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Elections across Europe in recent years have often been a case of gauging the dwindling ability of centrist political forces to contain the rise of parties on the hard right.
The continent-wide European Parliament elections held between June 6th and 9th marked another twist –
a strong rise of nationalist support in France and Germany,
even as their allies in the rest of the bloc made few inroads.
The political centre has been dented, but it still holds.
As the results trickled out on June 9th, the focus was on France.
Thanks to Emmanuel Macron's decision to call national parliamentary elections after the national rally,
RN of his archrival Marine Le Pen, routed Mr Macron's Liberals.
The RN had already topped the EU vote in 2014 and 2019.
Its margin this time was so wide that its 30 MEPs will be the biggest delegation to the 720 seat parliament in Brussels.
But the result in Germany was also remarkable.
The Nationalist Alternative for Germany, or AFD, a party which, unlike the RN,
has done little to moderate its xenophobic views to appeal to mainstream voters,
took 16%, beating all three parties in the ruling coalition.
The Social Democrats of Olaf Scholz, the Chancellor,