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==Future==
==Future==


On the basis that the UK is leaving the European Union, it is planned that the EU parliament will be adjusted to include only 706 seats, down from the current 751, with some of the UK's current 73 seats being given to various other countries.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_European_Parliament_election Wikipedia]</ref>
On the basis that the UK is leaving the European Union, it is planned that the EU parliament will be adjusted to include only 706 seats, down from the current 751, with some of the UK's current 73 seats being given to various other countries.<ref name="EU Parliament composition">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_European_Parliament_election Wikipedia]</ref> For example, France would receive 5 new seats, Spain 5, Netherlands 3, and Ireland two.<ref name="EU Parliament composition" />


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[[Category:History]]
[[Category:History]]
[[Category:Politics]]
[[Category:Politics]]

Revision as of 16:31, 27 May 2019

Since this content documents a current event, it may not have the best possible quality. Feel free to improve this article or discuss changes on the talk page.

Brexit is the process in which the United Kingdom is, as of 2019, exiting the European Union (shortened to "EU"), a group of European countries. Including the UK, the EU had 28 "member states" in 2019.[1] The Citizendium wiki uses the term "United Kingdom exit from the European Union" for "Brexit."[2]

History

David Cameron (right)

The United Kingdom became part of the European Union in 1973[3] and as of May 2019 the United Kingdom remains in the European Union. However, following a referendum which took place on June 23, 2016,[3] which showed that the majority of United Kingdom residents wanted to leave the EU, the United Kingdom began the process of leaving the European Union, and prime minister David Cameron (Conservative Party) resigned.[4] In April 2019, it was clear that the process of leaving the EU had been delayed. In May 2019, Theresa May, the British prime minister (Conservative Party), said that she was planning to resign.[5][6]

In May 2019, the UK voted in the EU Parliamentary Election; the Brexit Party received about 32% of the vote (more than any other UK party) and 29 seats.[7] The next strongest performer was the pro-remain party[8][9] LibDems, who received 18.5% of the vote and 16 seats.[7] The UK's two largest parties, Conservative and Labour, received 8.7% and 14.1% respectively.[7] On the other hand, as a complete contrast to this result, in the earlier UK local elections at the beginning of May, the Conservative Party had the most (3,564) councillors, followed by Labour's 2,021 councillors, and the LibDems had 1,351 councillors as a result of the election.[10]

2016 referendum results

Leave (the EU) Remain (in the EU)
51.9%[11] 48.1%[11]
17.4 million[11] 16.1 million[11]

Future

On the basis that the UK is leaving the European Union, it is planned that the EU parliament will be adjusted to include only 706 seats, down from the current 751, with some of the UK's current 73 seats being given to various other countries.[12] For example, France would receive 5 new seats, Spain 5, Netherlands 3, and Ireland two.[12]

References

References: