opposing calculations, in that
one or more of the MEPs elected under the supposition that a constituency commands three seats
might fail to be among the MEPs elected under the supposition that the seat contingent is raised to
four. In other words, the departure of the UK from the EU might entail the disruptive effect that an
MEP from before would have to vacate his or her seat, for somebody else to take this seat
afterwards.
12
Therefore domestic provisions decreed the use of just a single calculation and to base
this calculation on the seat contingents after the UK has left the EU. Furthermore it was provided
that the last candidate elected in the Dublin constituency and the last candidate elected in the South
constituency would take up their seats only after the UK left the EU.
In the Dublin constituency the Droop-quota amounts to 363 947 / (4+1) = 72 790. Hence every
72 790 votes justify one seat. The count of first preferences reveals that no candidate reaches the
quota. In a second count, the weakest candidate is eliminated and the ballots on which he is marked
12
This behavior is called an Alabama paradox, see, e.g., Pukelsheim (2017):
Proportional Representation
(op. cit.),
Section 9.12. In 1881, the reapportionment of the US Congress was considered. The application of the current system
at the time would have resulted in the state of Alabama having 8 representatives in a House of 299 members but 7
representatives in a House of 300 Members.
35
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first preference are transferred to the candidates marked second preference. The elimination
process continues until the thirteenth count by which time Ciarán C
UFFE
has accumulated 73 028
votes of first and lower-order preferences and is assigned the first seat. In the fourteenth count
Frances F
ITZGERALD
passes the quota and is assigned the second seat. The sixteenth and last count
finishes with four candidates, the previous two, Clare D
ALY
with 87 770 accumulated votes, and Barry
A
NDREWS
(68 952 votes). Hence Clare D
ALY
is assigned the third seat, and Barry A
NDREWS
must wait to
take the fourth seat until the UK leaves the EU.
In the Midlands–North-West constituency the Droop-quota equals 118 986. That is, every 118 986
votes justify one seat. Hence Mairead M
C
G
UINNESS
, with 134 630 first preference votes, is assigned
the first seat. In the second count 15 644 surplus votes of Mairead McGuinness are transferred by
second preferences to the other candidates. Thereafter the system starts eliminating lower ranked
candidates. Nobody reaches the quota until the thirteenth count, though, when the process finishes
with the four MEPs shown in Table 3.15.2.
In the South constituency the Droop-quota requires 119 855 votes. Hence every 119 855 votes
justify one seat. In the ninth and seventeenth counts the first and second seats are assigned, and in
the twentieth and last count the remaining three, in the order as exhibited in Table 3.15.2.
Table 3.15.2: Ireland, from votes to MEPs.
EP2019IE-2
Party
1st Preference Political
Votes (STVran) Group
1. Constituency of Dublin
1. Ciarán C
UFFE
G.P.
63 849 Greens/EFA
2. Frances F
ITZGERALD
F.G.
59 067 EPP
3. Clare D
ALY
I.4.C.
42 305 GUE/NGL
+4. Barry A
NDREWS
F.F.
51 420 Renew Europe
Lynn B
OYLAN
S.F.
39 387
Gary G
ANNON
S.D.
20 331
Alex W
HITE
Lab.
18 293
Mark D
URKAN
F.G.
16 473
Gillian B
RIEN
S.P.B.P.
10 864
Rita H
ARROLD
S.P.B.P.
4 967
Éllis R
YAN
W.P.
3 701
8 further candidates
Non-P.
33 290
Sum
363 947
2. Constituency of Midlands–North-West
1. Mairead M
C
G
UINNESS
F.G.
134 630 EPP
2. Luke Ming F
LANAGHAN
Non-P.
85 034 GUE/NGL
3. Maria W
ALSH
F.G.
64 500 EPP
4. Matt C
ARTHY
S.F.
77 619 GUE/NGL
Peter C
ASEY
Non-P.
56 650
Saoirse M
C
H
UGH
G.P.
51 019
Brendan
MITH
F.F.
42 814
Anne R
ABBITTE
F.F.
30 220
Dominic H
ANNIGAN
Lab.
12 378
Cyril B
RENNAN
S.P.B.P
8 130
Michael O’D
OWD
R.I.
6 897
Patrick G
REENE
D.D.I.
1 352
5 further candidates
Non-P.
23 684
Sum
594 927
36
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The European Elections of May 2019
3. Constituency of South
1. Seán K
ELLY
F.G.
118 446
2. Billy K
ELLEHER
F.F.
84 084
3. Mick W
ALLACE
I.4.C.
81 780
4. Grace O’S
ULLIVAN
G.P.
75 887
+5. Deirdre C
LUNE
F.G.
64 605
Liadh N
Í
R
IADA
S.F.
78 995
Malcolm B
YRNE
F.F.
69 167
Andrew D
OYLE
F.G.
38 738
Sheila N
UNAN
Lab.
22 082
Adrienne W
ALLACE
S.P.B.P.
14 810
Peter O’L
OUGHLIN
I.I.
3 685
Jan V
AN DE
V
EN
D.D.I.
1 421
11 further candidates
Non-P.
65 429
Sum
719 129
EPP
Renew Europe
GUE/NGL
Greens/EFA
EPP
STV schemes generally qualify as proportional representation systems. The argument relies on the
hypothetical assumption that we would be allowed to reinterpret first preference votes in terms of
a 1CV vote pattern, i.e. a voter casts one vote (namely the first preference vote) for the candidate of
her or his choice, and then all candidate votes are aggregated by party. The apportionment of
thirteen seats among parties, using the divisor method with standard rounding (divisor 120 000),
would result in four seats (now five) for Fine Gael (F.G.), two seats (as is) for Fianna Fáil (F.F.), two
seats (now one) for non-party candidates, two seats (now one) for Sinn Féin (S.F.), two seats (as is)
for Green Party/Comhaontas Glas (G.P.), and one seat (now two) for Independents 4 Change (I.4.C.).
The agreement of results is persuasive, even though the argument needs to be viewed with care.
For example, pooling all non-party candidates into a fictitious Non-P.-party is unlikely to be a reliable
predictor of how voters really behave if the vote pattern were 1CV.
37
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3.16. IT – Italian Republic
Italy has a seat contingent of seventy-three seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by three
seats. Parties and candidates must register by the thirty-ninth day prior to election day. Lists of
nominees have to be balanced by gender, also the first two candidates must be of different gender.
13
Domestic provisions subdivide Italy into five districts and allocate the seventy-six seats after the UK
leaves the EU between the districts by population figure:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Italia nord-occidentale – 20 seats,
Italia nord-orientale – 15 seats,
Italia centrale – 15 seats,
Italia meridionale – 18 seats,
Italia insulare – 8 seats.
Parties of linguistic minorities may establish an alliance with a party campaigning in all five districts.
In Italia nord-occidentale, the Autonomie per l'Europa party (ApE) of the French speaking minority
in the Aosta Valley is allied with the Partito Democratico (PD). In Italia nord-orientale, the Südtiroler
Volkspartei (SVP) of the German-speaking minority in South Tyrol is allied with Forza Italia (FD).
Parties present lists of candidates separately by district. A candidate may be nominated on several
lists. Ballot papers in different districts have different colours (grey, brown, red, orange, pink). Voters
stamp a mark next to the symbol of the party of their choice. They may add up to three preference
votes by writing the candidates’ names next to the party symbol. In case of three preferences at least
one has to be male and one female, in the absence of gender diversity the second and third
preferences are deemed null and void.
EP2019IT-1
Table 3.16.1: Italy, base data.
73 + 3
50 952 719
5
3CV
26 783 732
per district: 16, 17, 15, 15, 15
1 071 350 (= 4% of valid votes)
5
24 071 889
HQ1grR, HQ1grR
none
468 female + 497 male = 965
30 female+ 43 male = 73
Seat contingent
Electorate
Electoral districts
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Lists admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of four per cent of the valid votes (1 071 350 votes). The threshold
eliminates eleven parties. The seat apportionment calculations use the Hare-quota variant-1
method with fit by greatest remainders (HQ1grR). Variant-1 of the Hare-quota is the integer part of
the ratio of effective votes to available seats. For the state-wide super-apportionment the quota
13
Legge 22 aprile 2014, n. 65. – The dossier of the Italian Ministry of Interior includes calculations for the 76 seats after
the UK leaves the EU, but it is silent on the handling of the seats before this event , see Elezioni dei Membri del
Parlamento Europeo Spettanti all'Italia 26 maggio 2019, Il Dossier. Dipartimento per gli Affari Interni e Territoriali,
Ministero dell'Interno. Maggio 2019 rev.1.1, 259 pages [www.interno.gov.it].
38
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The European Elections of May 2019
amounts to 316 735. That is, every 316 735 votes justify roughly one seat. For the sub-appor-
tionments in the five districts the electoral key is, respectively, 353 461, 345 575, 330 054, 276 045,
and 237 424 votes.
The super-apportionment produces state-wide seat numbers for the parties. Domestic provisions
decree that these state-wide results take precedence. This enforcement of the state-wide view
distinguishes electoral systems with a subdivision into several districts (DE, IT, PL) from systems that
establish several constituencies (BE, IE, UK).
Generally, since candidates are nominated at the district level, the law provides for a break-down of
state-wide party seats to districts. The break-down is in two steps. The first step apportions,
separately within every district, the preordained district seats among parties. This step is self-
sufficient; it entirely disregards the available super-apportionment. The second step aggregates, for
every party, the district results of the first step and only then checks for discrepancies with the super-
apportionment. If a discrepancy is encountered, the party's district results are adjusted until the
discrepancy vanishes, in order to achieve conformity with the super-apportionment.
Specifically, Lega, Salvini Premier and PD+ApE finish with district results that are in agreement with
the super-apportionment, no further action is needed. In contrast, Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S) is
apportioned two seats too much. The party has four quotients whose remainders are rounded
upwards (.47, .73, .67, .81 in districts 1, 2, 3, 4). In order to adjust M5S to its state-wide due the two
smallest of these four remainders are rounded downwards (.47, .67 in districts 1, 3). This adjustment
reduces the party’s seat number in Italia nord-occidentale from three to two, and also in Italia
centrale. To restore the balance in these districts, the seat numbers of FI+SVP and Fratelli d’Italia,
whose discrepancies oppose the discrepancy of M5S, are increased appropriately. The process has
a somewhat makeshift character; it works out fine with the 2019 data.
Table 3.16.2: Italy, from votes to seats.
EP2019IT-2
Lega
PD+ApE
M5S
FI+SVP
FdI
Sum
Votes
Quotient
[Split]
Seats
Political
(HQ1grR) Group
29
19
14
8
6
76
ID
S&D
NI
EPP
ECR
Super-apportionment
9 175 208
28.97
6 107 545
19.38
4 569 089
14.43
2 493 858
7.87
1 726 189
5.45
24 071 889
[.44]
39
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2703145_0046.png
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
Party
Lega
PD+ApE
M5S
FI
FdI
Sum
Lega
PD
M5S
FI
FdI
Sum
Votes
Quotient
[Split]
Seats
(HQ1grR
)
9
5
3–1=2
2
1+1=2
20
Party
Lega
PD
M5S
FI+SVP
FdI
Sum
Lega
PD
M5S
FI
FdI
Sum
Aggregation
Votes
Quotient
[Split]
Seats
(HQ1grR)
7
4
2
1
1
15
1. Italia nord-occidentale
3 193 908
9.04
1 866 777
5.28
873 749
2.47
691 037
1.96
443 763
1.26
7 069 23
[.4]
4
3. Italia centrale
1 848 005
5.60
1 488 260
4.51
882 802
2.67
345 788
1.05
385 962
1.17
4 950 81
[.55]
7
5. Italia insulare
460 194
379 511
610 040
301 343
148 307
1 899 39
5
1.94
1.60
2.57
1.27
0.63
[.58]
2. Italia nord-orientale
2 381 555
6.89
1 388 378
4.02
599 106
1.73
481 201
1.39
333 390
0.96
5 183 630
[.5]
4. Italia meridionale
1 291 546
4.68
984 619
3.57
1 603 392
5.81
674 489
2.44
414 767
1.50
4 968 813
[.53]
Super-app.
