Posts Tagged ‘EU’

German federal election, 2009

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The 17th German federal election is currently scheduled for September 27, 2009 and will be held to elect the members of the Bundestag, the federal parliament of Germany.

Since the 2005 election, Chancellor Angela Merkel (CDU) has governed in a coalition with the SPD. However, it is her stated goal to win a majority for CDU/CSU and FDP (the CDU/CSU’s traditional coalition partner) in 2009. Foreign minister and Vice Chancellor Frank Walter Steinmeier (SPD) was formally nominated as his party’s chancellor-candidate at a convention on October 18, 2008. He aims to form a government in which the SPD is the strongest party, but which also excludes the Left.

In all polls held so far in 2009, CDU/CSU and FDP are clearly ahead of the other traditional coalition partners in Germany, with an average vote share of around 50%.

Vote at VoteGlobal.com

Kyrgyz candidate pulls out of polls

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

The main opposition candidate in Kyrgyzstan’s presidential election pulls out on polling day, claiming widespread vote fraud.

r Atambayev said the vote, in which President Kurmanbek Bakiyev is running for a second term, was illegitimate and a new election should be held.

The US and Russia both have military bases in the strategically important Central Asian nation.

Mr Bakiyev is widely expected to hold on to the presidency.

Mr Atambayev told a news conference in the capital Bishkek: “Due to mass voter fraud we demand that this election be stopped and a new election held instead.”

He had earlier said he planned to lead a march to the election commission later in the evening, when preliminary results are to be announced.

“We will not be defeated,” Mr Atambayev said after casting his ballot.

Europe may elect ‘virtual MEPs’

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The European elections may lead to the creation of 18 “virtual” Euro MPs, who will not take office until the Lisbon Treaty takes effect.

 

The Lisbon Treaty could finally come into effect in 2009, eight years after European leaders launched a process to make the EU “more democratic, more transparent and more efficient”. Like the European constitution before it, the treaty is often described as an attempt to streamline EU institutions to make the enlarged bloc of 27 states function better. But opponents see it as part of a federalist agenda that threatens national sovereignty.

 

The constitution was thrown out by French and Dutch voters in 2005. The Lisbon Treaty, too, was rejected by Irish voters in 2008. However, Ireland is planning a new referendum in 2009. Under EU rules, the treaty cannot enter into force if any of the 27 member states fails to ratify it.

 

The treaty has already been ratified by most of the 27 member states, but the Republic of Ireland is expected to hold a second referendum on it in October.

 

Lisbon can only come into force if all have ratified it – and Irish voters rejected it last June. The 736 seats contested in this election will become 754 under Lisbon. But even the figure of 754 is a transitional one, because the treaty sets the final number at 751. It was agreed that Germany would keep its total of 99 MEPs until the next European elections, in 2014, when its number would fall to 96, in line with the Lisbon Treaty.

EU (European Union) Elections 2009

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Elections to the European Parliament were held in the 27 member states of the European Union (EU) between 4 and 7 June 2009. A total of 736 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) were elected to represent some 500 million Europeans, making these the biggest trans-national elections in history.

Reference and Results:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Parliament_election,_2009