6 June, 2009 – Mathaba.net
Hungary’s nationalist party Jobbik wins 3 seats with nearly 15% of the votes, with much of Europe swinging away from globalist regimes
Mathaba.Net — Jobbik, The Movement for a Better Hungary has won 3 seats in the European Parliament, coming close to beating the votes polled the ruling Socialist Party (MSzP).
In 7 of Hungary’s counties Jobbik (pronounced Yobbik, meaning ‘Better’) secured second place ahead of the Socialists, and in many local regions came as first choice of the voters overtaking the centre liberal party Fidesz.
Official results were Fidesz 56.37%, MSzP (Socialists) 17.37%, Jobbik 14,77%.
‘Jobbik is the new power, this is the last 20 year’s greatest political achievement.’ Gabor Vona, president of Jobbik said. ‘Dr. Krisztina Morvai is our best candidate who will surely stir up the muddy water in the European Parliament’ he added.
As Mathaba reported earlier, Morvai was the victim along with other peaceful demonstrators, of police brutality, with Hungarian police now renowned for use of rubber bullets and heavy tactics which in recent years have wounded many Hungarian citizens who have demonstrated peacefully against the corrupt and beleaguered regime and rising uncontrolled crime in the country.
‘Jobbik not only speaks but will put the words in action, Hungary belongs to the Hungarians.’ Vona finished his speech in front of journalists and a happy, cheering and celebrating Jobbik audiance.
Across Europe political parties opposed to globalisation, unaccountable elites, uncontrolled immigration and fascism have won several seats in the European parliament, and are poised to win further success in national elections, heralding a victory for what the liberal establishment and money serving media (MSM) tools of the globalist elite term ‘right wing’, whilst across Latin America a similar democratic revolution has resulted in what the same globalist elites call ‘left wing’ victories.
Just over 40 per cent of eligible voters cast ballots in the European elections. In Britain, turnout was even lower. This reflects the total disillusionment of most young voters who are ill educated concerning history and current affairs, and largely live in individualistic hedonistic walkman bubbles and do not watch establishment news media as a result of the side lining of intellectual and scientific persuit by educational establishments which have neglected true education. The minority that has been able to think for itself has grasped the institutions and the Internet as a tool toward democracy.
The European Union said ‘centre-right’ parties were expected to take the most seats — 267 — in the 736-member parliament. ‘Centre-left’ parties were headed for 159 seats. The remainder, almost half, were expected to go to smaller groupings which includes those termed ‘far left’ or ‘far right’ i.e. all those not considered ‘center’ of the status quo, and thus opposed to the neo-liberal neo-conservative neo-fascist policies of current ruling parties.
In Britain, the ruling neo-fascist Labour Party suffered a major defeat, finishing third in the European poll. With nearly all results in on Monday morning, the main opposition neo-liberal Conservative Party won with roughly 29% of the vote. The U.K. Independence Party, which seeks withdrawal from the EU, took second place with about 17%.
Neo-Labour’s share of the vote was around 15%. For the first time, the ‘far-right’, British National Party which is opposed to immigration picked up two seats in the European Parliament. The pro-US Anglo-American globalist hegomony Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s political future is in doubt. Whether he is to be replaced could become clear after a meeting with Labour lawmakers Monday.
In Austria eurosceptic list led by Hans-Peter Martin, a member of the European parliament since 1999, picked up 17.87% of the vote, while the ruling conservative People’s Party shed 3%, with 29.7% on a 42.42% turnout. Its coalition partner, the Social Democrats, led by Chancellor Werner Faymann, saw support drop 9.5 points to 23.85%, losing two deputies in parliament. It was the party’s worst result in a nationwide election since the end of World War II.
Austria’s Freedom Party (FPOe) got 13.08%, up 6.31 points from five years ago, while the Alliance for the Future of Austria, led by Joerg Haider until his suspicious death last year in a car crash, participating for the first time in European elections, took 4.66% but was denied any representation in the European Parliament. The environmental Greens fell to 9.5%, from 12.89% in 2004 since the Green parties too have failed to address the political, economic and social problems with solutions.