29
19
14
8
6
76
Addition
29
19
16
7
5
76
6
4
3-1=2
1+1=2
1
15
5
4
6
2
1
18
Discrepanc
y
0
0
–2
+1
+1
±2
Lega
PD
M5S
FI
FdI
Sum
2
2
2
1
1
8
Lega
PD+ApE
M5S
FI+SVP
FdI
Sum
The assignment of seats to candidates is based on the personal votes for the candidates. A candidate
who is elected in several districts may choose where to accept the mandate.
40
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2703145_0047.png
The European Elections of May 2019
EP2019IT-3
Lega
1.10.
a
Marco
C
AMPOMENOSI
1.2. Angelo C
IOCCA
1.3. Silvia S
ARDONE
1.4. Isabella T
OVAGLIERI
1.5. Danilo Oscar L
ANCINI
1.6. Gianna G
ANCIA
1.7. Stefania Z
AMBELLI
1.8. Alessandro P
ANZA
1.9. Marco Z
ANNI
2.8.
b
Rosanna C
ONTE
2.2. Mara B
IZZOTTO
2.3. Gianantonio D
A
R
E
2.4. Paolo B
ORCHIA
2.5. Alessandra B
ASSO
2.6. Elena L
IZZI
2.7. Marco D
REOSTO
3.7.
c
Matteo A
DINOLFI
3.2. Susanna C
ECCARDI
3.3. Antonio Maria
R
INALDI
3.4. Anna B
ONFRISCO
3.5. Simona B
ALDASSARRE
3.6. Luisa R
EGIMENTI
4.5.
d
Valentino G
RANT
4.2. Massimo C
ASANOVA
4.3. Andrea C
AROPPO
4.4. Lucia V
UOLO
Votes
17 768
89 767
44 971
32 395
21 957
19 194
18 803
18 207
18 019
19 411
94 812
43 418
37 406
25 377
25 295
23 179
32 578
48 294
48 178
39 336
Table 3.16.3: Italy, from seats to MEPs.
+4.6. Vincenzo S
OFO
5.3.
e
Francesca D
ONATO
5.2. Annalisa T
ARDINO
PD
1.1. Giuliano P
ISAPIA
1.2. Irene T
INAGLI
1.3. Pierfrancesco
M
AJORINO
1.4. Patrizia T
OIA
1.5. Brando B
ENIFEI
2.1. Carlo C
ALENDA
2.2. Elisabetta G
UALMINI
2.3. Paolo D
E
C
ASTRO
2.4. Alessandra M
ORETTI
3.1. Simona B
ONAFÈ
3.6.
f
Nicola D
ANTI
3.3. David Maria S
ASSOLI
3.4. Massimiliano
S
MERIGLIO
4.1. Franco R
OBERTI
4.2. Giuseppe F
ERRANDINO
4.3. Andrea C
OZZOLINO
4.4. Pina P
ICIERNO
5.1. Pietro B
ARTOLO
32 095
28 071
32 884
3.1. Fabio Massimo C
ASTALDO
3.2. Daniela R
ONDINELLI
4.1. Chiara G
EMMA
4.2. Laura F
ERRARA
4.3. Piernicola P
EDICINI
4.4. Rosa D'A
MATO
4.5. Isabella A
DINOLFI
4.6. Mario F
URORE
5.1. Dino G
IARRUSSO
5.1. Ignazio C
ORRAO
FI
1.1. Silvio B
ERLUSCONI
1.2. Massimiliano S
ALINI
3.1. Antonio T
AJANI
+3.2. Salvatore D
E
M
EO
4.3.
g
Fulvio M
ARTUSCIELLO
4.2. Aldo P
ATRICIELLO
5.2.
h
Giuseppe M
ILAZZO
FdI
1.3.
i
Pietro F
IOCCHI
1.2. Carlo F
IDANZA
+2.2.
k
Sergio Antonio
B
ERLATO
3.2.
l
Nicola P
ROCACCINI
4.2.
m
Raffaele F
ITTO
5.2.
n
Raffaele S
TANCANELLI
SVP
2.1. Herbert D
ORFMANN
43 601
41 200
86 417
78 265
58 901
38 621
37 838
32 046
117 211
115 820
187 601
37 231
69 009
22 813
47 528
83 532
74 727
9 335
10 919
19 494
45 312
87 743
30 299
100 441
269 657
106 710
93 538
79 795
51 730
276 413
77 577
52 254
51 234
169 408
53 286
128 533
73 059
149 553
83 321
81 328
79 248
135 907
35 380 5.2. Caterina C
HINNICI
113 248
34 962 M5S
36 803 1.1. Eleonora E
VI
17 067
65 262 1.2. Tiziana B
EGHIN
15 039
50 671 2.1. Marco Z
ULLO
16 046
41 715 2.2. Sabrina P
IGNEDOLI
13 768
a
) Marco C
AMPOMENOSI
incoming for 1.1 Matteo S
ALVINI
(696 027 votes).
b
) Rosanna C
ONTE
incoming for 2.1 Matteo S
ALVINI
(551 315 votes).
c
) Matteo A
DINOLFI
incoming for 3.1 Matteo S
ALVINI
(517 966 votes).
d
) Valentino G
RANT
incoming for 4.1 Matteo S
ALVINI
(357 444 votes).
e
) Francesca D
ONATO
incoming for 5.1 Matteo S
ALVINI
(241 632 votes).
f
) Nicola D
ANTI
incoming for 3.5 Roberto G
UALTIERI
(67 389 votes)
who had been incoming for 3.2 Pietro B
ARTOLO
(140 000 votes).
g
) Fulvio M
ARTUSCIELLO
incoming for 4.1 Silvio B
ERLUSCONI
(187 856 votes).
h
) Giuseppe M
ILAZZO
incoming for 5.1 Silvio B
ERLUSCONI
(90 770 votes).
i
) Pietro F
IOCCHI
incoming for 1.1 Giorgia M
ELONI
(92 857 votes).
k
) Sergio Antonio B
ERLATO
incoming for 2.1 Giorgia M
ELONI
(74 976 votes).
l
) Nicola P
ROCACCINI
incoming for 3.1 Giorgia M
ELONI
(130 143 votes).
m
) Raffaele F
ITTO
incoming for 4.1 Giorgia M
ELONI
(128 616 votes).
n
) Raffaele S
TANCANELLI
incoming for 5.1 Giorgia M
ELONI
(63 564 votes).
The three candidates who assumed office after the UK left the EU are Vincenzo S
OFO
(Italia
meridionale, Lega), Salvatore D
E
M
EO
(Italia centrale, Forza Italia) and Sergio Antonio B
ERLATO
(Italia
orientale, Fratelli d'Italia).
41
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3.17. LT – Republic of Lithuania
Lithuania is allocated a contingent of eleven seats. The Central Electoral Commission accepts
application documents 85 days before elections. Registration ends 65 days prior to the elections.
Sixteen parties and coalitions and 302 candidates contested the election. The ballot sheet shows the
names of all parties and of all candidates. Voters mark a party and may add up to five candidate
votes by writing the serial numbers of their preferred candidates into designated boxes.
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of votes cast. With a total of 1 332 020 ballots, the
threshold requires 66 601 votes. Seven parties pass the threshold and their 954 709 votes become
effective. If fewer than sixty per cent of votes cast (799 212) had become effective, the threshold
would have had to be lowered. This is not the case, whence the five per cent threshold persists.
EP2019LT-1
Table 3.17.1: Lithuania, base data.
11
2 490 542
1
5CV
1 332 020
16
66 601 (= 5% of votes cast)
7
954 709
HQ2grR
101 female + 201 male = 302
3 female + 8 male = 11
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Votes cast
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The apportionment of seats among parties uses the Hare-quota variant-2 method with fit by
greatest remainders (HQ2grR). To obtain variant-2 of the Hare-quota, the ratio of effective votes to
seats is rounded upwards to yield 86 792. That is, every 86 792 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.17.2: Lithuania, from votes to seats.
EP2019LT-2
TS-LKD
LSDP
LV�½S
DP
LRLS
VKM-AMT
KKŠS
Sum
Votes
248 736
200 105
158 190
113 243
83 083
82 005
69 347
954 709
Quotient
[Split]
2.9
2.3
1.8
1.3
1.0
0.9
0.8
[.5]
Seats
Political
(HQ2grR) Group
3
2
2
1
1
1
1
11
EPP
S&D
Greens/EFA
Renew Europe
Renew Europe
EPP
ECR
The assignment of seats to candidates is based solely on the candidates’ preference votes.
EP2019LT-3
Table 3.17.3: Lithuania, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
2. Juozas O
LEKAS
LV�½S
1. Bronis R
OPĖ
2.
a
Stasys J
AKELIŪNAS
DP
1. Viktor U
SPASKICH
62 418
LRLS
1. Petras A
UŠTREVIČIUS
VKM-AMT
1. Aušra M
ALDEIKIENĖ
KKŠS
1. Valdemar T
OMAŠEVSKI
TS-LKD
46 815
1. Andrius K
UBILIUS
112 375
56 649
2. Liudas M
A�½YLIS
111 100
30 760
47 714
3. Rasa J
UKNEVIČIENĖ
100 994
LSDP
37 676
29 142
1. Vilija B
LINKEVIČIŪTĖ
104 501
a
) Stasys J
AKELIŪNAS
incoming for Raimondas Šarūnas M
ARČIULIONIS
(33 377 candidate votes).
42
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2703145_0049.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.18. LU – Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
Luxembourg is allocated a contingent of six seats. Candidate lists are definitively adopted 72 days
before election day. Every party nominates a list of six candidates. Voters have up to six votes which
they may allocate to candidates of different lists (panachage), with at most two votes per candidate
(cumulation). Alternatively a voter may mark a party; then the mark is expanded into six votes, one
for each of the party’s six candidates. The number of valid votes is 1 256 624, originating from a total
of 218 177 valid ballots. Thus a ballot features 1 256 624 / 218 177 = 5.8 votes on average.
EP2019LU-1
Table 3.18.1: Luxembourg, base data.
6
285 435
1
6CV
none
10
1 256 624
DivDwn
30 female + 36 male = 66
3 female + 3 male = 6
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The apportionment of seats among the ten parties is proportional to the sum of the votes for the
parties’ candidates. There is no electoral threshold. The divisor method with downward rounding
(DivDwn) is applied. Every 130 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.18.2: Luxembourg, from votes to seats.
EP2019LU-2
DP
CSV
Déi gréng
LSAP
6 Others
Sum
Votes
269 259
265 105
237 615
153 396
331 349
1 256 624
Quotient
[Divisor]
2.1
2.04
1.8
1.2
[130 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
2
2
1
1
0
6
Renew Europe
EPP
Greens/EFA
S&D
The assignment of the seats of a party to its candidates follows the ranking by the candidates’ vote
tallies.
Table 3.18.3: Luxembourg, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019LU-3
Votes
97 548
50 954
62 732
49 582
55 465
39 152
DP
1. Charles G
OERENS
2. Monica S
EMEDO
CSV
1. Christophe H
ANSEN
2. Isabel W
ISELER
-L
IMA
Déi gréng
1. Tilly M
ETZ
LSAP
1. Nicolas S
CHMIT
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2703145_0050.png
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3.19. LV – Republic of Latvia
Latvia is allocated a contingent of eight seats. The last day for the submission of lists of candidates
is the sixty-fifth day before election day. The election was contested by 255 candidates from sixteen
parties. Every party or coalition has its own ballot paper. Voters cast one party vote. For every
candidate of the party of their choice, voters may express a preference (a 'plus') if they wish to
endorse the candidate, or a non-preference (a 'crossing-out') if they object to the candidate.
Altogether voters dealt out 7 736 112 pluses and crossings-out.
EP2019LV-1
Table 3.19.1: Latvia, base data.
8
1 414 712
1
mCV
473 260
16
23 663 (= 5% of votes cast)
6
397 949
DivStd
74 female + 181 male = 255
4 female + 4 male = 8
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Votes cast
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is a five per cent threshold relative to votes cast, 22 663, which is passed by six parties. The
seat apportionment among the six parties is carried out using the divisor method with standard
rounding (DivStd). Every 51 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.19.2: Latvia, from votes to seats.
EP2019LV-2
New Unity
Harmony
National Alliance
Development+For!
