The main demand of the “Two-Tailed Dog Party” is free beer at the expense of the state, and the “Empty Places” party promises to dissolve itself if it wins.
A number of parties with strange names participate in elections to the European Parliament. Among them: “The Two-Tailed Dog Party” and the Aliens Party. BILD columnist Sebastian Geisler spoke about this in his column.
As you know, on June 6, the elections to the European Parliament began in the 27 countries of the European Union. About 400 million voters will elect 720 representatives. In Germany, polling stations will open on June 9. German citizens must choose from 35 parties. There are several dozen more in other countries. Sebastian Geisler highlighted the most unique of them:
“Party for Biomedical Research in the Field of Rejuvenation” – founded in Germany in 2015. Promises to fight aging, increase life expectancy and defeat death.
“Party of the Two-Tailed Dog” – founded in Hungary in 2014. Makes absurd statements, making fun of traditional politics. The main requirement is free beer at the expense of the state.
“For a better EU with foreigners, stop high prices and war” – founded this year in the Czech Republic by politician Tomas Franek. Recognizes life on other planets and calls ending the war in Ukraine a priority.
“Empty Places” is an Italian party founded in 2010. He promises not to send representatives to parliament so that their seats remain empty, and if he wins, he will dissolve himself.
The Angry Chicken Party is a Swedish party that claims to be fighting to reduce Internet censorship and change copyright laws. Its members also want to give smaller parties easier access to politics.
The Party of European Democratic Esperantists is a French party campaigning for more multilingualism in the EU. They also demand that Esperanto be a working language in institutions. If the documents cannot be translated into all EU languages, the party wants them to be available at least in Esperanto.
We remind you that in Hungary, on the eve of the election, tens of thousands of people protested against Prime Minister Viktor Orban.
European Parliament elections: the future of the EU is at stake
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Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.