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Voters steer Europe to the right

Centre-right parties have done well in elections to the European Parliament at

the expense of the left.

Far-right and anti-immigrant parties also made gains, as turnout figures

plunged to 43% - the lowest since direct elections began 30 years ago.

The UK Labour Party, Germany's Social Democrats and France's Socialist Party

were heading for historic defeats.

The centre-right European People's Party (EPP) looks set to continue to hold

power in the parliament.

Jose Manuel Barroso, who seems set for a second term as European Commission

president following the centre-right success, thanked voters and assured them

their voices would be heard.

FALLING TURNOUT

1979 - 62%

1984 - 59%

1989 - 58%

1994 - 57%

1999 - 50%

2004 - 45%

2009 - 43%

"Overall, the results are an undeniable victory for those parties and

candidates that support the European project and want to see the European Union

delivering policy responses to their everyday concerns," he said.

Socialist leader Martin Schulz said his group's defeat would be analysed.

"It's a sad evening for social democracy in Europe. We are particularly

disappointed, [it is] a bitter evening for us," he said.

Vice-president of the European Commission Margot Wallstrom said the low turnout

was a "bad result".

Government defeats

Fringe groups appear to have benefited, with far-right and anti-immigrant

parties picking up seats in the Netherlands, Austria, Denmark, Slovakia and

Hungary. The British National Party won two seats - its first ever in a

nationwide election.

Sweden's Pirate Party, which wants to legalise internet file sharing, won 7% of

the national vote and one of the country's 18 seats in the European Parliament.

Several governments battling the economic downturn are facing a heavy defeat,

says the BBC's Oana Lungescu in Brussels.

However, governing parties in France and Germany appear to have done relatively

well despite the crisis. In results so far:

greens from the Europe-Ecologie party also made gains

but finished ahead of its rivals. The Social Democrats, Ms Merkel's partners in

the grand coalition, saw their worst election showing since World War II

of the socialist opposition, with around 35% of the vote

lowest share of the vote for a century

Party, according to partial results

expense of the Eurosceptic Law and Justice Party

percentage points, losing out mainly to Greens and far-left parties

Voters have been choosing representatives mainly from their own national

parties, many of which then join EU-wide groupings with similarly-minded

parties from other countries.

HAVE YOUR SAY Hopefully a new parliament will do more to connect with the

European electorate Erling, Denmark

The centre-right EPP retains its place as the largest grouping for the last

five years, securing an estimated 267 seats out of 736 (down from the previous

785). The centre-left PES is on 159, while the liberal ALDE has an estimated

81.

Provisional figures released by the EU suggested turnout was at an all-time low

in some countries, including France (40.5%) and Germany (43.3%).

Lowest turnout was seen in Slovakia (19.6%) and Lithuania (20.9%), while the

highest figures came from Luxembourg (91%) and and Belgium (85.9%) - both

countries where voting is compulsory.

Overall turnout has fallen at each European election in the last 30 years, from

a high of nearly 62% in 1979.