The elections to the European Parliament have never been so hotly anticipated, with many predicting that this year’s ballot will mark a coming-of-age moment for the Eurosceptic movement.

The elections, which take place in all of the European Union’s 28 nations, have never had stakes that high.

Europe’s traditional political powerhouses – the European People’s Party and the Socialists & Democrats – are set to lose some clout and face their strongest challenge yet from an array of populist, nationalist and far-right parties that are determined to claw back power from the EU for their own national governments.

Here’s a look at the vote that starts on Thursday in the Netherlands and Britain:

– A clash of values

French President Emmanuel Macron
French President Emmanuel Macron believes a more integrated Europe is a stronger Europe (Stefan Rousseau/PA)

This clash of basic values — between Europe growing more united or more divided — has put the continent at a historic political crossroads.

French President Emmanuel Macron, champion of the closer-integration camp, says the challenge at the polls this week is to “not cede to a coalition of destruction and disintegration” that will seek to dismantle the unity the EU has built up over the past six decades.

Facing off against Mr Macron and Europe’s traditional parties are Italian interior minister Matteo Salvini, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, French far-right leader Marine Le Pen and a host of other leaders who have vowed to fundamentally upend Europe’s political landscape.

Nationalist leaders from 11 EU nations stood together in Milan last weekend – a show of unity unthinkable in previous years from a group once considered to be on Europe’s political fringe. Mr Salvini then declared “the extremists are in Brussels”, the home of EU institutions, for wanting to retain the status quo.

“We need to do everything that is right to free this country, this continent, from the illegal occupation organised by Brussels,” Mr Salvini said.

– Taking from the Trump playbook

A broken Union flag on a backdrop of the EU flag
Nationalists are hoping to emulate the electoral success of Donald Trump in the US and Brexit in the UK (Yui Mok/PA)

Europe’s nationalist parties hope to emulate what President Donald Trump did in the 2016 US election and what Brexiteers achieved in the UK referendum to leave the EU.

That is to disrupt the powers that be, rail against what they see as an out-of-touch elite and warn against migrants massing at Europe’s borders ready to rob the continent of its jobs and culture.

Standing with Mr Salvini, Ms Le Pen promised the Eurosceptics “will perform a historic feat”, saying they could end up as high as the second-biggest political group in the EU Parliament.

Predictions show that is still extremely ambitious. Projections released by the European Parliament this month show the European People’s Party bloc losing 37 of its 217 seats and the S&D group dropping from 186 seats to 149.

As for the nationalists, the Europe of Nations and Freedom group is predicted to win 62 seats, compared to 37 currently. Such statistics though could be irrelevant as soon as Monday if national parties start shifting to other EU-wide political groups in the 751-seat European legislature which meets both in Brussels and France’s Strasbourg.

Mr Orban’s nationalist Fidesz party is now in the EPP’s ranks, but has been suspended for its anti-EU stance and virulent anti-migration rhetoric. The Hungarian prime minister might well bolt after the election to a new radical-right group, perhaps to be formed by Mr Salvini and Ms Le Pen.

– War, taxes, unemployment

For many among the EU’s half billion citizens, the memories of war have vanished and the EU’s role in helping to keep the peace for 75 years, a feat for which it won the Nobel Prize, is overlooked.

Yet Europe was rocked by the financial crisis a decade ago and struggled through a year-long debt crisis that saw nations like Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Cyprus get bailouts and produced recessions that slashed the incomes of millions.

Europe’s high taxes, stagnant wages and gap between rich and poor are still a sore point, highlighted now by weekly protests by France’s yellow vest movement demanding more help for hard-pressed workers.

EU nations have also not been able to forge a common approach to migration, fuelling inter-bloc tensions and its impotence in quickly containing a migrant influx in 2015 has propelled a surge of support for nationalist parties.

“We have a crisis of the European Union. This is a matter of fact,” Mr Macron acknowledged.

Experts say he is right.

“There are a lot of people who fear that things potentially are moving in the wrong direction or already have moved in the wrong direction,” said Janis Emmanouilidis at the European Policy Centre think-tank in Brussels.

“It is a mix of multiple insecurities which, at the end of the day, is pushing people toward those who are coming up with easy answers.”

– Turning into a potent force

The European Parliament site in Strasbourg, France
The European Parliament has grown in terms of what it can do (Gareth Fuller/PA)

Since the first European Parliament election in 1979, the legislature has slowly changed from a toothless organisation where over-the-hill politicians got cushy pre-retirement jobs to a potent force with real decision-making powers.

The EU at first primarily regulated farming but now sets international trade policy for all members and even monetary rules for the 19 nations who use the shared euro currency.

The legislature itself affects Europeans’ daily lives in thousands of ways: cutting smartphone roaming charges, imposing safety and health rules for industries ranging from chemicals and energy to autos and food, supporting farming, reforming copyright rules and protecting the environment.

There are no cross-border elections this week, just national polls in 28 nations. Each EU nation gets a number of seats in the EU Parliament based on its population. Cyprus, Luxembourg and Malta have the fewest seats with six each, while the EU’s most populous member, Germany, has 96 seats.

Up until now, EU elections were tepid affairs. Voter turnout slumped to just 42.6% in 2014 — but that could well change this year.

– Which way forward?

Jan Zahradil, the leader of Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe
Jan Zahradil, the leader of Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists in Europe (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)

The pro-EU side says increasing integration is essential for the EU to survive in a globalised world. Eurosceptics say it robs national identity whenever more decisions are made at EU headquarters in Brussels.

Yet even some mainstream conservatives can have a Eurosceptic streak. Czech politician Jan Zahradil, lead candidate for the Alliance of Conservatives and Reformists, is among those seeking to return more control to Europe’s national capitals.

“(We want) an EU that is scaled back, that is flexible, that is decentralised,” Mr Zahradil said. “(An EU) that respects national governments and that co-operates with them, that doesn’t fight them, that doesn’t patronise them, that doesn’t lecture them.”

For the pro-EU side, in a world in which China, the US and Russia are all flexing their political and financial muscles, Mr Macron urges voters to think about the strength and unity that comes from 28 smaller nations working together.

“If you fragment Europe, there is no chance you have a stronger Europe. Unity makes strength,” Mr Macron said.