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UKIP on clear lead in Britain as Eurosceptics clear up across EU

Nigel Farage spoke of a “political earthquake” – and here’s how the other EU results are shaping up.

Local council and European elections UKIP party leader Nigel Farage enjoys a pint in the Hoy and Helmet Pub in South Benfleet, Essex, as his party make gains across the country following yesterdays voting in local elections. Gareth Fuller / PA Wire/Press Association Images Gareth Fuller / PA Wire/Press Association Images / PA Wire/Press Association Images

NIGEL FARAGE, LEADER of the UKIP, said his Eurosceptic party is on its way to causing a political “earthquake”.

It raced ahead in the polls in the UK‘s Euro elections.

UKIP – a party without a single seat in the national parliament – had 22 seats after nine of the 12 regions declared.

They were comfortably ahead of the 16 seats for the Conservatives of Prime Minister David Cameron and 14 seats for the main opposition Labour Party.

Farage said:

Up until now, European integration… always seemed to be inevitable and I think that inevitability will end with this result tonight.

Victory for UKIP would be the first time in over a century that a British election has not been won by either of the mainstream Conservative or Labour parties.

Meanwhile, France‘s far-right National Front stormed the European Parliament polls on Sunday as eurosceptic parties dished up a harsh reality check that sent shockwaves across the EU and beyond.

The Parliament’s own projections showed the extent of the anti-EU breakthrough, with eurosceptic parties set to win around 140 seats in the 751-seat assembly.

The most emphatic results came in France where the National Front (FN) won around 26 percent of the vote, according to official figures, and in Britain where early results suggested a solid victory for the United Kingdom Independence Party.

The anti-EU Danish People’s Party was also victorious, while far right groups had strong showings in Hungary and Greece, among others.

Projections for the European Parliament as a whole showed the centre-right European People’s Party holding on to its top spot with 212 seats, though it looks to have lost 62 in the process.

The Socialists are second with 185, down from 196. The ALDE Liberals group would be third with 71 seats, ahead of the Greens at 55 and the left GUE/NGL with 45.

If confirmed, the FN victory in France would be the highest ever national vote garnered by the anti-immigration, anti-EU party led by Marine Le Pen who has promised to shake up the country and the EU.

It easily beat the centre-right UMP on 20.6 percent, and humbled President Francois Hollande’s Socialists, which came a distant third with just under 14 percent.

The French people “no longer want to be ruled from outside, to have to submit to laws they did not vote for or to obey (EU officials) who are not subject to the legitimacy of universal suffrage,” she said.

“Lessons have to be learned,” a Hollande aide conceded. “We have to find a way of convincing the French people that we can change Europe without leaving Europe.”

There was better news for the pro-EU camp in Germany where Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative party won around 36 percent of the vote, while its coalition partner, the centre-left Social Democrats, scored some 27 percent.

But even in the EU’s most powerful member state, the nay-sayers were not totally denied, with the anti-euro Alternative for Germany taking 6.8 percent of the vote, putting it above the threshold for seats just a year after the party was formed.

Eyes were also on the turnout, which has fallen every year since the first election in 1979, reaching a record low of 43 percent in 2009.

Even a miniscule improvement to 43.09 percent was therefore treated as a historic turning point by europhiles. (Although Ireland had a higher turnout than the average EU, as has been the case in the last four European Parliament elections since 1999):

However, many of those voters came out to support anti-euro and anti-immigration parties who had tapped into growing voter frustration with the EU, saying Brussels has too much power and does not listen.

Left-wing parties performed strongly in Italy, Spain and Greece.

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s centre-left Democratic Party (PD) pulled out a stunning win with 41.5 percent of the vote, well ahead of the anti-establishment Five Star Movement (M5S) on 22.4 percent, according to early projections.

In Spain, the two mainstream parties, the ruling conservative Popular Party and the Socialist Party, lost ground to mostly smaller groups on the left.

The inroads made by the anti-EU and radical parties have stoked concern they could hold Parliament hostage, working against the EU from within, but analysts say such fears may be overdone.

The EPP and Socialists would hold about 400 seats in the new assembly of 751 and traditionally the two groups have worked together and should be able to continue to do so, they said.

For his part, European Commission head Jose Manuel Barroso called on the pro-EU groups, who “have overall won once again” to come together.

“Standing together as Europeans is indispensible for Europe to shape a global order where we can defend our values and interests,” Barroso said.

“Democratic deficit”

Faced by mounting hostility to the Brussels bureaucracy, which is seen as aloof, EU political leaders have worked hard to correct a so-called “democratic deficit”.

For the first time, the five main groups in parliament named candidates to be the next head of the powerful European Commission and sent them out on the campaign trail.

They also organised televised debates between the candidates, exposing them to the harsh light of public questioning.

Summing up the hopes of reconnecting with the bloc’s 500 million people, a giant banner hung at EU headquarters in Brussels read: “This time it’s different — Your vote counts.”

Analysts have their doubts, however.

“The European Parliament’s bid to politicise and personalise the vote has not worked,” said Jean-Dominique Giuliani of the Robert Schuman Foundation.

It is not even clear if Parliament’s choice for head of the Commission will actually be selected.

Herman Van Rompuy, who chairs the European Council grouping of heads of state, has made it clear it was not ready to hand over that power so easily.

