European Parliament election, 1989

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

European Parliament Election
Area EC-12
Dates 15–18 June 1989
Seats 518
Electorate 244,951,379
Turnout 58.5%
Previous 1984
Next 1994
Election methods
All PR, except UK (not NI)
which used FPTP

The 1989 European Parliamentary Election was a European election held across the 12 European Community member states in June 1989. It was third European 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%

Contents


[edit] Results

European Parliament election, 1989 - Final results at 25 July 1989
Group Description Chaired by MEPs
  SOC Social Democrats Jean-Pierre Cot 180
  EPP Christian Democrats Egon Klepsch 121
  LDR Liberals and Liberal Democrats Valéry Giscard d'Estaing 49
  EUL Communists and the Far Left Luigi Alberto Colajanni 42
LU René-Emile Piquet
  ED Conservatives Christopher Prout 34
  G Greens Maria Amélia Santos 30
  EDA National Conservatives Christian de La Malène 20
  DR Far-Right Nationalists Jean-Marie Le Pen 17
  RBW Regionalists Jaak Vandemeulebroucke 13
  NI Independents none 27 Total: 518 Sources: [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.

[edit] Statistics

[edit] Seat changes

National Distribution of Seats
State Seats State Seats
 West Germany 81  Belgium 24
 United Kingdom 81  Portugal 24
 France 81  Greece 24
 Italy 81  Denmark 16
 Spain 60  Ireland 15
 Netherlands 25  Luxembourg 6

These were the first elections Portugal 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.

[edit] External links

Personal tools