Out of the 73 seats now held by Britain, 27 will be allocated to
existing EU states, the parliament’s institutional affairs committee said, as
it drew up the make-up of the legislature in the five years from 2019 when
Britain quits.
The remaining 46 British seats would stay empty for now and be
filled later by EU newcomers - in all likelihood from the six Western Balkan
countries now knocking on the EU’s door - or from "pan-European lists” in
which citizens of one EU country can vote for a candidate from another member
state.
Spain and France will each get five seats from the vacated
British pool, while the Netherlands and Italy will each add three more, in
Tuesday’s decision.
Some other EU members, including Denmark, Poland, Croatia and
Austria, will each get one new seat on their national lists.
Britain will leave the EU in March, 2019, and the remaining 27
countries in the bloc will vote in European Parliament elections two months
later.
The 27 are now getting ready for negotiations with London on a
two-year transition period after Brexit, before launching talks in spring on
a new deal from 2021.
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Source: NDO