Latvian Russion Union
Union of Greens and Farmers
Sum
Votes
124 193
82 604
77 591
58 763
29 546
25 252
397 949
Quotient
[Divisor]
2.4
1.6
1.52
1.2
0.6
0.495
[51 000]
Seats
Political
(DivStd) Group
2
2
2
1
1
0
8
EPP
S&D
ECR
Renew Europe
Greens/EFA
The assignment of seats within a party follows the candidates’ ranking that is induced by their vote
balances. The vote balance of a candidate is the number of votes of the candidate’s party plus the
number of the candidate’s pluses minus the number of the candidate’s crossings-out.
EP2019LV-3
Table 3.19.3: Latvia, from seats to MEPs.
Vote Balance
National Alliance
New Unity
1. Roberts Z
ĪLE
130 604
1.
a
Inese V
AIDERE
33 817 2. Dace M
ELBĀRDE
85 364
2. Sandra K
ALNIETE
177 538 Development+For!
Harmony
1. Ivars I
JABS
90 716
1. Nils U
ŠAKOVS
149 931 Latvian Russion Union
2. Andris A
MERIKS
98 022 1. Tatjana �½
DANOKA
46 905
a
) Inese V
AIDERE
incoming for Valdis D
OMBROVSKIS
(vote balance 210 582).
44
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2703145_0051.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.20. MT – Republic of Malta
Malta is allocated a contingent of six seats. The nomination dates for the 2019 elections were 16, 17,
18, 20 and 22 April 2019. Of the forty-one candidates, thirty-six were affiliated with the eight
contesting parties, and five stood as independent candidates.
EP2019MT-1
Table 3.20.1: Malta, base data.
6
371 643
1
STV
260 212
8, plus 5 independent candidate
STVran
10 female + 31 male = 41
3 female + 3 male = 6
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
On the ballot sheet voters mark their preferences by writing 1 next to the candidate of their first
choice, 2 next to the candidate of their second choice, and so on. The ballots are evaluated using
the single transferable vote scheme with random transfers (STVran). The electoral key is given by
the Droop-quota which, up to rounding, is the quotient of vote total and seat total plus one, 37 174.
That is, every 37 174 votes justify one seat.
Two candidates win more first preferences than the quota demands, whence they are assigned the
first two seats. Their surplus votes are transferred to the remaining field and then lower ranked
candidates are eliminated, one by one. On counts 14 and 38 the next two candidates reach the quota
and are declared elected, on count 39 the last two. Four MEPs belong to the Partit Laburista (PL),
and the other two to Partit Nazzjonalista (PN).
Table 3.20.2: Malta, from votes to MEPs.
EP2019MT-2
1. Miriam D
ALLI
2. Roberta M
ETSOLA
3. Alfred S
ANT
4. David C
ASA
5. Alex A
GIUS
S
ALIBA
6. Josianne C
UTAJAR
35 further candidates
Sum
Party
PL
PN
PL
PN
PL
PL
1st Preference
Votes (STVran)
63 438
38 206
26 592
20 493
18 808
15 603
77 072
260 212
Political
Group
S&D
EPP
S&D
EPP
S&D
S&D
As in Section 3.15 proportionality may be appraised by assuming that a first preference vote for a
candidate can be taken to be a vote for the candidate’s party. The first preferences for all candidates
of PL sum to 141 267, the corresponding sum for PN is 98 611. The proportional share of six seats
justifies four seats for PL and two seats for PN, just as is. If seats had been assigned to candidates
according to the rank-order that results from their first preference tallies, the same six candidates
would have been elected.
45
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2703145_0052.png
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3.21. NL – Kingdom of the Netherlands
The Netherlands have twenty-six seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by three seats.
Nominations of candidates must be filed by the forty-third day before polling day. Sixteen parties
contested the election, with a total of 316 candidates. The ballot sheet shows all parties with all of
their candidates. Every voter marks one candidate of the party of his or her choice. Other than in
2009 and 2014, the 2019 election did not feature any list alliances.
EP2019NL-1
Table 3.21.1: Netherlands, base data.
26 + 3
13 164 688
1
LV1
5 497 813
16
(= 5% of votes cast)
9
4 923 208
DivDwn
Quorum bypass rule
122 female + 194 male = 316
13 female + 13 male = 26
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
An electoral threshold is looming in the depth of the provisions. For a party to be awarded at least
one seat, its vote count must exceed a number which the provisions refer to as the electoral divisor.
The electoral divisor is the quotient of valid votes and seats: 5 497 813 / 26 = 211 455. Relative to the
5 519 776 votes cast the threshold amounts to 211 455 / 5 519 776 = 3.8 per cent and stays below
the five per cent ceiling. Nine parties pass the threshold and enter the apportionment stage, as far
as the 26 seats are concerned before the UK leaves the EU. The divisor method with downward
rounding is used (DivDwn). Every 164 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.21.2: Netherlands, from votes to seats.
EP2019NL-2
P.v.d.A.
VVD
CDA
Forum voor Democratie
GroenLinks
D66
ChristenUnie – SGP
Partij voor de Dieren
50Plus
PVV
Sum
Votes
1 045 274
805 100
669 555
602 507
599 283
389 692
375 660
220 938
215 199
194 178
4 923 208
Quotient
[Divisor]
6.4
4.9
4.1
3.7
3.7
2.4
2.3
1.3
1.3
[164 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
6
4 +1
4
3 +1
3
2
2
1
1
0 +1
26+3
S&D
Renew Europe
EPP
ECR
Greens/EFA
Renew Europe
(see Table 3.21.3)
GUE/NGL
EPP
With 29 seats after the UK left the EU, the threshold drops to 5 497 813 / 29 = 189 580. A tenth party
would be admitted into the seat apportionment calculations (PVV). Every 150 000 votes would
justify roughly one seat. The three added seats benefit PVV, VVD, and FvD.
However, the official Proces-verbaal of final results was restricted to the apportionment of the 26
seats while the UK was a member of the EU. If the apportionment of the 29 seats after resignation of
the UK were limited to the initial nine parties, the PVV seat would be allotted to GroenLinks.
46
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2703145_0053.png
The European Elections of May 2019
The assignment of seats to candidates makes use of a quorum bypass rule. A candidate whose
preference votes tally meets or exceeds one tenth of the electoral divisor is exempt from the
preordained rank-order on the submitted list and moves to the top. Hence all candidates are subject
to the uniform bypass hurdle 21 146, no matter whether their party is stronger or weaker.
47
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2703145_0054.png
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Table 3.21.3: Netherlands, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019NL-3
List
Place
Candidate
Votes
P.v.d.A.
1. Lara W
OLTERS
2. Agnes J
ONGERIUS
3. Kati P
IRI
4. Paul T
ANG
5. Vera T
AX
6. Mohammed C
HAHIM
VVD
a
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
7
2
4
3
5
6
21 146)
4 888
109 987
29 475
8 497
12 760
2 825
(Bypass hurdle:
1. Malik A
ZMANI
1
365 155
2. Caroline N
AGTEGAAL
3
163 279
3. Jan H
UITEMA
2
115 738
4. Liesje S
CHREINEMACHER
5
37 519
+5. Bart G
ROOTHUIS
4
21 353
CDA
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Esther de L
ANGE
1
402 975
2. Annie S
CHREIJER
-P
IERIK
4
113 914
3. Jeroen L
ENAERS
2
50 121
4. Tom B
ERENDSEN
3
28 579
Forum voor Democratie
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Derk Jan E
PPINK
1
339 988
b
2. Rob R
OOKEN
3
10 143
3. Robert R
OOS
2
41 323
+4. Dorien R
OOKMAKER
4
15 403
GroenLinks
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Bas E
ICKHOUT
1
263 034
2. Tineke S
TRIK
2
149 628
3. Kim
VAN
S
PARRENTAK
7
32 505
D66
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Sophie in 't V
ELD
1
248 383
2. Samira R
AFAELA
3
32 510
ChristenUnie-SGP
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Peter van D
ALEN
EPP
1
240 459
2. Bert-Jan R
UISSEN
ECR
2
44 416
Partij voor de Dieren
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Anja H
AZEKAMP
1
136 224
50Plus
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
1. Antonius M
ANDERS
1
127 228
Partij voor de Vrijheid
(Bypass hurdle:
21 146)
+1. Geert W
ILDERS
10
83 448
a
) Lara W
OLTERS
incoming for Frans T
IMMERMANNS
(839 240 candidate votes).
b
) Rob R
OOKEN
incoming for Thierry B
AUDET
(164 711 candidate votes).
48
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2703145_0055.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.22. PL – Republic of Poland
Poland has a contingent of fifty-one seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one seat.
Candidate lists in a given region had to be submitted to the constituency electoral commission no
later than 16 April 2019. Nine parties contested the election, with a total of 868 candidates. Thirty-
five per cent of the candidates of a party must be female. Every party has its own ballot paper
exhibiting all nominees. The ballot papers are collated into a booklet, one within each of the thirteen
electoral districts into which the country is subdivided. Voters have a single vote to mark a candidate
of the party of their choice. The votes of a party are obtained by aggregating the votes for the party’s
candidates.
EP2019PL-1
Table 3.22.1: Poland, base data.
51 + 1
30 118 852
13
1CV
13 647 311
9
682 366 (= 5% of valid votes)
3
12 269 690
DivDwn, HaQgrR
406 female + 462 male = 868
18 female + 33 male = 51
Seat contingent
Electorate
Electoral districts
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of the valid votes (682 366). It leaves but three lists.
We refer to the state-wide apportionment of seats among parties as the super-apportionment. The
super-apportionment uses the divisor method with downward rounding (DivDwn). Every 230 000
votes justify roughly one seat. After the UK leaves the EU the key drops to 229 000 votes, with the
additional seat going to PiS.
Since parties nominate their candidates separately by district, the overall seats of a party must be
sub-apportioned among the thirteen districts. This calls for three sub-apportionment calculations,
one for each party. They are carried out using the Hare-quota method with fit by greatest remainders
(HaQgrR).
14
Repeated applications of the method may exhibit strange effects. When more seats become
available, such as when the overall seats of PiS grow from 26 to 27, possibly some seats are
retracted.
15
To avoid this problem the method is applied just once during the PiS sub-
apportionment, to the 27 seats after the UK leaves the EU. Of these 27 MEPs the one with the fewest
candidate votes had to wait for the UK to leave the EU before assuming office.
14
The apportionment method HaQgrR is unbiased, i.e. on average no participant is favored nor disadvantaged. Unbias-
ed methods (HaQgrR, DivStd) are preferred for the apportionment of seats among several district-lists of a party. The
method DivDwn is biased, in that on average it favors stronger participants at the expense of weaker participants.
This direction of bias is attractive to many experts as far as the apportionment of seats among political parties is
concerned. For more on the concept of bias see Pukelsheim (2017):
Proportional Representation
(op.cit.), Chap. 7.
These effects are paraphrased to be an instance of the Alabama paradox. Quota methods are susceptible to the
paradox, divisor methods are immune against it. See also the note in Section 3.15.
15
49
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2703145_0056.png
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Table 3.22.2: Poland, from votes to seats.
EP2019PL-2
PiS
Coal. KE
Wiosna
Sum
District
1. Gdańsk
2. Bydgoszcz
3. Olsztyn
4. Warszawa 1
5. Warszawa 2
6. Łódź
7. Poznań
8. Lublin
9. Rzeszów
10. Kraków
11. Katowice
12. Wrocław
13. Gorzów
Wielkopolskim
Sum
Votes
Votes
6 192 780
5 249 935
826 975
12 269 690
Quotient
[Divisor]
26.9
22.8
3.6
[230 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
26 +1
22
3
51+1
ECR
(see Table 3.22.3.)
