Opinion | Europe’s rightward lurch offers China a mixed bag
- While a more conservative European Parliament will be less welcoming to China, bilateral trade deals with EU members could flow more freely
Provisional results at the time of writing indicate that the centrist European People’s Party had secured 186 seats, up 1o from 2019, thereby controlling about one-quarter of the parliament. The left-leaning Socialists and Democrats were at 135, a roughly 19 per cent share. The Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) had added four seats to reach 73.
Renew Europe, a pro-European liberal party, and the Greens appear to have suffered the heaviest losses. Renew had lost 23 seats according to the provisional results, falling from 102 to 79, with the Greens losing 18 seats to hold 53.
The centre-left will still prevail if its coalition holds firm, as it has since direct elections for the European Parliament began in 1979. However, the right and far-right now control 131 seats between the ECR and the Identity and Democracy parties.