Euroskeptic, anti-immigrant parties make big gains in European Union elections
May 26, 2014: Nigel Farage leader of Britain's UK Independence Party (UKIP) celebrates with candidate Janice Atkinson, left, as he hears the results of the south east region European Parliamentary Election vote at the Guildhall in Southampton, England. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)
BRUSSELS Far-right and Euroskeptic parties made sweeping gains in European Parliament elections Sunday -- triggering what one prime minister called a political "earthquake" by those who want to slash the powers of the European Union or abolish it altogether.
Voters in 21 of the EU's 28 nations went to the polls Sunday, choosing lawmakers for the bloc's 751-seat legislature. The other seven countries in the bloc had already voted in a sprawling exercise of democracy that began Thursday in Britain and the Netherlands.
One of the most significant winners was France's far-right National Front party, which was the outright winner in France with 26 percent support-- or 4.1 million votes.
"The sovereign people have spoken ... acclaiming they want to take back the reins of their destiny," party leader Marine Le Pen said in a statement. She called the results "the first step in a long march to liberty."
The National Front like other far-right parties across Europe promote anti-immigrant and often anti-Semitic policies.
French Prime Minister Manuel Valls, in an impassioned televised speech, called the National Front win "more than a news alert ... it is a shock, an earthquake."
French President Francois Hollande's office announced he would hold urgent talks first thing Monday with top government ministers in what French media called a crisis meeting.
All of Europe will have to deal with the fallout, analysts and politicians said.
Pro-European parties "have to take very seriously what is behind the vote," said Martin Schulz of the Socialist group in parliament.
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Euroskeptic, anti-immigrant parties make big gains in European Union elections