S&D
Quotient
Seats
Quotient
Seats
Quotient
Seats
Votes
Votes
[Split]
(HaQgrR)
[Split]
(HaQgrR)
[Split] (HaQgrR)
PiS sub-apportionment
Coal. KE sub-apportionment
Wiosna sub-apportionment
285 740
1.25
1
419 182
1.8
2
50 862
0.2
0
260 408
1.1
1
305 362
1.3
1
39 412
0.1
0
375 001
1.6
2
293 677
1.2
1
45 424
0.2
0
447 770
1.95
2
625 719
2.6
3
142 443
0.5
1
512 158
2.2
2
227 106
1.0
1
33 302
0.1
0
426 046
1.9
2
347 620
1.46
1
50 696
0.2
0
460 432
2.007
2
518 706
2.2
2
93 504
0.34
1
436 139
1.9
2
208 392
0.9
1
22 692
0.1
0
485 779
2.1
2
160 988
0.7
1
22 881
0.1
0
980 816
4.28
4
505 400
2.1
2
78 568
0.3
0
691 641
3.02
3
643 567
2.7
3
93 120
0.34
1
506 921
2.2
2
574 397
2.4
2
88 515
0.32
0
323 929
6 192 780
1.4
[.3]
2
27
419 819
5 249 935
1.8
[.5]
2
22
65 556
826 975
0.2
[.33]
0
3
50
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2703145_0057.png
The European Elections of May 2019
Within a party and district, the assignment of seats follows the candidates' vote tallies.
EP2019PL-3
PiS
1.1. Anna F
OTYGA
2.1. Kosma Z
ŁOTOWSK
3.1. Karol K
ARSKI
3.2. Krzysztof J
URGIEL
4.1. Jacek S
ARYUSZ
-W
OLSKI
4.2. Ryszard C
ZARNECKI
5.1. Adam B
IELAN
5.2. Zbigniew K
UŹMIUK
6.1. Witold Jan W
ASZCZYKOWSKI
6.2. Joanna K
OPCIŃSKA
7.1. Zdzisław K
RASNODĘBSKI
7.2. Andżelika Anna M
OŻDŻANOWSKA
8.1. Beata M
AZUREK
8.2. Elżbieta K
RUK
9.1. Tomasz Piotr P
ORĘBA
9.2. Bogdan R
ZOŃCA
10.1. Beata S
ZYDŁO
10.2. Patryk J
AKI
10.3. Ryszard Antoni L
EGUTKO
+10.4. Dominik T
ARCZYŃSKI
11.1. Jadwiga W
IŚNIEWSKA
11.2. Izabela-Helena K
LOC
11.3. Grzegorz T
OBISZOWSKI
12.1. Beata K
EMPA
12.2. Anna Z
ALEWSKA
13.1. Joachim Stanisław B
RUDZIŃSKI
Table 3.22.3: Poland, from seats to MEPs.
Votes
160 51
7
107 11
3
184 05
4
104 59
2
186 85
1
134 62
9
207 84
5
134 40
5
168 02
1
130 35
8
164 03
4
76 953
204 69
3
164 10
8
276 01
4
64 113
525 81
1
258 36
6
65 710
41 912
409 37
3
78 352
65 007
209 30
5
168 33
7
185 16
8
13.2. Elżbieta R
AFALSKA
Coalition KE
1.1. Magdalena A
DAMOWICZ
EPP
1.2. Janusz L
EWANDOWSKI
2.1. Radosław S
IKORSKI
3.1. Tomasz F
RANKOWSKI
4.1. Włodzimierz C
IMOSZEWICZ
4.2. Danuta Maria H
ÜBNER
4.3. Andrzej H
ALICKI
EPP
5.1. Jarosław K
ALINOWSKI
6.1. Marek B
ELKA
7.1. Ewa K
OPACZ
EPP
7.2. Leszek M
ILLER
S&D
8.1. Krzysztof H
ETMAN
9.1. Elżbieta Katarzyna Ł
UKACIJEWSKA
10.1. Róża T
HUN UND
H
OHENSTEIN
10.2. Adam J
ARUBAS
EPP
11.1. Jerzy B
UZEK
EPP
11.2. Jan O
LBRYCHT
EPP
11.3. Marek Paweł B
ALT
S&D
12.1. Janina O
CHOJSKA
EPP
12.2. Jarosław D
UDA
EPP
13.1. Bartosz A
RŁUKOWICZ
13.2. Bogusław L
IBERADZKI
Wiosna
4.1. Robert B
IEDROŃ
7.1. Sylwia S
PUREK
11.1. Łukasz K
OHUT
70 916
199 591
EPP
EPP
EPP
S&D
EPP
120 990
129 339
125 845
219 677
146 746
87 422
EPP
S&D
104 216
182 517
252 032
79 380
EPP
EPP
EPP
105 908
40 737
221 279
138 854
422 445
69 009
45 043
307 227
77 611
EPP
S&D
239 893
99 897
96 388
55 306
48 783
51
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3.23. PT – Portuguese Republic
Portugal is allocated a contingent of twenty-one seats. Political parties had to register their lists of
nominees with the Constitutional Court until 41 days before election day. Voters cast a single vote
for a closed list of a party. Ballot sheets impress by their heavy party emphasis. For every party they
give the full name, plus the party acronym, plus the party emblem. Names of candidates do not
appear on the ballot sheet.
EP2019PT-1
Table 3.23.1: Portugal, base data.
21
10 757 192
1
LV0
none
17
3 078 901
DivDwn
218 female + 272 male = 490
10 female + 11 male = 21
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is no electoral threshold. The apportionment of seats among parties uses the divisor method
with downward rounding (DivDwn). Every 112 000 votes justify roughly one seat. Of the seventeen
parties eleven fail to win a seat.
Table 3.23.2: Portugal, from votes to seats.
EP2019PT-2
PS
PSD
B.E.
CDU (PCP + PEV)
CDS-PP
PAN
11 Others
Sum
Votes
1 104 694
725 399
325 093
228 045
204 792
168 015
322 863
3 078 901
Quotient
[Divisor]
9.9
6.5
2.9
2.04
1.8
1.5
[112 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
9
6
2
2
1
1
0
21
S&D
EPP
GUE/NGL
GUE/NGL
EPP
Greens/EFA
The assignment of seats to candidates follows the list order, as is characteristic of closed list systems.
EP2019PT-3
Table 3.23.3: Portugal, from seats to MEPs.
6. Sara C
ERDAS
3. José Manuel F
ERNANDES
CDU (PCP + PEV)
1. João F
ERREIRA
2. Sandra P
EREIRA
CDS-PP
1. Nuno M
ELO
PAN
1. Francisco G
UERREIRO
7. Carlos Z
ORRINHO
4. Maria Da Graça C
ARVALHO
8. Isabel S
ANTOS
5. Álvaro A
MARO
9. Manuel P
IZARRO
6. Cláudia M
ONTEIRO DE
A
GUIAR
PSD
B.E.
1. Paulo R
ANGEL
1. Marisa M
ATIAS
2. Lidia P
EREIRA
2. José G
USMÃO
C
ARVALHAIS
incoming for André B
RADFORD
(list place 5).
PS
1. Pedro M
ARQUES
2. Maria Manuel L
EITÃO
M
ARQUES
3. Pedro S
ILVA
P
EREIRA
4. Margarida M
ARQUES
10.
a
Isabel C
ARVALHAIS
a
) Isabel
52
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2703145_0059.png
The European Elections of May 2019
3.24. RO – Romania
Romania has a seat contingent of thirty-two seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one
seat. The law stipulates that no list of nominees of a party may consist of male candidates only.
Candidates' proposals had to be submitted to the constituency offices at the latest 40 days before
the election date. Every voter receives a stamp and a ballot booklet with the lists of candidates of all
parties. Voters print the stamp next to the party of their choice.
EP2019RO-1
Table 3.24.1: Romania, base data.
32 + 1
18 267 256
1
LV0
9 352 472
13, plus 3 independent candidates
467 624 (= 5% of valid votes for parties only)
6
8 100 866
DivDwn
150 female + 334 male = 484
7 female + 25 male = 32
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
For parties there is a threshold of five per cent of the valid votes: 5% of 9 352 472 = 467 624. For
independent candidates the threshold is equal to the ratio of valid votes to seats: 9 352 472 / 32 =
292 265. Seven parties and all independent candidates fail their threshold. This leaves six parties to
participate in the seat apportionment process. The divisor method with downward rounding is used
(DivDwn). After the UK left the EU the thirty-third seat is allotted to PSD (divisor 226 000).
Table 3.24.2: Romania, from votes to seats.
EP2019RO-2
PNL
PSD
2020 USR Plus
PPR
PMP
UDMR
Sum
Votes
2 449 068
2 040 765
2 028 236
583 916
522 104
476 777
8 100 866
Quotient
[Divisor]
10.6
8.9
8.8
2.5
2.3
2.1
[230 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
10
8+1
8
2
2
2
32+1
EPP
S&D
Renew Europe
S&D
EPP
EPP
The assignment of seats to candidates follows the prespecified rank-order of the party-lists.
EP2019RO-3
Table 3.24.3: Romania, from seats to MEPs.
8. Ramona S
TRUGARIU
PPR
3.
a
Mihai T
UDOSE
2. Corina C
REȚU
PMP
1. Traian B
ĂSESCU
2. Eugen T
OMAC
UDMR
1. Iuliu W
INKLER
2. Loránt V
INCZE
9. Cristian-Silviu B
UŞOI
8. Adrian-Dragoș B
ENEA
PNL
10. Marian-Jean M
ARINESCU
+9. Victor N
EGRESCU
1. Ioan-Rareș B
OGDAN
PSD
2020 USR PLUS
2. Mircea-Gheorghe H
AVA
1. Rovana P
LUMB
1. Dacian C
IOLOȘ
3. Siegfried M
UREŞAN
2. Carmen A
VRAM
2. Cristian G
HINEA
4. Vasile B
LAGA
3. Claudiu M
ANDA
3. Dragoş P
ÎSLARU
5. Adina-Loana V
ĂLEAN
4. Cristian T
ERHEŞ
4. Clotilde A
RMAND
6. Daniel B
UDA
5. Dan N
ICA
5. Dragoş T
UDORACHE
7. Dan-Ştefan M
OTREANU
6. Maria G
RAPINI
6. Nicolae Ş
TEFĂNUŢĂ
8. Gheorghe F
ALCĂ
7. Tudor C
IUHODARU
7. Vlad-Marius B
OTOS
a
) Mihai T
UDOSE
incoming for Victor P
ONTA
(list place 1).
53
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3.25. SE – Kingdom of Sweden
Sweden has a seat contingent of twenty seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one seat.
The Election Authority must have received parties’ notification no later than 30 days before election
day. Eleven parties contested the election, with a total of 574 candidates. Every party has its own
ballot paper. Voters cast a party vote, and may adjoin one preference vote for one of the party’s
candidate.
EP2019SE-1
Table 3.25.1: Sweden, base data.
20 + 1
7 576 917
1
LV1
4 151 470
11
166 059 (= 4% of valid votes)
8
4 047 710
Div0.6
5% bypass rule
237 female + 337 male = 574
11 female + 9 male = 20
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
The electoral threshold is four per cent of the valid votes (166 059), it was passed by eight parties.
The apportionment of seats among parties uses Div0.6, the Swedish modification of the divisor
method with standard rounding (DivStd). The modification differs from DivStd for a quotient smaller
than one, by rounding it upwards only when larger than 0.6 (not just larger than 0.5 as with DivStd).
With the 2019 data the party with the fewest votes has quotient 0.9, which is rounded upwards by
both methods, Div0.6 and DivStd. Every 195 000 votes justify roughly one seat. After the UK leaves
the EU, with key 190 000, the additional seat is allotted to MP.
Table 3.25.2: Sweden, from votes to seats.
EP2019SE-2
S
M
SD
MP
C
KD
V
L(FP)
Sum
Votes
974 589
698 770
636 877
478 258
447 641
357 856
282 300
171 419
4 047 710
Quotient
[Divisor]
5.0
3.6
3.3
2.45
2.3
1.8
1.4
0.9
[195 000]
Seats Political
(Div0.6) Group
5
4
3
2 +1
2
2
1
1
20+1
S&D
EPP
ECR
Greens/EFA
Renew Europe
EPP
GUE/NGL
Renew Europe
Preference votes are incorporated through a five per cent bypass rule. That is, when the preference
vote tally of a candidate meets or exceeds five per cent of the number of votes for his or her party,
the candidate takes precedence in the seat assignment stage. These candidates are elected in order
of their personal vote tallies, while their list places are ignored.
