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It is one of the biggest democratic exercises in the world.
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More than 350 million people across 28 European countries are eligible to vote and to choose their next representatives that will sit here in the European Parliament.
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But with 28 countries voting on different days, each with its own electoral laws and procedures, it's bound to get complicated.
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The first European parliamentary elections took place back in 1979, when only nine countries were members of what was then called the European Economic Community.
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Since then, that community has expanded into what's now known as the European Union.
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And voters head to the polls every five years to elect the 751 members of the European parliament or MEPs.
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The number of MEPs assigned to each country varies and corresponds to the country's population.
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For example, the EU's most populous country Germany elects 96 lawmakers, while Luxembourg only gets six seats.
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In some countries like Italy, MEPs represent a specific region.
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In others like France, they represent the entire country.
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So now let's get into how all of these MEPs are actually elected.
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Voting is open to all EU citizens, and in Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Greece and Luxembourg, it's actually compulsory.
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This time around, the elections are spread over four voting days, between May 23rd and 26th.
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Here in Belgium, citizens cast their vote on Sunday, whereas the British and the Dutch have their say on the previous Thursday.
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The results, however, are kept secret until every country has voted.
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Next, let's talk about the method, or should I say methods, that the EU uses to elect its representatives.
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Stay with me—this is where it gets a little bit tricky.
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Depending on where a voter is based, they could be using one of three systems.
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The closed list, open list or single transferable vote system.
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What they all have in common is that they aim to achieve proportional representation.
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That means the number of votes a party gets, will directly correspond to the number of seats they receive in the European parliament.
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In the closed list system, citizens vote for parties.
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Those parties have already selected a fixed list of candidates.
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So if a party gets 20% of votes in a country allocated 10 MEPs;
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The two top people on the party's list will become Members of the European Parliament.
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In the open list system, Europeans vote for a party, but can also indicate their favorite candidate.
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This means voters can actually change the order of the party's list.
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Therefore influencing which of the party's candidates become MEPs.
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In the single transferable vote system, voters can choose as many candidates as they like and then number them by preference.
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These votes are counted in phases.
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First, people's number one preferences are counted.
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Any candidate who passes a certain quota of votes is elected.
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Any votes exceeding that quota are then changed into the ballot's second preference.
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And transferred to the other candidates.
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If there still aren't enough votes to reach the quota, the candidate with the lowest amount of votes is eliminated.
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And those votes are transferred to the second preference too.
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This process is repeated until all seats up for election are filled.
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One more thing.
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Some countries have what's called an electoral threshold.
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Which means that a party or a candidate needs to get a certain percentage of the national vote in order to get a seat here in Brussels.
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This, in theory, keeps fringe or extremist parties from winning seats without meeting a minimum level of widespread support.
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So citizens select their parties and candidates at a national level.
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They then align themselves with other EU politicians with similar views and form one big pan-EU group at the European Parliament.
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These alliances help stand-alone parties and independent politicians gain more influence.
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The big elephant in the room is of course Brexit.
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The European Parliament's 751 seats will shrink down to 705 once the U.K. leaves the European Union.
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The plan is to reallocate some of those seats to under-represented countries like France, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands.
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There was another proposal on the table too—transnational lists.
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It would have transformed U.K. seats into seats for a pan-European constituency.
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Its advocates, who include the likes of French President Emmanuel Macron, say it would strengthen the European democracy
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by forcing parties to discuss European, not just national, issues.
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EU lawmakers have rejected this idea but it does bring us back to why this year's European elections are seen as so important.
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Pro-Europe parties have dominated the Parliament, but nationalists and eurosceptics are gaining traction.
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Whoever sits in the European Parliament will help determine what happens next in this economic and political union.