Parliamentary elections in Europe could redefine international relations

BUENOS AIRES.- The president of Argentina, Javier Milei, celebrated the “tremendous advance of the new right” in the elections to the European Parliament, where the different formations of this political current achieved at least 131 seats, a figure that represents a notable increase with respect to the last elections but which follows the numbers by a distance of a hypothetical ‘grand coalition’ between the European People’s Party (EPP, 184 seats), the Socialists and Democrats (S&D, 139 seats) and the Liberals (Renew, 80 deputies).

“Tremendous advance of the new right in Europe. Great news is coming from the Old Continent. The new right have swept the European elections and have put a stop to all those who push the 2030 Agenda, an inhumane agenda designed by bureaucrats, to benefit of bureaucrats,” expressed Milei on his X social network account.

In that sense, he highlighted that Europe “has spoken” against the 2030 Agenda which, according to the president, “leads” Western countries towards “their extinction.”

“The people of Europe have spoken and have revalidated our vision with their vote, despite the cries of local and international progressives, journalists and politicians who questioned Argentina’s new positioning to disguise its globalist intentions,” he added.

Afterwards, he urged the West to “recover the flags” of the “most prosperous civilizational process in our history”, and has insisted that these results represent a “fundamental step” in the defense of his ideas of “the defense of life, the liberty and property of individuals.

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The first official results published by the European Parliament give victory to the European People’s Party (EPP) with 184 seats, followed by Socialists and Democrats (S&D) with 139 and Liberals (Renew), with 80 (which has lost 19 seats). If these scrutinized data are confirmed, ‘popular’, socialists and liberals will total 403 seats of the 720 in the running. The Greens have also suffered a significant drop, remaining at 52 seats from the 71 they had in the outgoing legislature.

Added to this are voices from other parties that for now appear as Not Registered because they were expelled from their natural groups in the last legislature, such as the 10 seats of Fidesz (Viktor Orbán’s party suspended from the EPP), the 15 of Alternative for Germany (expelled from ID) or the 3 from The Party’s Over.

Source: With information from Europa Press

Tarun Kumar

I'm Tarun Kumar, and I'm passionate about writing engaging content for businesses. I specialize in topics like news, showbiz, technology, travel, food and more.

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