For candidates below the bypass hurdle, preference votes are ignored; they are elected in the rank-
order of their list places.
16
With the data at hand candidates who overcome the bypass hurdle finish
16
Domestic provisions assign seats to candidates below the bypass hurdle in a more elaborate way, see, e.g., Svante
Janson (2016): Phragmén's and Thiele's election methods,
arxiv.org/abs/1611.08826,
or Rosa Camps, Xavier Mora and
54
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The European Elections of May 2019
in a sequence identical to their list places. Hence, retrospectively, incorporation of preference votes
is concordant with the preordained rank-order of the party-lists; party-lists prevail as is.
Table 3.25.3: Sweden, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019SE-3
S
List
Plac
e
Preferenc
e
Votes
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 974 589 =
48 730)
1. Heléne F
RITZON
1
73 929
2. Johan D
ANIELSSON
2
40 136
3. Jytte G
UTELAND
3
42 617
4. Erik B
ERGKVIST
4
17 117
5. Evin I
NCIR
5
9 479
M
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 698 770 =
34 939)
1. Tomas T
OBÉ
1
150 726
2. Jessica P
OLFJÄRD
2
17 945
3. Jörgen W
ARBORN
3
13 503
4. Arba K
OKALARI
4
10 284
SD
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 636 877 =
31 844)
1. Peter L
UNDGREN
1
87 384
2. Jessica S
TEGRUD
2
41 202
3. Charlie W
EIMERS
3
30 668
MP (Bypass hurdle: 5% of 478 258 =
23 913)
1. Alice Bah K
UHNKE
1
141 106
2. Pär H
OLMGREN
2
73 120
+3. Jakop D
ALUNDE
3
12 098
C
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 447 641 =
22 383)
1. Fredrick F
EDERLEY
1
108 240
2. Abir A
L
-S
AHLANI
2
6 352
KD
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 357 856 =
17 893)
1. Sara S
KYTTEDAL
1
74 325
2. David L
EGA
2
27 862
V
(Bypass hurdle: 5% of 282 300 =
14 115)
1. Malin B
JÖRK
1
63 264
L(FP) (Bypass hurdle: 5% of 171 419 =
8 571)
1. Karin K
ARLSBRO
1
15 826
Laia Saumell (2019): The method of Eneström and Phragmén for parliamentary elections by means of approval voting,
arxiv.org/abs/1907.10590.
For the present data the results agree with the rank-orders of the party-lists.
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3.26. SI – Republic of Slovenia
Slovenia is allocated a contingent of eight seats. Lists of candidates had to be submitted to the
National Electoral Commission no later than thirty days before election day. Fourteen parties
contested the election, with a total of 103 candidates. Every party-list is obliged to include at least
forty per cent female candidates. There is a single ballot paper showing all parties and all candidates.
Voters circle a party’s serial number, and may add one preference vote for a specific candidate. In
2019 the ballot paper had grown to A2 size.
EP2019SI-1
Table 3.26.1: Slovenia, base data.
8
1 704 866
1
LV1
482 075
14
19 283 (= 4% of valid votes)
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Valid votes
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
8
441 550
DivDwn
Quorum bypass rule
51 female + 52 male = 103
4 female + 4 male = 8
There is an electoral threshold of four per cent of valid votes, 19 283. The threshold removes six
parties, leaving eight apportionment parties. The apportionment of seats among parties uses the
divisor method with downward rounding (DivDwn). Every 34 000 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.26.2: Slovenia, from votes to seats.
EP2019SI-2
SDS+SLS
SD
LMŠ
NSi
4 Others
Sum
Votes
126 534
89 936
74 431
53 621
97 028
441 550
Quotient
[Divisor]
3.7
2.6
2.2
1.6
[34 000]
Seats
Political
(DivDwn) Group
3
2
2
1
0
8
EPP
S&D
Renew Europe
EPP
For assigning seats to candidates, preference votes may overrule the rank-order of the
corresponding party-list by way of a quorum bypass rule. The quorum is one half of the quotient of
the party’s vote count and the number of its list candidates. All four parties that are apportioned one
or more seats nominate eight candidates. Hence the quorum requires one half of one eighth of the
party’s vote count, 1/16 = 6.25%, which constitutes a rather low hurdle. Indeed, all MEPs are elected
through their preference vote tallies.
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The European Elections of May 2019
Table 3.26.3: Slovenia, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019SI-3
List
Place
Preference
Votes
SDS+SLS
(Bypass hurdle: �½·126 534/8 = 7 908)
1. Romana T
OMC
2
40 668
2. Milan Z
VER
1
26 674
3. Franc B
OGOVIČ
4
13 743
SD
(Bypass hurdle: �½·89 936/8 =
5 621)
1. Tanja F
AJON
1
54 651
2. Milan B
RGLEZ
4
7 152
LMŠ
(Bypass hurdle: �½·74 431/8 =
4 652)
1. Irena J
OVEVA
1
42 190
2. Klemen G
ROŠELJ
2
6 494
NSi
(Bypass hurdle: �½·53 621/8 =
3 351)
1. Ljudmila N
OVAK
1
19 558
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3.27. SK – Slovak Republic
Slovakia has a seat contingent of thirteen seats which, after the UK left the EU, was raised by one
seat. Candidates must register not later than 45 days before polling day. Every party has its own
ballot paper. Voters cast a list vote for a party, and may circle the serial number of up to two
candidates to express their preferences for specific candidates.
EP2019SK-1
Table 3.27.1: Slovakia, base data.
13 + 1
4 429 801
1
LV2
1 006 351
31
50 318 (= 5% of valid cast)
6
714 507
DQ3grR
Quorum bypass rule
74 female + 275 male = 349
2 female + 11 male = 13
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Votes cast
Parties admitted
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Preference vote hurdle
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
There is an electoral threshold of five per cent of the valid votes (50 318). Six parties pass the
threshold, with a total of 714 507 effective votes. The apportionment of the fourteen seats after the
UK leaves the EU uses the Droop-quota variant-3 method with fit by greatest remainders. Variant-3
of the Droop-quota is the standard rounding of the quotient of effective votes and seat total plus
one, 714 507 / 15 = 47 634. That is, every 47 634 votes justify roughly one seat.
Table 3.27.2: Slovakia, from votes to seats.
EP2019SK-2
Coal. PS + SPOLU
SMER-SD
SNS
KDH
SaS
OL'ANO
Sum
Votes
198 255
154 996
118 995
95 588
94 839
51 834
714 507
Quotient
[Split]
4.2
3.3
2.498
2.007
1.991
1.1
[.5]
Seats
Political
(DQ3grR) Group
4
3
2
2
2
1
14
(see Table 3.27.3)
S&D
NI
EPP
ECR
EPP
The assignment of seats to candidates is dominated by preference votes. A quorum bypass rule is
employed, where the quorum is three per cent of the party’s vote total.
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The European Elections of May 2019
Table 3.27.3: Slovakia, from seats to MEPs.
EP2019SK-3
Coal. PS + SPOLU
1. Michal Š
IMEČKA
2. Michal W
IEZIK
EPP
3. Martin H
OJSÍK
4. Vladimír B
ILČÍK
EPP
SMER-SD
List
Plac
e
Candidat
e
Votes
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 198 255 =
5 948)
Renew Europe
1
81 735
7
Renew Europe
6
2
29 998
27 549
26 202
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 154 996 =
4 650)
1. Monika B
EŇOVÁ
1
89 472
2. Miroslav Č
Í�½
2
51 362
3. Robert H
AJŠEL
3
13 773
SNS
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 118 995 =
3 570)
1. Milan U
HRÍK
14
42 779
2. Miroslav R
ADAČOVSKÝ
3
42 276
KDH
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 95 588 =
2 868)
1. Ivan Š
TEFANEC
1
33 128
+2. Miriam L
EXMANN
2
27 833
SaS
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 94 839 =
2 846)
1. Lucia Ď
URIŠ
N
ICHOLSONOVÁ
3
52 331
2. Eugen J
URZYCA
1
33 540
OL'ANO
(Bypas hurdle: 3% of 51 834 =
1 556)
1. Peter P
OLLÁK
3
23 815
According to domestic provisions the party whose quotient has the smallest remainder (KDH, with
remainder .007) had to wait until after the UK left the EU before seating its last candidate (Miriam
Lexmann).
The provision caused a discordant apportionment of the thirteen seats while the UK was in the EU.
KDH attracts more votes than SaS (95 588 versus 94 839), but is allotted fewer seats (one versus two).
The discordance would have been avoided if the domestic provisions had targeted the party with
the smallest remainder not of
all
quotients, but only of those that are rounded upwards (SaS, with
remainder .991).
59
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3.28. UK – United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
The United Kingdom was allocated a contingent of seventy-three seats which, after the UK left the
EU, were vacated. Registration of parties and candidates had to be submitted by the nineteenth
working day before election day.
EP2019UK-1
Table 3.28.1: United Kingdom, base data.
73
46 534 897
12
LV0, STV
none
23, plus 24 independent candidates
17 190 12
DivDwn, STVfra
239 + 364 = 603
34 female, 39 male = 73
Seat contingent
Electorate
Constituencies
Vote pattern
Electoral threshold
Apportionment parties
Effective votes
Apportionment method
Candidates admitted
MEPs gender
Domestic provisions establish twelve constituencies to which the seats are passed on as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
East Midlands – 5 seats,
East of England – 7 seats,
London – 8 seats,
North East England – 3 seats,
North West England – 8 seats,
South East England – 10 seats,
South West England and Gibraltar – 6 seats,
West Midlands – 7 seats,
Yorkshire and the Humber – 6 seats,
Wales – 4 seats,
Scotland – 6 seats,
Northern Ireland – 3 seats.
In all constituencies except the last, Northern Ireland, parties register closed lists, and voters cast a
single list vote. The results are evaluated using the divisor method with downward rounding
(DivDwn), separately in every constituency. Therefore the electoral key varies from constituency to
constituency. In Constituency 3, London, every 200 000 votes justify roughly one seat, in
Constituency 4, North East England, it is every 110 000 votes.
The Northern Ireland constituency employs a single transferable vote scheme with fractional vote
transfers (STVfra). Voters express their preferences by writing 1 next to the candidate of their first
choice, 2 next to the candidate of their second choice, and so on. The quorum that is needed to be
assigned a seat is the Droop-quota, 572 447 / 4 = 143 112 votes. No candidate reaches the quorum
with their first preferences. Hence lower ranked candidates are successively eliminated and their
votes are transferred to the remaining candidates. In count 3, Diane D
ODDS
is first to be assigned a
seat, followed in count 5 by Naomi L
ONG
and Martina A
NDERSON
.
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The European Elections of May 2019
EP2019UK-2
Brexit
LibDem
Labour
Green
Conservative
4 Others
Sum
Quotien Seats
Votes
t
(DivDwn
[Divisor]
)
Table 3.28.2: United Kingdom, from votes to seats.
