Right in large numbers in France, Germany and Hungary based on the first exit polls for the 2019 European elections. Here are all the details WHO WON AND WHO LOST IN ITALY. RESULTS, COMMENTS AND SCENARIOS HERE ARE THE EXIT POLLS IN FRANCE
Marine Le Pen’s Rassemblent national would be the first party in France. This is what emerges from a first exit poll released after the closing of the polls, according to which the Rn would have obtained 24% of the votes, against 22.5% of the Renaissance list, which refers to President Emmanuel Macron. The third party, according to the exit poll conducted by the Harris institute, would be Yannick Jadot’s Europa Ecologia-I Verdi, at 12.5%. If these first data were confirmed, the RN headed by Jourdan Bardella would have in the European Parliament between 22 and 26 seats, the Reinassance list headed by Nathalie Loiseau between 20 and 24, while the Greens between 11 and 14. WHAT EXIT POLLS IN GERMANY SAY
In Germany the Greens fly: they double the consensus and become the second party. At the head, but in sharp decline, is the CDU of Angela Merkel, with the Christian Democrats never so weak in Catholic Bavaria, while the Afd’s right is growing. Instead, the SPD collapses: overtaken by environmentalists as the country’s second force, for the first time since the Second World War it also loses the municipality of Bremen. It is the picture drawn by the exit polls of the European elections in Germany, according to which now someone is starting to hold on to the government in Berlin. WHO WON AND WHO LOST IN ITALY. RESULTS, COMMENTS AND SCENARIOS HERE ARE THE DETAILS PARTY BY PARTY IN GERMANY
The CDU-CSU Union is the first party with 27.5%, but it loses as much as 7.8% of the preferences. Worse is the SPD: it gets 15.6%, 11.9% less than in the previous Europeans of 2014. The Greens instead fly to 20.5%, with a sensational + 9.8%, well beyond the expectations that gave them to 17. AfD’s ultra-right is reported at 10.5%: it grows by 3.4% but does not even come close to the 13% that polls attributed to populists, probably also damaged by the scandal that overwhelmed their Austrian twins from the Fpoe. As for the other lists, Linke would be at 5.5% (-1.9) and the liberals of the FDP at 5.5 (-0.6%). WHO WINS AND WHO LOSES IN HUNGARY
At the Europeans in Hungary, Viktor Orban’s party, Fidesz, is confirmed at the top of the first exit polls with a net 56%. It emerges from the numbers released by Europe Elects. The result is 4 percentage points higher than in the 2014 European elections. All the other parties are very far from Fidesz: socialists (MSZP) and social-liberals (Dk) are both figures at 10%, substantially unchanged compared to the previous European parties. The ultra-nationalists of Jobbik would instead get 9% of the consensus against 14% in 2014, followed by the liberals of Momentum at 7%. The Greens (Lmp) are behind, with 3% (5.4 in 2014). WHO WON AND WHO LOST IN ITALY. RESULTS, COMMENTS AND SCENARIOS ALL THE FIRST EXIT POLLS IN SPAIN
At the European Championships in Spain, Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez’s Socialists are preparing to win with a gap of over ten points, according to today’s latest poll. The PSOE, awaiting the first exit polls, is given 28.9% and 18 seats, 11 more than the popular, which collapsed, as in the April policies, obtaining about 17.3% of the votes. In Spain there is also a vote for the renewal of 12 regional parliaments and thousands of municipalities. HERE ARE THE RESULTS IN THE NETHERLANDS
In the Netherlands in the European Parliament, Frans Timmermans’ PvdA Labor gains 18.10%, followed by Prime Minister Mark Rutte’s liberal-conservatives (VVD) at 15%, while Christian Democrats (CDA) are at 12.3%. These are the first official estimates of the European Parliament based on exit polls. The right-wing populist party Forum voor Democratie (FvD) of newcomer Thierry Baudet is at 11%, while Geert Wilders’ Pvv has slipped at 4.10. WHO WON AND WHO LOST IN ITALY. RESULTS, COMMENTS AND SCENARIOS
(article updated at 8 pm)

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