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1989 European Parliament election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1989 European Parliament election

← 198415–18 June 19891994 →

All 518 seats to theEuropean Parliament
260 seats needed for a majority
Turnout58.5%Decrease 2.5pp
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderJean-Pierre CotEgon KlepschValéry Giscard d’Estaing
PartySOCEPPELDR
Leader's seatFranceGermanyFrance
Last election13011031
Seats won180*121*49*
Seat changeIncrease50Increase11Increase18

Post-election composition of each member state's delegation
* The number of seats was increased from 434 to 518 – so this is a nominal figure

President of the European Parliament before election

Henry Plumb
ED

President of the European Parliament after election

Enrique Barón Crespo
PES

The1989 European Parliament election was a held on Wednesday June 15 to Sunday 18 across the 12 European Union member states in June 1989.[1] It was the third European Parliament election but the first time that Spain and Portugal voted at the same time as the other members they joined in 1986. Overall turnout dropped to 59%.

Electoral system

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There was no single voting system for all member states but each of them adopted its own method, established by national law.

TheUnited Kingdom used a one-round (first-past-the-post) system of 78 constituencies inEngland,Wales andScotland, while inNorthern Ireland 3 proportional seats were allocated.Belgium,Ireland andItaly used a proportional system with subdivision of the territory into constituencies.Denmark,France,West Germany,Greece,Luxembourg, theNetherlands,Portugal andSpain used a single national proportional system, although in the case of West Germany the three seats for theWest Berlin area were not directly elected but were chosen by theBerlin House of Representatives, given the particular status of the city.

Seat changes

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These were the first electionsPortugal and Spain took part in with the other states. Spain was allocated 60 seats and Portugal was allocated 24; the number of seats for the other states remained the same, raising the total number of seats from 434 to 518.

National distribution of seats
StateSeatsStateSeats
 West Germany81 Belgium24
 United Kingdom81 Portugal24
 France81 Greece24
 Italy81 Denmark16
 Spain60 Ireland15
 Netherlands25 Luxembourg6

Results

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European Parliament election, 1989 - Final results at 25 July 1989
GroupDescriptionChaired byMEPs
 SOCSocial DemocratsJean-Pierre Cot180
 EPPChristian DemocratsEgon Klepsch121
 LDRLiberals and Liberal DemocratsValéry Giscard d'Estaing49
 EULCommunists and theFar LeftLuigi Alberto Colajanni42
LURené-Emile Piquet
 EDConservativesChristopher Prout34
 GGreensMaria Amélia Santos30
 EDANational ConservativesChristian de La Malène20
 DRFar-Right NationalistsJean-Marie Le Pen17
 RBWRegionalistsJaak Vandemeulebroucke13
 NIIndependentsnone12Total: 518Sources:[1][2]

The Socialists held their third consecutive victory, rising to 180 seats (166 pre-election), with the People's Party managing to win only 8 extra seats. However, the European Democrats had a massive loss of 32 of the 66 seats, knocking them from third to sixth largest party. The liberals, who had already risen one place with the byelections in Spain and Portugal earlier, gained an extra seat, holding their new-found third place with both the Rainbow and Communist groups splitting post-election.

Seats summary
SOC
34.75%
EPP
23.36%
LDR
9.46%
EULLU
8.11%
ED
6.56%
G
5.79%
EDA
3.86%
DR
3.28%
RBW
2.51%
NI
2.32%

Results by country

[edit]
Group
Nation
SOCEPPLDREDEDAGEULDRLURBWNITotal
Belgium5PS
3SP
5CVP
2PSC
2PVV
2PRL
2Ecolo
1Agalev
1VB1VU24
Denmark4A2D3V2C1SF4N16
France22PS4CDS
1CNI
1Ind.
12UDF
1UDF diss.
12RPR
1CNI
8Verts10FN7PCF1UPC1Ind.81
Greece9PASOK10ND1DIANA4Synaspismos24
Ireland1LAB4FG1PDs
1Ind.
6FF1WPI1Ind.15
Italy12PSI
2PSDI
26DC
1SVP
3PRI3LV
2VA
1DP
1LA
22PCI2LL
1PSd'Az
4MSI
1Ind.
81
Luxembourg2LSAP3CSV1DP6
Netherlands8PvdA10CDA3VVD1D662Regenboog1SGP25
Portugal8PS3CDS–PP9PSD1CDU (PEV)3CDU (PCP)24
Spain27PSOE15PP
1CiU (UDC)
5CDS
1CiU (CDC)
1IP4IU1PA
1PEP
2Ruiz-Mateos
1CN
1HB
60
United Kingdom45LAB
1SDLP
1UUP32CON1SNP1DUP81
West Germany31SPD25CDU
7CSU
4FDP7Grünen6REP81
Total180121493420283117141312518

Statistics

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European Parliament election, 1989 - Statistics
AreaDatesSeatsElectorateTurnoutPreviousNextElection methodsSources
European Community
(EC-12)
15-18 June
1989
518244,951,37958.5%19841994AllPR, exceptUK (notNI)
which usedFPTP
[3]Archived 25 March 2009 at theWayback Machine[4][5]Archived 4 August 2008 at theWayback Machine[6]
European Parliament election, 1989 - Timeline
Second Parliament1989 Election and RegroupingThird Parliament
GroupsPre-elections
Last session
ChangeResults
July 25
New
Groups
First session
July 25
 SOC166+14180 SOC180
 EPP112+9121 EPP121
 LDR46+349 LDR49
 RBW20+2313 RBW13
30 G30
 COM48-628 EUL28
14 LU14
 ED66-3234 ED34
 EDA30-1020 EDA20
 ER16+117 DR17
 NI14-212 NI12
Total5180518Total518
Sources[7][8][9]Archived 11 September 2008 at theWayback Machine[10][11]
European Parliament election, 1989 - Delegation at 25 July 1989
GroupDescriptionDetails%MEPs
 SOCSocial DemocratsWest Germany 31, Belgium 8, Denmark 4, France 22, Ireland 1, Italy 14, Luxembourg 2, Netherlands 8, UK 46, Greece 9, Spain 27, Portugal 835%180
 EPPChristian DemocratsWest Germany 32, Belgium 7, Denmark 2, France 6, Ireland 4, Italy 27, Luxembourg 3, Netherlands 10, UK 1, Greece 10, Spain 16, Portugal 323%121
 LDRLiberals and Liberal DemocratsWest Germany 4, Belgium 4, Denmark 3, France 13, Ireland 2, Italy 3, Luxembourg 1, Netherlands 4, Spain 6, Portugal 99%49
 EUL & LUCommunists and theFar LeftDenmark 1, France 7, Ireland 1, Italy 22, Greece 4, Spain 4, Portugal 38%42 (28+14)
 EDConservativesDenmark 2, UK 327%34
 GGreensWest Germany 8, Belgium 3, France 8, Italy 7, Netherlands 2, Spain 1, Portugal 16%30
 EDANational ConservativesFrance 13, Ireland 6, Greece 14%20
 DRFar-Right NationalistsWest Germany 6, Belgium 1, France 103%17
 RBWRegionalistsBelgium 1, Denmark 4, France 1, Ireland 1, Italy 3, UK 1, Spain 23%13
 NIIndependentsFrance 1, Italy 5, Netherlands 1, UK 1, Spain 42%12
Sources:[12][13][14]Archived 11 September 2008 at theWayback Machine[15]100%518

Further reading

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References

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  1. ^Curtice, John (1 December 1989)."The 1989 European election: Protest or green tide?".Electoral Studies.8 (3):217–230.doi:10.1016/0261-3794(89)90002-4.ISSN 0261-3794.

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