Votes
Brexit
LibDem
Labour
Green
Conservative
4 Others
Sum
Quotient
[Divisor]
Seats
(DivDwn
)
1. East Midlands
452 321
3.2
3
203 989
1.5
1
164 682
1.2
1
124 630
0.9
0
126 138
0.9
0
111 467
0
1 183 227 [140 000]
5
3. London
Brexit
400 257
2.001
2
LibDem
608 725
3.04
3
Labour
536 810
2.7
2
Green
278 957
1.4
1
Conservative
177 964
0.9
0
11 Others
238 968
0
Sum
2 241 681 [200 000]
8
5. North West England
Brexit
541 843
3.9
3
LibDem
297 507
2.1
2
Labour
380 193
2.7
2
Green
216 581
1.5
1
Conservative
131 002
0.9
0
9 Others
167 781
0
Sum
1 734 907 [140 000]
8
7. South West England and Gibraltar
Brexit
611 742
3.6
3
LibDem
385 095
2.3
2
Labour
108 100
0.6
0
Green
302 364
1.8
1
Conservative
144 674
0.9
0
6 Others
114 654
0
Sum
1 666 629 [170 000]
6
9. Yorkshire and the Humber
Brexit
470 351
3.4
3
LibDem
200 180
1.4
1
Labour
210 516
1.5
1
Green
166 980
1.2
1
Conservative
92 863
0.7
0
4 Others
148 387
0
Sum
Brexit
LibDem
Labour
SNP
Conservative
Scottish Grn
4 Others
Sum
1 289 277 [140 000]
11. Scotland
233 006
1.4
218 285
1.3
146 724
0.9
594 553
3.5
182 476
1.1
129 603
0.8
66 599
1 571 246 [170 000]
6
1
1
0
3
1
0
6
2. East of England
604 715
3.8
3
361 563
2.3
2
139 490
0.9
0
202 460
1.3
1
163 830
1.02
1
116 808
0
1 588 866 [160 000]
7
4. North East England
Brexit
240 056
2.2
2
LibDem
104 330
0.9
0
Labour
119 931
1.1
1
Green
49 905
0.5
0
Conservative
42 395
0.4
0
2 Others
63 237
0
Sum
619 854 [110 000]
3
6. South East England
Brexit
915 686
4.98
4
LibDem
653 743
3.6
3
Labour
184 678
1.004
1
Green
343 249
1.9
1
Conservative
260 277
1.4
1
7 Others
181 312
0
Sum
2 538 945 [184 000]
10
8: West Midlands
Brexit
507 152
3.9
3
LibDem
219 982
1.7
1
Labour
228 298
1.8
1
Green
143 520
1.1
1
Conservative
135 279
1.04
1
2 Others
112 607
0
Sum
1 346 838 [130 000]
7
10. Wales
Brexit
271 404
2.3
2
LibDem
113 885
0.9
0
Labour
127 833
1.1
1
Green
52 660
0.4
0
Conservative
54 587
0.5
0
Plaid Cymru
163 928
1.4
1
2 Others
51 898
0
Sum
836 195 [120 000]
4
12. Northern Ireland (1st preference votes, STVfra)
1. Diane D
ODDS
DUP
124 991
APNI
105 928
2. Naomi L
ONG
3. Martina A
NDERSON
SF
126 951
SDLP
78 589
Colum E
ASTWOOD
Jim A
LLISTER
TUV
62 021
Danny K
ENNEDY
UUP
53 052
5 Others
20 915
Sum
572 447
All in all, the Brexit Party (Political Group NI) finishes with twenty-nine seats, the Liberal Democrats
(Renew Europe) with sixteen, the Labour Party (S&D) with ten, the Green Party of England and Wales
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(Greens/EFA) with seven, the Conservative Party (ECR) with four, the Scottish National Party
(Greens/EFA) with three, and Plaid Cymru (Greens/EFA), Sinn Féin (GUE/NGL), the Democratic
Unionist Party (NI) and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (Renew Europe) with one seat each.
Seats are assigned to candidates in the rank-order of the party-lists of their constituencies, with the
exception of Northern Ireland where seats are assigned according to the STV scheme.
EP2019UK-3
Table 3.28.3: United Kingdom, from seats to MEPs.
7.3. Christina J
ORDAN
8.1. Rupert L
OWE
8.2. Martin D
AUBNEY
8.3. Andrew E
NGLAND
K
ERR
9.1. John L
ONGWORTH
9.2. Lucy H
ARRIS
9.3. Jake P
UGH
10.1. Nathan G
ILL
10.2. James W
ELLS
12.1. Louis S
TEDMAN
-B
RYCE
LibDem
1.1. Bill N
EWTON
D
UNN
2.1. Barbara G
IBSON
2.2. Lucy N
ETHSINGHA
3.1. Irina V
ON
W
IESE
3.2. Dinesh D
HAMIJA
3.3. Luisa P
ORRITT
5.1. Chris D
AVIES
5.2. Jane B
ROPHY
6.1. Catherine B
EARDER
6.2. Antony H
OOK
6.3. Judith B
UNTING
7.1. Caroline V
OADEN
7.2. Martin H
ORWOOD
8.1. Phil B
ENNION
9.1. Shaffaq M
OHAMMED
12.1. Sheila R
ITCHIE
Labour
1.1. Rory P
ALMER
3.1. Claude M
ORAES
3.2. Seb D
ANCE
4.1. Jude K
IRTON
-D
ARLING
5.1. Theresa G
RIFFIN
5.2. Julie W
ARD
6.1. John H
OWARTH
8.1. Neena G
ILL
9.1. Richard C
ORBETT
10.1. Jackie J
ONES
Greens
2.1. Catherine R
OWETT
3.1. Scott A
INSLIE
5.1. Gina D
OWDING
6.1. Alexandra P
HILLIPS
7.1. Molly S
COTT
C
ATO
8.1. Ellie C
HOWNS
9.1. Magid M
AGID
Conservative
2.1. Geoffrey V
AN
O
RDEN
6.1. Daniel H
ANNAN
8.1. Anthea M
C
I
NTYRE
12.1. Nosheena M
OBARIK
SNP
11.1. Alyn S
MITH
11.2. Christian A
LLARD
11.3. Aileen M
C
L
EOD
Plaid Cymru
10.1. Jill E
VANS
Sinn Féin
12. Martina A
NDERSON
DUP
12. Diane D
ODDS
APNI
12. Naomi L
ONG
Brexit Party
1.1. Annunziata R
EES
-M
OGG
1.2. Jonathan B
ULLOCK
1.3. Matthew P
ATTEN
2.1. Richard T
ICE
2.2. Michael H
EAVER
2.3. June Alison M
UMMERY
3.1. Ben H
ABIB
3.2. Lance F
ORMAN
4.1. Brian M
ONTEITH
4.2. John T
ENNANT
5.1. Claire F
OX
5.2. Henrik N
IELSEN
5.3. David B
ULL
6.1. Nigel F
ARAGE
6.2. Alexandra P
HILLIPS
6.3. Robert R
OWLAND
6.4. Belinda D
E
L
UCY
7.1. Ann W
IDDECOMBE
7.2. James G
LANCY
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The European Elections of May 2019
4. Citizens and representatives from a Union-wide viewpoint
Ever since its inception the EP has expressed its intention to unify the procedures which the Member
States employ at EP elections. The present paper focusses on counting ballots, evaluating vote
counts, and assigning seats to candidates. Electoral systems comprise more than these procedural
rules. They determine who stands at the election, how they register, if they are given access to the
media, whether they are reimbursed for their expenses, which ballot design is submitted to the
voters and much more. Yet, even when the view is narrowed down to how votes are translated into
seats, the electoral provisions in the twenty-eight Member States constitute a perplexing multitude.
The 2019 European elections are not readily amenable to a Union-wide re-evaluation. The reason is
the lack of visibility of political parties at the European level. European parties which are visibly
functioning at the Union level would give rise to a political system in which the many domestic
parties would be able to find their place. Such a scenario does not apply to the 2019 elections.
Even so, it is tempting to view the European elections 2019 from a unified standpoint. To this end
we replace the almost invisible European parties by the visible Political Groups in the EP. In DE, ES,
NL, PL and SI some parties split their seats between several Political Groups; we split their votes
accordingly. In IE, MT, and the Northern Ireland region of the UK, where STV schemes are used, we
aggregate only first preferences. Domestic parties not affiliated to a Political Group nor obtaining a
seat, labelled in our tables as 'Others', are omitted. By adding the vote counts for the domestic
parties who joined a Political Group 'hypothetical votes' are generated. The hypothetical votes
provide the basis to apportion the 748 EP seats among the Political Groups. Every 236 000 votes
justify roughly one seat, see Table 4.1.
Table 4.1: Political Groups in the EP, actual size versus hypothetical seats.
Political Group
EPP
S&D
RenewEurope
Greens/EFA
ID
ECR
GUE/NGL
NI
Sum
Actual
Size
182
154
108
74
73
62
41
54
748
Hypothetical
Votes
39 665 362
36 585 197
23 466 081
19 804 837
20 837 020
14 537 613
10 134 340
11 455 280
17 6485 730
Quotient
[Divisor]
168.1
155.0
99.4
83.9
88.3
61.6
42.9
48.54
[236 000]
Hypothetical
Discrepancy
Seats (DivStd)
168
155
99
84
88
62
43
49
748
14
–1
9
–10
–15
0
–2
5
0
While a single Union-wide apportionment would faithfully reflect the political division of the Union’s
electorate, it would miss out on the geographical dimension of the Union being composed of 28
Member States. Therefore, it is important to realise that divisor methods allow a double proportional
variant that honours both dimensions simultaneously: the geographical distribution of the Union’s
citizens across Member States, and the political division of the electorate as expressed by their votes
for parties and candidates. Double proportionality is a powerful concept that would allow the EP to
improve the design of the European elections according to the political objectives set by parliament,
e.g. by maintaining degressive representation of Member States, or by introducing transnational
lists, or by incorporating other desirable features.
17
17
Friedrich Pukelsheim (2018): Compositional proportionality among European political parties at European Parliament
elections,
Středoevropské politické studie – Central European Political Studies Review
20,1–15.
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5. Conclusion
The normative link between a common electoral system in all Member States and the democratic
legitimacy of the EU was made from the early days of European integration. Both from a legal and a
political perspective, alignment between national electoral laws, or their replacement through
common provisions based on EU law, was seen as a prerequisite for making the ECSC, the EEC, the
EC and then the EU a political community directly involving their citizens. In fact, the Electoral Act
of 1976 was seen by contemporaries as a transitional arrangement to organise the first direct
elections.
18
Electoral law is notoriously difficult to amend, at all levels of governance. The 1976 Act has been
modified only once, in 2002. A second amendment introducing an electoral threshold at the
European level, adopted in July 2018, will enter into force once the approval of all Member States
according to their constitutional requirements has been notified to the Council Secretariat. As of 16
October 2019, Germany, Spain and Cyprus still had to notify their agreement.
19
This study demonstrates yet again, for the 2019 European elections, that the variations between the
28 national laws governing the European elections are important: we observe the existence of
electoral thresholds in some Member States but not in others; if they are applied the percentages
also differ; we observe nine different apportionment methods to transform votes into seats; we also
observe different rules concerning candidates’ gender balance, the deadlines for party or candidate
registration, and the options for preference votes.
Such variations may seem innocuous. The differences of outcome of the different apportionment
methods, for instance, may appear negligible to non-specialists of electoral procedure. However,
electoral thresholds or different list systems have profound effects on the number of effective votes
and the success rate for individual candidates in a given Member State. Moreover, one reason for
introducing direct elections to the EP was to enable a proportional Europe-wide reflection of
different political ideologies and to allow citizens to have an impact on the basic direction the EU
(or its predecessors) should take. Academic literature on the Europeanisation of EP elections has
been growing for a long time and there is also an important body of case law rendered by different
constitutional courts. Both are generally rather sceptical of the democratic weight of the EP,
particularly in comparison to national parliaments. Academics have provided numerous analyses of
the second-order nature of European elections, concluding that their objective is only partially to
determine EU-wide policies or to hold EU leaders to account. They are often an interim assessment
of the performance of the national government of the day, thus weakening the link between citizens
and the institutions of the EU, and in particular, the link between voters and the EP.
Some courts, particularly the German Federal Constitutional Court, have on several occasions
critically analysed weaknesses of the European electoral system and arrived at the general appraisal
that the EP has little chance ever to provide democratic legitimation at the same level as domestic
chambers. Hence the importance of a close look at the current state of affairs, including the technical
aspects of the European electoral system. On a positive note, one could consider the different
approaches that can be observed in the 28 countries as an opportunity for mutual learning and
18
See Sergio Alonso de León (2017): Four decades of the European Electoral Act: a look back and a look ahead to an
unfulfilled ambition,
European Law Review
42, 353–368.
Council Decision (EU, Euratom) 2018/994 of 13 July 2018 amending the Act concerning the election of the members
of the European Parliament by direct universal suffrage, annexed to Council Decision 76/787/ECSC, EEC, Euratom of
20 September 1976,
Official Journal of the European Union
L 178 (16.7.2018) 1–3.
