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What can we expect from the European Parliament elections?

14 March 2024, 6:15 pm–7:30 pm

European Parliament building and a queue of people waiting in line

Part of the UCL Policy & Practice seminar series.

This event is free.

Event Information

Open to

All

Availability

Yes

Cost

Free

Organiser

Eleanor Kingwell-Banham

Location

1.03
Malet Place
Gower Street
London
WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom

 

Citizens in the 27 EU member states will be voting to elect the next European Parliament in June. Much has been written about the recent rise of far-right parties in many parts of the continent - Italy, Sweden, Finland, Greece, and most recently the Netherlands, with Geert Wilders’ Freedom party becoming the biggest party in the Dutch parliament. And yet, a far right surge does not seem inevitable. For instance, Spanish voters delivered a hung parliament in July 2023, which led to a progressive coalition, and Polish voters ousted PIS in October. Join us for this Policy & Practice seminar, to hear our panelists share their thoughts on what we might expect from European voters in June. We will also discuss the implications of the elections for the politics of the EU, for the next Commission, and for the EU’s policies on Ukraine, migration, the climate crisis, and more.  

Meet the speakers

Professor Sara Hobolt FBA is Sutherland Chair in European Institutions in the Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science. She has published extensively on elections, referendums, public opinion and European Union politics. She is the Chair of European Election Studies (EES), an EU-wide project studying voters, parties, candidates and the media in European Parliamentary elections. Her most recent book (co-authored with Catherine De Vries) is Political Entrepreneurs. The Rise of Challenger Parties in Europe (Princeton University Press, 2020).

Tony Barber is European Comment Editor of the Financial Times. He is a former foreign correspondent in Austria, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Poland, the former Soviet Union, the US and the former Yugoslavia. In 2012 he was awarded the Medal of Gratitude by the Solidarity Centre in Gdańsk in recognition of his work in support of freedom and democracy in Poland. He wrote the introduction to Mud Sweeter Than Honey, a book on communist Albania by the author Margo Rejmer.

Dr Heather Grabbe is a senior fellow at Bruegel, and visiting professor at UCL and KU Leuven. A political scientist, she researches the political economy of the European Green Deal and how the climate transition will change the EU’s international relationships and external policies. She was previously director of the Open Society European Policy Institute in Brussels, and earlier deputy director of the Centre for European Reform in London. Her columns appear in the Financial Times and Politico, among other leading publications.

Chair: Dr Michal Ovádek is Lecturer in European Institutions, Politics and Policy in the UCL Department of Political Science and School of Public Policy.

 


A close up of a video camera with a LED screen showing that it is focussed on a speaker. The speaker and crowd appear blurred in the background
Recording

This event will be recorded and the video will be uploaded to our YouTube channel.

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Accessibility

There is step free access into the lecture theatre(s).
The door opening width(s) is/are 75cm+ for the lecture theatre(s).
There are designated spaces for wheelchair users within the lecture theatre(s).
There is space for an assistance dog.
There is a hearing assistance system for the lecture theatre(s).
There is not a visual fire alarm beacon in the lecture theatre(s).

More info can be found here.


UCL European Institute logo
This event is co-organised with UCL European Institute. UCL's hub for research, engagement and teaching on Europe. We foster an environment where work on Europe can flourish, aiming to maximise its reach and relevance - internally and externally.

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