In 2025, nearly one third of EU parliamentarians were women, up 5.4 percentage points since 2015.
# ㅤ
SoSmartKappa on
Wait, why are we (Czechia) darker colour than Poland or Estonia, despite having same %?
Is this about hidden decimals and rounding? 30.1% vs 29.9% for example
bayoublue on
Why show Türkiye, but not the UK?
Potato_Poul on
To add to this our current prime minister in Denmark is a woman, tho we are having an election now so it might not be in a month
Outtathaway_00 on
In Mexico, womens are 50%, its the law
Hot_College_1343 on
Enough is enough! 😆
locksymania on
IRELANDCYKABLYAT…
LongtimeLurker916 on
How did Norway and Turkey make the chart if Britain and Switzerland did not?
brokencasserole on
In Serbia, the law requires that for every five consecutive candidates on an electoral list (local or parliamentary elections) there must be three of one sex and two of the other. In practice, this means that at least about 40% of candidates should be of the less represented sex, which currently are women. The share is now ~38% rather than exactly 40%. This happened because multiple parties entered the parliament and the election counts do not always end neatly in groups of five, so the distribution slightly shifts. Overall it tends to balance out. Although the ruling party is manipulating elections and ignoring many rules, this particular requirement is one they generally do follow.
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In 2025, nearly one third of EU parliamentarians were women, up 5.4 percentage points since 2015.
# ㅤ
Wait, why are we (Czechia) darker colour than Poland or Estonia, despite having same %?
Is this about hidden decimals and rounding? 30.1% vs 29.9% for example
Why show Türkiye, but not the UK?
To add to this our current prime minister in Denmark is a woman, tho we are having an election now so it might not be in a month
In Mexico, womens are 50%, its the law
Enough is enough! 😆
IRELANDCYKABLYAT…
How did Norway and Turkey make the chart if Britain and Switzerland did not?
In Serbia, the law requires that for every five consecutive candidates on an electoral list (local or parliamentary elections) there must be three of one sex and two of the other. In practice, this means that at least about 40% of candidates should be of the less represented sex, which currently are women. The share is now ~38% rather than exactly 40%. This happened because multiple parties entered the parliament and the election counts do not always end neatly in groups of five, so the distribution slightly shifts. Overall it tends to balance out. Although the ruling party is manipulating elections and ignoring many rules, this particular requirement is one they generally do follow.