19
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emulation. It is interesting, for instance, that the majority of Member States, to varying degrees, offer
their citizens the possibility to personalise their voting preferences. Providing this option should
increase the average citizen’s interest in the European elections. Perhaps even more importantly,
personalisation of the vote could contribute to a reduction of the overweening influence of national
political parties on the selection of candidates, both when they are initially elected to the EP and
when they wish to stand for re-election. It is an obstacle to creating common political awareness at
the EU level if electoral campaigns, from posters to TV debates or party manifestos, are dominated
by the preferences and calculations of national political leaderships. Having 28 (or 27) national
electoral systems, with only some important guidelines being determined at the EU level, also
contributes to maintaining among voters narrow national views on EU policies and EU leaders’
actions, for instance by minimising the visibility of European party families.
But some political leaders and constitutional scholars are convinced that a higher degree of
harmonisation or Europeanisation of the EP elections is a crucial element to improve EU governance
and to create political allegiance of European voters to the EU institutions. In earlier
pronouncements – for example, in its Maastricht decision of 1993 – the German Federal Constitu-
tional Court had indicated that a common electoral law in all Member States could strengthen the
democratic credibility of the EP.
20
The Conference on the Future of Europe that is currently being
prepared will, on the one hand, deal with a host of policy-related issues, such as migration manage-
ment, future budgetary resources and the fight against global climate change. However, questions
such as electoral reform or more effective European political parties are also likely to be prominent
on the agenda.
21
This study aims to provide an informative contribution to these debates, which
should come to a preliminary conclusion in 2021, if they are to be considered for application in the
2024 elections.
20
BVerfGE 89, 155 (185)
Maastricht.
For critical comments of the Court´s more recent assessment of the European
Parliament´s democratic legitimacy see, among many others, Martin Selmayr (2009): Endstation Lissabon? Zehn
Thesen zum “Niemals”-Urteil des Bundesverfassungsgerichts vom 30. Juni 2009,
Zeitschrift für europarechtliche Studien
12, 647–656.
See, e.g., Andrew Duff (2019): The European Union makes a new push for democracy, Discussion paper, European
Politics and Institutions Programme, European Policy Centre, 28 November 2019.
21
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6. References
Alonso de León, Sergio (2017): Four decades of the European Electoral Act: a look back and a look
ahead to an unfulfilled ambition.
European Law Review
42, 353–368.
Bardi, Luciano and Lorenzo Cicchi (2015): Electoral rules and electoral participation in the European
elections: the ballot format and structure. Study for the AFCO Committee, European Parlia-
ment, PE 536.464.
Camps, Rosa, Xavier Mora and Laia Saumell (2019): The method of Eneström and Phragmén for
parliamentary elections by means of approval voting.
arxiv.org/abs/1907.10590.
Costa, Olivier (2016): The history of European electoral reform and the Electoral Act 1976, Issues of
democratisation and political legitimacy. Study, European Parliamentary Research Service
Historical Archive Unit, PE 563.516.
Duff, Andrew (2011): Report (A7-0176/2011, 28.7.2011) on a Proposal for a Modification of the Act
Concerning the Election of the Members of the European Parliament by Direct Universal
Suffrage of 20 September 1976 (2009/2134(INI)). Committee on Constitutional Affairs of the
European Parliament, PE 440.210v04-00.
Duff, Andrew (2019): The European Union makes a new push for democracy. Discussion paper,
European Politics and Institutions Programme, European Policy Centre, 28 November 2019.
Grimmett, Geoffrey, Jean-François Laslier, Friedrich Pukelsheim, Victoriano Ramírez González,
Richard Rose, Wojciech Słomczyński, Martin Zachariasen and Karol Życzkowski (2011): The
Allocation Between the EU Member States of the Seats in the European Parliament – Cam-
bridge Compromise. Note, European Parliament, Directorate-General for Internal Policies,
Policy Department C: Citizens' Rights and Constitutional Affairs, PE 432.760.
Grimmett, Geoffrey, Friedrich Pukelsheim, Victoriano Ramírez González, Wojciech Słomczyński and
Karol Życzkowski (2017): The Composition of the European Parliament. Workshop 30 January
2017. Compilation: Two briefings and one in-depth analysis. European Parliament,
Directorate-General for Internal Policies, Policy Department C: Citizens' Rights and Constitu-
tional Affairs, PE 583.117.
Hrbek, Rudolf (2019): Europawahl 2019: neue politische Konstellationen für die Wahlperiode 2019–
2024.
Integration – Vierteljahreszeitschrift des Instituts für Europäische Politik in Zusammenarbeit
mit dem Arbeitskreis Europäische Integration
42, 167–186.
Janson, Svante (2016): Phragmén's and Thiele's election methods.
arxiv.org/abs/1611.08826.
Kotanidis, Silvia (2019): European Union electoral law. Current situation and historical background.
European Parliamentary Research Service, PE 642.250.
Lehmann, Wilhelm (2014): The European elections: EU legislation, national provisions and civic
participation. Study for the AFCO Committee, Revised edition, European Parliament,
PE 493.047.
Oelbermann, Kai-Friederike, Antonio Palomares and Friedrich Pukelsheim (2010): The 2009
European Parliament elections: From votes to seats in 27 ways.
Evropská volební studia –
European Electoral Studies
5, 148–182. Erratum,
ibidem
6 (2011) 85.
66
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Oelbermann, Kai-Friederike and Friedrich Pukelsheim (2015): European elections 2014: From voters
to representatives, in twenty-eight ways.
Evropská volební studia – European Electoral Studies
10, 91–124.
Pukelsheim, Friedrich (2017):
Proportional Representation – Apportionment Methods and Their
Applications, With a Foreword by Andrew Duff MEP, Second Edition.
Springer International
Publishing AG, Cham (CH).
Pukelsheim, Friedrich (2018): Compositional proportionality among European political parties at
European Parliament elections.
Středoevropské politické studie – Central European Political
Studies Review
20, 1–15.
Pukelsheim, Friedrich and Geoffrey Grimmett (2018): Degressive representation of Member States
in the European Parliament 2019–2024.
Representation – Journal of Representative Democracy
54, 147–158.
Sabbati, Giulio, Gianluca Sgueo and Alina Dobreva (2019): 2019 European elections: National rules.
At a Glance Infographic. European Parliamentary Research Service, PE 623.556.
Selmayr, Martin (2009): Endstation Lissabon? Zehn Thesen zum “Niemals”-Urteil des Bundesver-
fassungsgerichts vom 30. Juni 2009.
Zeitschrift für europarechtliche Studien
12, 637–679.
Viola, Donatella M. (Editor) (2016):
Routledge Handbook of European Elections, With a foreword by
J.H.H. Weiler.
Routledge, London.
Whitfield, Edward (2015): 40
th
Anniversary of the 1976 Act on Direct Elections to the European
Parliament. European Parliamentary Research Service Historical Archive Unit, PE 563.513.
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7. Appendix: Acronyms, country codes, party tabs, links
Acronym Expansion
EP
European Parliament
Political Groups in the EP, see Table 2.4.1
MEP
Member of the European Parliament
ECSC
European Community of Steal and Coal
EEC
European Economic Community
EC
European Community
EU
European Union
LVx
List vote with one or more ('x') preference votes
xCV
One or more ('x') candidate votes
STV
Vote pattern of single transferable vote schemes
STVfra
Single transferable vote scheme with fractional transfers
STVran
Single transferable vote scheme with random transfers
UVP
Unused voting power
DivStd
Divisor method with standard rounding
Div0.6
Swedish modification of the divisor method with standard rounding
DivDwn
Divisor method with downward rounding
HaQgrR
Hare-quota method with fit by greatest remainders
HQ3-EL
Hare-quota variant-3 method with Greek fit
HQxgrR
Hare-quota variant-'x' method with fit by greatest remainders
DQxgrR
Droop-quota variant-'x' method with fit by greatest remainders
Page
1
9
1
63
63
63
1
7
8
6
6
25
5
5
5
5
6
5
6
Country Code
Short Name
Official Name
AT
Austria
Republic of Austria
BE
Belgium
Kingdom of Belgium
BG
Bulgaria
Republic of Bulgaria
CY
Cyprus
Republic of Cyprus
CZ
Czechia
Czech Republic
DE
Germany
Federal Republic of Germany
DK
Denmark
Kingdom of Denmark
EE
Estonia
Republic of Estonia
EL
Greece
Hellenic Republic
ES
Spain
Kingdom of Spain
FI
Finland
Republic of Finland
FR
France
French Republic
HR
Croatia
Republic of Croatia
HU
Hungary
Hungary
IE
Ireland
Ireland
IT
Italy
Italian Republic
LT
Lithuania
Republic of Lithuania
LU
Luxembourg
Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
LV
Latvia
Republic of Latvia
MT
Malta
Republic of Malta
NL
Netherlands
Kingdom of the Netherlands
PL
Poland
Republic of Poland
PT
Portugal
Portuguese Republic
RO
Romania
Romania
SE
Sweden
Kingdom of Sweden
SI
Slovenia
Republic of Slovenia
SK
Slovakia
Slovak Republic
UK
United Kingdom United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Source:
http://publications.europa.eu/code/en/en-370100.htm
(Interinstitutional Style Guide)
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Party Tab
AT
ÖVP
SPÖ
FPÖ
GRÜNE
NEOS
N-VA
Vl.Belang
Open VLD
CD&V
Groen
sp.a
PS
ECOLO
MR
PTB-PVDA
PVDA-PTB
cdH
CSP
GERB
BSP
DPS
VMRO
Demokratichna Bulgaria
DISY
ΑΚΕL
DIKO
EDEK
ANO 2011
ODS
Piráti
TOP 09 + STAN
SPD
KDU-ČSL
KSČM
CDU
GRÜNE
SPD
AfD
CSU
DIE LINKE
FDP
Die PARTEI
FREIE WÄHLER
Tierschutzpartei
ÖDP
FAMILIE
VOLT
PIRATEN
Party Name
Österreichische Volkspartei
Sozialdemokratische Partei Österreich
Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs
Die Grünen – Die Grüne Alternative
NEOS – Das neue Österreich
Nieuw-Vlaamse Alliantie
Vlaams Belang
Open Vlaamse Liberalen en Democraten
Christen-Democratisch & Vlaams
Groen
Socialistische Partij – Anders
Parti Socialiste
Ecologistes Confédérés pour l'Organisation de Luttes Originales
Mouvement Réformateur
Parti du Travail de Belgique
Partij van de Arbeid van België
Centre Démocrate Humaniste
Christlich Soziale Partei
Coalition Grazhdani za evropeysko razvitie na Balgariya
+ Sayuz na demokratichnite sili
Bulgarska sotsialisticheska partiya
Dvizhenie za prava i svobodi
VMRO – Bulgarsko Natsionalno Dvizhenie
Demokratichna Bulgaria
Democratic Rally
Progressive Party of Working People
Democratic Party
Movement for Social Democrats EDEK
ANO 2011
Občanská demokratická strana
Česká pirátská strana
STAROSTOVÉ (STAN) s regionálními partnery a TOP 09
Svoboda a přímá demokracie
Křesťanská a demokratická unie – Československá strana lidová
Komunistická strana Čech a Moravy
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Bündnis 90/Die Grünen
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
Alternative für Deutschland
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern e.V.
DIE LINKE
Freie Demokratische Partei
Partei für Arbeit, Rechtsstaat, Tierschutz, Elitenförderung und basisdemokratische
Initiative
FREIE WÄHLER
PARTEI MENSCH UMWELT TIERSCHUTZ
Ökologisch-Demokratische Partei
Familien-Partei Deutschlands
VOLT
Piratenpartei Deutschland
BE
BG
CY
CZ
DE
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EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
DK
EE
EL
V
A
F
O
B
C
Ø
N
Å
I
RE
SDE
KE
EKRE
Isamaa
N.D.
SY.RΙ.ΖΑ.
Coal. KINAL
KKE
X.A.
