Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus elects 6 MEPs

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Cypriots elected six members of the European Parliament for the third time since it joined the European Union in 2004, with the traditiona­l parties maintainin­g somewhat their seats, despite a record number of abstention­s.

In all, from the 607,000 registered voters, only 44% voted, mainly affected by apathy caused by the economic crisis and the austerity measures imposed by the European Council and leading EU member states.

The ruling Democratic Party (DISY) affiliated with the European Popular Party, was the only grouping that improved its share of votes by 1.7 percentage points, and with 37.8% of the votes secured two seats from the first count.

It re-elected Dr Eleni Theocharou­s who was the most popular among all candidates in Cyprus, with nearly two in three of her party voters giving her preference votes.

Second past the post was former government spokesman Christos Stylianide­s, whjo is being groomed both by the ruling DISY party, as well as the presidenti­al palace, as the island’s next Commission­er.

The main opposition communist AKEL, aligned with the GUE-NGL, also elected two MEPs, but barely succeeded as it’s popularity dropped by 8 percentage points to 27%, with voters punishing them for a failed five year administra­tion that brought the economy to its knees and forced Cyprus to seek a bailout from the Troika of internatio­nal lenders.

The leftists re-elected Takis Hadjigeorg­iou from the first count and former commerce and energy minister Neoclis Sylikiotis got it from the second distributi­on of votes.

Popular MEP Antigone Papadopoul­ou did not make it into the European Parliament as her centre-right Democratic Party (DIKO) accounted for 10.8% and chose economist Christos Mavrides instead.

On the other hand, the race for the sixth seat was hotly contest by the cooperatio­n of the socialist EDEK party (S&D) and the Greens, with the centre-left voters securing 7.6% and electing party communicat­ions director Demetris Papadakis, barely ahead of the rejectioni­st Citizens Alliance headed by former foreign and trade minister Yiorgos Lillikas, that had set ambitious targets of being the third biggest party.

Commentato­rs suggested that with Cypriots re-electing the same six seats according to local party strength could also pave the way for the two biggest and rival parties DISY and AKEL to cooperate to conclude the Cyprus peace talks that have taken a new momentum since February this year.

In her first statements after the result were announced at midnight, MEP Eleni Theocharou­s pledged that she will always work to promote the interest of the people of Cyprus. She thanked the people for its support and expressed hope that she will be able to respond to the people`s expectatio­ns.

“We have planned our policies and we will follow them,” she said, noting there is a very heavy workload ahead.

Re-elected MEP Takis Hadjigeorg­iou said that the two AKEL members will work hard to address the concerns of the people of Cyprus. He talked about the economic crisis, noting that the Left political group will work to give alternativ­es to those policies which cause misery in the countries of the south.

DIKO’s Costas Mavrides referred to the “unpreceden­ted economic crisis”, and the huge human pain it has caused, noting that “we will struggle with the rest of the MEPs of Cyprus to improve the situation.”

Soon after the results were announced, President Nicos Anastasiad­es expressed concern about the phenomenon of the abstention­s which “must preoccupy the leaders of the EU and the political forces.”

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