In France, Pro-American globalist President Nicolas Sarkozy’s governing conservatives trounced the Socialists, the first time since 1979 that a sitting French president’s party has won a European election, picking up almost 28% of the vote to the Socialists’ 16.48%. The Green Party came a strong third place with 16.28%. The green coalition, Europe Ecologie, is headed by the former May 1968 student leader and Europe veteran Daniel Cohn-Bendit. Turnout, at 41%, was the lowest ever in a European election in France.
France’s National Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen lost four seats, down from seven, believed to have been partly a result of President Sarkozy’s adoption of rhetoric against crime (whilst in reality crime continues to rage out of control in France) while the hard-right sovereignist Movement for France of Philippe de Villiers, now branded Libertas under the umbrella of Irish centrist eurosceptic Declan Ganley, also dropped two seats down to one.
In Belgium the Christian Democratic party of the former premier Jean-Luc Dehaene scored a narrow conservative victory, taking 15.2%. The ‘far-right’ Flemish Interest party saw its support shrink by 9% to 15% in Flanders.
In Bulgaria the governing Socialists faced defeat as the country’s biggest ‘right-wing’ opposition party won most of the votes.
In Cyprus, the opposition conservatives narrowly defeated the governing communist-rooted party. Official results gave the Disy party 35.65% of the vote, 0.75% more than Akel, the party of President Dimitris Christofias.
In the Czech Republic, the center-right Civic Democrats of former Premier Mirek Topolanek were set for a close victory. With about 40% of the vote counted, Mr. Topolanek’s party was leading the field with 29%, ahead of the center-left Social Democrats with 24%, with about 40% of the vote counted. Official results are to be announced on Wednesday. ‘Fringe’ parties failed to collect enough votes to gain any seats. Turnout was only 28 percent, according to final figures released today Monday. Similarly in Slovakia, the ruling Social Democrats won with 32% of the vote.
In Denmark, an exit poll said the Danish People’s Party, a government ally, will grab one seat in the European assembly. Another EU-skeptical group, the June Movement, will lose its single seat according to the poll, while other parties would maintain their seats. The anti-immigration Danish People’s Party, which rejects the ‘far-right’ label foisted upon it by MSM news outlets, gained an extra seat giving it 2 seats in the European parliament.
In Estonia, the Centre Party gained two seats, while the Social Democratic Party lost its three, whilst in Finland the centre-right government coalition partners, the Conservatives and the Centre Party, and the main opposition Social Democrats, lost support in the election for Finland’s 13 seats. Finland also delivered up its first ‘hard-right’ deputy, from the Perussuomalaiset, or True Finns, a nationalist and staunchly anti-EU grouping. The group’s win at the EU level follows on from its successes in domestic elections. In the 2003 parliamentary elections, the party won three seats and in 2007, it won five.
In Germany the Pro-American Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservatives won a lackluster victory, with Ms. Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union and a regional sister party winning 37.8% of the vote. Their center-left rivals, the Social Democrats, suffered a heavy defeat only months before a national election, winning 20.8% of the vote — their worst showing since World War II in any nationwide election. The result was enough to boost Ms. Merkel’s hopes of ending the left-right ‘grand coalition’ that has led Germany since 2005.
In Greece the governing conservatives suffered a defeat in the wake of corruption scandals and with a sharply slowing economy. The main opposition Socialists — winning their first election battle in nine years — renewed calls for early general elections. Greece’s Popular Orthodox Rally, or LAOS grouping, led by ‘right-wing’ journalist Georgios Karatzaferis, doubled its representation from one to two MEPs, with around seven percent of the vote.
In Italy, a nearly complete count showed the conservative party of scandal-plagued Premier Silvio Berlusconi lost support, while his anti-immigrant ally made gains in European Parliament voting. With some 97% of vote counted, Mr. Berlusconi’s Freedom Party had 34.9%, down from 37.4% in the last European vote in 2004. Italy’s anti-immigration Northern League also doubled its representation, from four to eight MEPs.