EL
PSOE/PSC
PP
C's
Podemos-IU
VOX
Ahora Repúblicas
JUNTS
CEUS
ES
FI
FR
KOK
VIHR
SDP
PS
KESK
VAS
SFP (RKP)
RN
Coal. Renaissance
EELV
LR
FI
Coal. EEES
V – Venstre, DanmarksLiberaleParti
S – Socialdemokratiet
SF – Socialistisk Folkeparti
DF – Dansk Folkeparti
RV – Det Radikale Venstre
KF – Det Konservative Folkeparti
EL – 'Enhedslisten, deRød – Grønne'
Folkebevægelsen mod EU
Alternativet
LA – Liberal Alliance
Eesti Reformierakond
Sotsiaaldemokraatlik Erakond
Eesti Keskerakond
Eesti Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond
Isamaa Erakond
New Democracy
Coalition of the Radical Left
Coalition Movement for Change (Panhellenic Socialist Movement
+ Democratic Alignment + Movement of Democratic Socialists)
Communist Party of Greece
Golden Dawn
Greek Solution
Partido Socialista Obrero Español + Partido de los Socialistas de Cataluña
Partido Popular
Ciudadanos – Partido de la Ciudadanía
Coalition Unidas Podemos Cambiar Europa (Unidas Podemos + Izquierda Unida
+ Catalunya en Comú + Barcelona en Comú)
VOX
Coalition Ahora Repúblicas (Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya
+ Euskal Herria Bildu + El Bloque Nacionalista Galego)
Coalition LLIURES PER EUROPA (Partit Demòcrata Europeu Català
+ Junts per Catalunya)
Coalition por una Europa Solidaria (Partido Nacionalista Vasco
+ Coalición Canaria + Compromiso por Galicia + Atarrabia Taldea
+ Proposta per les Illes Balears y Demòcrates Valencians)
Kansallinen Kokoomus
Vihreä liitto
Finlands Socialdemokratiska Parti
Perussuomalaiset
Suomen Keskusta
Vasemmistoliitto
Svenska folkpartiet (Ruotsalainen kansanpuolue)
Rassemblement national
La Republique En marche! + MoDem + Agir + Mouvement radical, social et libéral
Europe écologie – Les verts
Les Républicains – Union de la droite et du centre
France insoumise
Coalition Envie d'Europe écologique et sociale (Parti Socialiste
+ Radicaux de Gauche + Place publique + Nouvelle Donne)
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HR
HDZ
SDP
Coal. Hrv. Suverenisti
Mislav Kolakušić
�½IVI ZID
Coal. AMS
HU
IE
IT
LT
FIDESZ + KDNP
DK
Momentum
MSZP-P
JOBBIK
FG
FF
SF
GP
I4C
LN
PD
M5S
FI
FDI
TS-LKD
LSDP
LV�½S
DP
LRLS
VKM-AMT
KKŠS
LU
LV
DP/PD
CSV/PCS
Déi Gréng/Les Verts
LSAP/POSL
JV
Saskaņa SDP
Coal. NA
Coal. AP!
LKS
Coal. ZZS
MT
NL
PL/MLP
PN/NP
PvdA
VVD
CDA
FvD
GroenLinks
D66
Coal. CU + SGP
PvdD
50+
PVV
Hrvatska demokratska zajednica
Socijaldemokratska partija Hrvatske
Coalition Hrvatski suverenisti (HRAST – Pokret za uspješnu Hrvatsku
+ Hrvatska konzervativna stranka – HKS
+ Hrvatska stranka prava de Ante Starrčević – HSP AS
+ Ujedinjeni hrvatski domoljubi – UHD)
Independent Mislav Kolakušić
�½ivi zid
Coalition Amsterdamska koalicija (Hrvatski laburisti + Primorsko goranski savez
+ Hrvatska stranka umirovljenika + Istarski demokratski sabor
+ Hrvatska seljačka stranka + Građansko-liberalni savez + Demokrati)
Coalition (FIDESZ – Magyar Polgári Szövetség + Kereszténydemokrata Néppárt)
Demokratikus Koalíció
Momentum Mozgalom
Coalition (Magyar Szocialista Párt + Párbeszéd Magyarországért)
Jobbik Magyarországért Mozgalom
Fine Gael Party
Fianna Fáil Party
Sinn Féin
Green Party
Independents 4 Change
Lega Salvini Premier
Partito Democratico (con Siamo Europei)
Movimento Cinque Stelle
Forza Italia
Fratelli d'Italia
Homeland Union – Lithuanian Christian Democrats
Lithuanian Social Democratic Party
Lithuanian Peasant Popular Union
Labour Party
Liberals Movement of the Republic of Lithuania
Visuomeninis rinkimų komitetas 'Aušros Maldeikienės traukinys'
'Valdemaro Tomaševskio blokas' Christian Families Union and Russians Alliance
Coalition
Demokratesch Partei/Parti démocratique
Chrëschtlech-Sozial Vollekspartei/Parti populaire chrétien-social
Déi Gréng/Les Verts
Lëtzebuerger Sozialistesch Aarbechterpartei/Parti ouvrier socialiste luxembourgeois
Jaunā Vienotība
Saskaņa Sociāldemokrātiskā partija
Coalition Nacionālā apvienība (Tēvzemei un Brīvībai/LNNK + Visu Latvijai!)
Coalition AP! (Latvijas attīstībai + Kustība Par!)
Latvijas Krievu savienībā
Coalition Zaļo un Zemnieku Savienība (Latvijas Zemnieku Savienība
+ Latvijas Zaļā Partija)
Partit Laburista/Malta Labour Party
Partit Nazzjonalista/Nationalist Party
Partij van de Arbeid
Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie
Christen-Democratisch Appèl
Forum voor Democratie
GroenLinks
Democraten 66
ChristenUnie + Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij
Partij voor de Dieren
50Plus
Partij voor de Vrijheid
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PL
PT
RO
SE
SI
SK
UK
Prawo i Sprawiedliwość
Coalition Koalicja Europejska (Platforma Obywatelska
Coal. KE
+ Polskie Stronnictwo Ludowe + Sojusz Lewicy Demokratycznej
+ Nowoczesna + Partia Zieloni)
Wiosna
Wiosna Roberta Biedronia
PS
Partido Socialista
PSD
Partido Social Democrata
B.E.
Bloco de Esquerda
Coligação Democrática Unitária (Partido Comunista Português
CDU (PCP + PEV)
+ Partido Ecologista os Verdes)
CDS-PP
CDS + Partido Popular
PAN
Pessoas–Animais–Natureza
PNL
Partidul Naţional Liberal
PSD
Partidul Social Democrat
Coalition 2020 USR + PLUS Alliance (Uniunea Salvați România
Coal. Alliance 2020
+ Partidul Libertății, Unității și Solidarității)
Pro Romania
Partidul Pro Romania
PMP
Partidul Mișcarea Populară
UDMR
Romániai Magyar Demokrata Szövetség/Uniunea Democrată Maghiară din România
S
Socialdemokraterna
M
Moderaterna
SD
Sverigedemokraterna
MP
Miljöpartiet de Gröna
C
Centerpartiet
KD
Kristdemokraterna
V
Vänsterpartiet
L
Liberalerna
Coal. SDS + SLS
Coalition (Slovenska demokratska stranka + Slovenska ljudska stranka)
SD
Socialni demokrati
LMŠ
Lista Marjana Šarca
N.Si
Nova Slovenija
Coal. PS + SPOLU
Coalition (Progresívne Slovensko + SPOLU – občianska demokracia)
SMER-SD
SMER – Sociálna demokracia
�½SNS
Kotleba – �½udová strana Naše Slovensko
KDH
Kresťanskodemokratické hnutie
SaS
Sloboda a Solidarita
Coal. OL'aNO + NOVA
Coalition (Obyčajní �½udia a nezávislé osobnosti + Nová väčšina – Dohoda)
Brexit Party
Brexit Party
LibDem
Liberal Democrats
Lab.
Labour Party
GP
Green Party
Cons.
Conservative and Unionist Party
SNP
Scottish National Party
PL-PW
Plaid Cymru – Party of Wales
SF
Sinn Féin
DUP
Democratic Unionist Party
APNI
Alliance Party
Source:
https://www.europarl.europa.eu/election-results-2019/en
PiS
72
INU, Alm.del - 2022-23 (2. samling) - Endeligt svar på spørgsmål 12: MFU spm. om, hvilke krav der stilles i hvert af de 27 EU-lande for, at et parti eller en bevægelse kan blive opstillingsberettiget til et Europaparlamentsvalg
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The European Elections of May 2019
Link to Electoral Authority of the Member States (as of June 2020)
AT
BE
BG
CY
CZ
DE
DK
EE
EL
ES
FI
FR
HR
HU
IE
IT
LT
LU
LV
MT
NL
PL
PT
RO
SE
SI
SK
https://www.bmi.gv.at/412/Europawahlen/Europawahl_2019/start.aspx
https://wahlen2019.belgium.be/en/election?el=EU
https://results.cik.bg/ep2019/rezultati/index.html
http://live.elections.moi.gov.cy/English/EUROPEAN_ELECTIONS_2019/Islandwide
https://volby.cz/pls/ep2019/ep?xjazyk=EN
https://www.bundeswahlleiter.de/en/europawahlen/2019/ergebnisse/bund-99.html
https://elections.sim.dk/ep-elections/results-of-the-european-parliament-elections-in-denmark-in-2019/
https://ep2019.valimised.ee/en/voting-result/index.html
https://ekloges.ypes.gr/current/e/home/
http://www.juntaelectoralcentral.es/cs/jec/elecciones/Europeas-mayo2019
https://eleccioneslocaleseuropeas19.es/calendario-electoral.html
https://tulospalvelu.vaalit.fi/EPV-2019/en/index.html
https://www.interieur.gouv.fr/Elections/Les-resultats/Europeennes/elecresult__europeennes-2019/
https://www.izbori.hr/site/izbori-referendumi/izbori-clanova-u-europski-parlament-iz-republike-hrvatske/izbori-
clanova-u-europski-parlament-iz-republike-hrvatske -2019-1759/1759
https://www.valasztas.hu/ep2019
https://www.housing.gov.ie/sites/default/files/publications/files/a4_european_results_2019_0.pdf
https://dait.interno.gov.it/elezioni/speciale-europee
https://www.vrk.lt/en/2019-europos-parlamento/rezultatai
https://www.legislationline.org/download/id/5153/file/Lithuania_law_elections_european_parliament_2012_en.p
df
https://elections.public.lu/dam-assets/fr/elections-europeennes/2019/RECENSEMENT-GENERAL-2019.pdf
https://epv2019.cvk.lv/pub/en/election-results
https://www.cvk.lv/en/elections/ep-elections/elections-to-the-european-parliament-2019
https://electoral.gov.mt/ElectionResults/MEP?year=245&v=null
https://www.kiesraad.nl/verkiezingen/europees-parlement
https://pe2019.pkw.gov.pl/pe2019/en
http://www.cne.pt/sites/default/files/dl/2019_pe_mapa_resultados.pdf
http://europarlamentare2019.bec.ro/rezultate/
http://legislatie.just.ro/Public/DetaliiDocumentAfis/90301
https://www.val.se/valresultat/europaparlamentet/2019/valresultat.html
https://www.volitve.gov.si/ep2019/en/index.html#/rezultati
http://volby.statistics.sk/ep/ep2019/en/
https://www.legislationline.org/download/id/7767/file/Slovakia_Act_European_Parliamentary_Elections_2003_a
m2008_en.pdf
http://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-8600/CBP-8600.pdf
https://www.eoni.org.uk/Elections/
UK
73
INU, Alm.del - 2022-23 (2. samling) - Endeligt svar på spørgsmål 12: MFU spm. om, hvilke krav der stilles i hvert af de 27 EU-lande for, at et parti eller en bevægelse kan blive opstillingsberettiget til et Europaparlamentsvalg
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QA-04-20-445-EN-N
This EPRS study provides an overview of the electoral
systems and outcomes in the May 2019 elections to the
European Parliament. It analyses the procedural details
of how parties and candidates register their
participation, how votes are cast, how valid votes are
converted into seats, and how seats are assigned to
candidates. For each Member State the paper describes
the ballot structure and vote pattern used, the
apportionment of seats among the Member State’s
domestic parties, and the assignment of the seats of a
party to its candidates. It highlights aspects that are
common to all Member States and captures
peculiarities that are specific to some domestic
provisions.
This is a publication of the Members' Research Service
EPRS | European Parliamentary Research Service
This document is prepared for, and addressed to, the Members and staff of the European
Parliament as background material to assist them in their parliamentary work. The content of
the document is the sole responsibility of its author(s) and any opinions expressed herein should
not be taken to represent an official position of the Parliament.
PE 652.037
ISBN 978-92-846-6956-1
doi:10.2861/129510