European elections 2024: publication of results and other information for media | News | European Parliament (2024)

The first provisional results of the European elections will be announced tonight around 23.15-23.45 CEST in the European Parliament hemicycle in Brussels.

    Provisional European election results can only be published after 23.00 CEST, when the last voting polls in Italy have closed. Before, Parliament will publish a first set of available national estimates around 18.15 CEST, and a first projection of the new Parliament is expected around 20.15-20.30 CEST (indicative time), based on national estimates, exit polls and pre-electoral voting intentions.

    A second seat projection, at around 23.15-23.45 CEST (indicative time), will include the first provisional results from some EU member states, and estimates for the rest.

    Updated projections will follow, as Parliament’s services receive information from national authorities. The last updated projection is expected at around 01.00 CEST.

    Find here a detailed schedule of estimates and provisional results. All data will be available on the official election results website.

    Media briefings at 11.00 and 17.00

    Parliament’s press service will brief media at 11.00 and 17.00 from the Parliament’s hemicycle, turned into a pressroom, on the latest information about the election night, as well as on useful data about the Parliament and the organisation of the European elections. Both briefings can be followed in person and via webstreaming.

    EbS will run a special programme on the elections starting at 17.30.

    On Monday 10 June at 11.00, there will be another briefing on provisional election results and next steps, followed by a press conference by spokespersons of the political groups.

    Statements by lead candidates and political groups’ leaders

    Representatives of the EP political groups and European parties’ lead candidates for the position of Commission President will speak to the media during the evening. Political groups will also have their press teams available to respond to media requests and facilitate contacts. Find their contact details here.

    Political group leaders or representatives are scheduled to address the media around 21.30 (indicative timing, to be confirmed) in reverse order according to their size in the current parliament:

    • The Left: Marc Botenga
    • ID: not confirmed
    • ECR: Assita Kanko
    • Greens/EFA: Philippe Lamberts
    • Renew Europe: Iskra Mihaylova
    • S&D: Pedro Marques
    • EPP: Manfred Weber

    Lead candidates for the European Commission Presidency will take the floor following the announcement of provisional results, from around 23.45, in the following order:

    • EPP: Ursula von der Leyen
    • PES: Nicolas Schmit
    • Renew Europe Now: Valérie Hayer (tentative)
    • European Greens: Bas Eickhout
    • European Left: Walter Baier

    Audiovisual material on voting from all EU member states is available on EBS and the EP’s Multimedia Centre, including statements from the lead candidates and group leaders voting in their constituencies.

    Country-by-country information on the European elections

    You can find individual pages on each of the EU member states with details on how the European elections are organised, lists, candidates, including MEPs who are running again for election and previous elections results, via this link.

    Media access to the Parliament on election night

    Only accredited journalists (holding an EU inter-institutional pass or accreditation to Parliament) will have access to Parliament’s premises on election night. Journalists may collect EP media passes on Sunday 9 June at the Accreditation Centre in front of Parliament (Esplanade Solidarność, office 01F035) from 8.00 and until 23.00.

    The Simone Veil entrance (SPINELLI building) will be open from 10.00 to 02.00, while the entrance at rue Wiertz (SPINELLI building) will stay open all day and night.

    Only those journalists who were assigned a place in the hemicycle will be able to work from there. The meeting room in front of the plenary chamber (3C050 in the SPAAK building) will also be set up as a press working area, and journalists may also work from the press room in the SPAAK building, on the ground floor.

    More than 1 000 media representatives from all over the world will follow election night from the EP in Brussels. Regarding languages, around 148 interpreters will ensure there is interpretation of the event to and into all EU languages, as well as international sign language.

    New EP Events mobile app

    All journalists covering the European elections on site are encouraged to download the new “EP events” app (available in Google Play and App Store) to get timely information on their phones about everything happening in the Parliament before, during and after the elections, as well as practical information, including passcodes for Wi-Fi connection, opening hours, maps, contacts, links and technical information for audio-visual media.

    Parking facilities

    Parliament’s carpark will be free for media to use on election night – on presentation of valid media accreditation at the entrance. There will be no need to use the IZIX App that is used during normal parliamentary weeks. It will close at 02.00.

    Catering services

    The cafeteria next to the hemicycle (SPAAK building, third floor) will be open from 11.00 until the closure of the EP premises (kitchen closes at 22.00).

    The press bar on SPAAK’s ground floor will be open from 17.00 to 23.00.

    Parliament’s self-service restaurant in the SPAAK building, twelfth floor, will also be open between 12.00 and 23.00, offering sandwiches, salads and warm meals.

    European elections 2024: publication of results and other information for media | News | European Parliament (2024)

    FAQs

    How are seats allocated in the European Parliament? ›

    Apportionment. The allocation of seats to each member state is based on the principle of degressive proportionality, so that, while the size of the population of each country is taken into account, smaller states elect more MEPs than is proportional to their populations.

    What is the European Council? ›

    The European Council is the EU institution that defines the general political direction and priorities of the European Union.

    Who votes for members of the European Parliament? ›

    Since 1979, the Parliament has been directly elected every five years by the citizens of the European Union through universal suffrage.

    How are decisions made in the European Parliament? ›

    In most cases, the Council decides together with the European Parliament through the ordinary legislative procedure, also known as 'codecision'. Codecision is used for policy areas where the EU has exclusive or shared competence with the member states.

    What are the three main roles of the European Parliament? ›

    The European Parliament has 3 roles:
    • It debates legislation. It can pass or reject laws, and it can also make amendments (but not in all cases). ...
    • It supervises EU institutions and budgets. ...
    • It establishes an EU budget (along with the Council of the EU).
    Apr 9, 2024

    What is the salary of the EU Parliament? ›

    Salaries are set at 38.5% of the basic salary of a CJEU judge, as outlined in the Statute for MEPs (Article 10). All MEPs earn the same salary. An MEP's monthly salary is €10,377.43 gross and €8,089.63 net, after deduction of EU taxes and insurance contributions (figures as of 01/01/2024).

    What is the absolute majority in the EU? ›

    Absolute majority (in the European Parliament)

    An absolute majority is the majority of all members of the European Parliament (including those absent or not voting). In its present configuration with 751 MEPs, the threshold for an absolute majority is 376 votes.

    What do you call a member of the European Parliament? ›

    Members of the European Parliament

    Since 1979 MEPs have been elected by direct universal suffrage for a five-year period.

    How are the seats distributed in the European Parliament? ›

    Under the Lisbon Treaty, which first applied to the 2014 European Parliament election, the cap on the number of seats was raised to 750, with a maximum of 96 and a minimum of 6 seats per state. They continue to be distributed "degressively proportional" to the populations of the EU's member states.

    What is the seating arrangement in the European Parliament? ›

    The Chairs of the political groups sit in the first row in the semi-circle opposite the President of the European Parliament. The third row is occupied by Bureau members (Vice-Presidents and Quaestors). Within the political groups, the remaining seats are generally allocated in alphabetical order.

    How many MPs sit in the European Parliament? ›

    The European Parliament is made up of 705 members of which 76 from Italy. Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) are organized in pan-European political groups according their political stance.

    What is the official seat of the European Parliament? ›

    Discover the official seat of the European Parliament in Strasbourg. See the inside of the iconic building where European democracy comes to life.

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