In Ireland, voters rejected both the ruling Fianna Fail-Green party coalition and the country’s most famous Eurosceptic, Declan Ganley, in European, local and Dáil byelections over the weekend. Ganley failed to take the third European seat for the Ireland north-west constituency, with his Eurosceptic Libertas movement polling poorly in other parts of the republic. The opposition Fine Gael was the big winner nationally, taking more than 30% of the vote. The Green party was the biggest loser with no European seats. Fianna Fail gained just 23% of the national vote, while Sinn Fein also suffered a major setback after vice-president Mary Lou McDonald lost out in the fight for the third European seat in Dublin. Irish Labour challenged the Greens to pull out of government last night.
In Latvia, exits polls released say that The Civic Union (PS) is reported to have received 24.29% of the vote. The Fatherland and Freedom Party (TB/LNNK), also in the governing coalition, received 7.96% and the New Era (JL) party of Prime Minister Valdis Dombrovskis 7.43%. The Fatherland and Freedom (LNNK) party lost three seats in the European parliament. The People’s Party (TP) which is also in the governing coalition received 5.58%. The second largest vote share of the vote after PS went to Concord Centre (SC) which received 16.68%, according to the exist polls. The Latvian First Party/Latvian Way (LPP/LC) received 8% of the vote while the Latvian Social Democratic Workers’ Party (LSDSP) received 5.38% of votes. Turnout was estimated at 53.94%, up from 41.34% in 2004.
In Latvia, voters looked to an ethnic Russian party to rescue the Baltic state from its economic crisis. Nearly complete results showed the center-left Harmony Party had won two of Latvia’s eight seats in the next European Parliament and over one-third of the vote in municipal election in Riga.
In Lithuania, exit polls said the conservative Homeland Union-Christian Democrats are leading the vote, with around 25%, followed by the Social Democratic Party, which had 19%.
In Luxembourg, Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker’s Christian Democrats looked set to take three seats, followed by the Socialists and Liberals, both of which would take one seat.
In Malta, the opposition Labor Party scored a resounding victory, taking 57% of the vote.
In the Netherlands (Holland) Geert Wilders’ anti-Islamic party took 17% of the vote, or four of 25 seats. Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende’s Christian Democrats held onto five seats, while the center-left Labor party took three.
Poland saw the biggest drop in the ‘far-right’ vote, which returned 16 right-of-the-right MEPs last time around. This year, not a single one has been elected from either the League of Polish Families or the Self-Defence party. An exit poll showed Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s probusiness Civic Platform party had 45.3% of the vote and the nationalist and conservative opposition Law and Justice party was second with 29.5% — a shift to the center-right by voters.
In Portugal opposition center-right PPD was predicted to take 10 seats, while Prime Minister Jose Socrates’ Socialists were expected to take seven.
European ruling parties and establishment media networks are blaming the financial crisis that they caused, as the reason for voters swing toward parties that reject their policies on the economy, globalisation, immigration and favour greater democracy.
In Romania, The Greater Romania Party won two seats, up from nil in 2007. Prior to the country’s entry into the European Union, the party did however have representation in the form of five ‘observer’ MEPs. In 2007 however, they lost all MEPs.
In Slovenia, the center-right opposition won the most votes, dealing a blow to the governing Social Democrats.
In Spain, the conservative Popular Party won two more seats than the ruling Socialists in preliminary vote tallies. Spain’s rightwing People’s party won its first national victory for nine years. A ‘radical’ separatist Basque party, Iniciativa Internacionalista, won 16% of the vote in the northern Basque region.
In Sweden, exit polls said the new populist Pirate Party, winning around 7.4% of votes and which wants to soften copyright regulations to encourage free file-sharing and the abolition of existing patent laws in a sign of the priorities of today’s young generation, would win a seat, while the main opposition Social Democrats took six seats. The conservative Moderate Party, Sweden’s leading party in the center-right coalition government, was expected to take three seats. ”
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