KEY POINTS
  • This year's vote was particularly relevant due to the surge of anti-EU and nationalist parties across the region.
  • Pro-EU parties will hold onto two-thirds of the seats at the EU Parliament, though nationalist opponents have also produced a solid result.
  • The European parliamentary election is the second-largest democratic exercise in the world, with citizens across 28 nations voting for their new representatives.

The EU Parliament will be much more fragmented over the next five years with the established centrist bloc set to fall short of securing a majority at this week's election, early results show.

The current projection from the European parliament is that center-right and center-left blocks will end up with a total of 329 seats out of 751.The lack of a majority for the centrist bloc — the center-right European People's Party (EPP) and the center-left Socialist and Democrats (S&D) which has held power in Brussels for several decades — could further complicate decision-making at the European Union.