That opens the door to a potential institutional clash that could further discredit the EU just after voters have given it a damning appraisal.

- © AFP, 2014

Follow our Elections 2014 LiveBlog here>

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    Mute sparky
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    Apr 15th 2017, 9:41 PM

    Did I just read this..jasyus I did…I did need to get out more..but nobody has ever explained to me why Broccoli goes cold as soon as you cook it..I’ve never had hot Broccoli yet..

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    Mute Gary
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    Apr 15th 2017, 9:51 PM

    @sparky: Broccoli has a very high surface area per unit weight compared to other veg. This high surface area allows for higher rates of heat transfer to occur between the broccoli and the air. The stems of the broccoli are also a lot less dense than other vegetables too so heat transfer occurs more rapidly for that reason as well.

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    Mute molly coddled
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    Apr 15th 2017, 11:52 PM

    @sparky: always preheat your plate.

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    Mute Jack Cassady
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    Apr 15th 2017, 9:34 PM

    Another valuable scientific endeavour….
    Thank God for religion, that’s all I can say.

    37
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    Mute Abcd
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    Apr 15th 2017, 11:17 PM

    Stephen Hawking must be glad he is still alive to read this. Good to know scientists have their prioritys right. Serious illnesses & research is not important if shoelaces become undone according to these scientists. This is an insult to scientists everywhere.

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    Mute Paddy Ryan
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    Apr 15th 2017, 11:23 PM

    @Abcd: If you’d bother to actually read the article you’d see that it does have a serious side in preventing injury.

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    Mute Paddy Ryan
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    Apr 15th 2017, 11:24 PM

    @Jack Cassady: Guess what Jack… turns out God didn’t do this either…

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    Mute Abcd
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    Apr 16th 2017, 7:48 AM

    @Paddy Ryan: My shoelaces have not undone since i was about 6. We where taught too secure all footwear & loose clothing especially near any machinery.

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    Mute Tomasz Irlandczik Krótki
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    Apr 16th 2017, 8:35 PM

    @Abcd: move on to ‘é’ and the rest of the alphabet as soon as you can. Then complete your education, concentrating on logic, but not forgetting reading and comprehension. Then read this article once more. If you do not understand it differently the second time around, you are probably ineducable.

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    Mute Paul Culligan
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    Apr 15th 2017, 11:30 PM

    Jasus, this article had me in knots.

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    Mute Mark Fields
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    Apr 16th 2017, 3:19 AM

    Double knot always works for me. Takes2 seconds longer to untie but worth it for one pair of athletic shoes with laces that untie within 10 minutes of tying the knot.

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    Mute Colleen McGovern
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    Apr 15th 2017, 10:04 PM

    Bunny ears, bunny ears, playing by a tree. Criss-crossed the tree, trying to catch me. Bunny ears, Bunny ears, jumped into the hole, popped out the other side beautiful and bold.”

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    Mute Tomasz Irlandczik Krótki
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    Apr 16th 2017, 8:36 PM

    @Colleen McGovern: what you rabbitin’ on about, Willis?

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    Mute Harry Whitehead
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    Apr 16th 2017, 1:48 AM

    “…unable to lift his foot off the gas…”

    Enough of the Yankisms

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    Mute George Hogan
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    Apr 16th 2017, 1:42 PM

    Hahaha, yet you use an Americanism in your appeal to eschew a ‘Yankism’!
    Enough with the Little Englander mentality. The world uses American English and in Ireland we use, increasingly, American spelling. You can color it whatever way you wish, but the English used in Ireland and in our neighboring island is moving toward the American standard.

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    Mute rowan hill
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    Apr 15th 2017, 10:39 PM

    Seriously

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    Mute Paul Downes
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    Apr 15th 2017, 9:40 PM

    My guess is it’ll be a combination of vibration from the foot/shoe in normal thread action and the laces swinging. The result of both actions causing the knot to work itself loose.

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    Mute Cillian McCormick
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    Apr 15th 2017, 10:18 PM

    @Paul Downes: My guess is its explained in the article.

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    Mute Glen Harding
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    Apr 16th 2017, 9:10 AM

    Good on you journal. That’s a fine piece of copy and pasting from a piece of news that was reported on around the globe last week.

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    Mute Tom Kennedy
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    Apr 16th 2017, 8:01 AM

    So, am I right in thinking a bunch of scientists have basically determined through scientific research that lases come undone because we/i don’t make a proper knot?? Out with lases in with velcro. I think we need a tribunal!

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    Mute Grá Design - Dublin
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    Apr 16th 2017, 10:16 AM

    Ah lads, this was solved a long time ago. It’s to do with the direction in which you tie the knot. 3 min video on Ted Talks explains it.
    Terry Moore: How to tie your shoes
    http://go.ted.com/NQ2rKQ

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    Mute Micheal S. O' Ceilleachair
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    Apr 16th 2017, 4:21 AM

    I kid you knot!!!

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    Mute Niall Cunneen
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    Apr 16th 2017, 6:50 AM

    Who the hell finds this kind of research ? The scouts ?

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    Mute Niall Cunneen
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    Apr 16th 2017, 6:51 AM

    #Funds#

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    Mute Cathal MacDocraigh
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    Apr 16th 2017, 8:00 PM

    Jesus these lads are busy

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