As voters in all 28 European Union countries elect a new shared parliament, here are some key races to watch in the battle to fill the 751 seats in the European Parliament:

ITALY

Italy’s anti-migrant, anti-Islam interior minister, Matteo Salvini, has been campaigning hard to boost his right-wing League party to become number one in Italy and possibly Europe.

Mr Salvini has been using his hard-line credentials to expand a parliamentary group of European populists that already includes far-right politicians in France, Germany and Austria.

He is promising to restore sovereignty over key issues like immigration to national capitals, thwarting the EU’s drive toward closer integration of its members.

Matteo Salvini
Matteo Salvini has promised to restore sovereignty to EU members over issues like immigration (Maurizio Brambatti/ANSA/AP)

In Europe, the populists will find it difficult to deliver on their transformation promises. But Mr Salvini is also looking to capitalise on the outcome of the European elections to boost his power at home in the League’s uneasy populist ruling coalition with the left-wing 5-Star Movement.

Mr Salvini could use European electoral gains to leverage his position in the government and pass policies important to his base of northern Italian entrepreneurs, like a flat tax or the high-speed train connecting Lyon, France, with Turin.

Most analysts believe he is unlikely to seek an early election in Italy, even with a big victory on the European stage. The 5-Star Movement, on the other hand, could decide to pull the plug on the coalition government.

FRANCE

France is looking at an epic battle between pro-EU centrist President Emmanuel Macron and anti-immigration, far-right flagbearer Marine Le Pen in the European Parliament vote, a duel over Europe’s basic values.

A loss for Mr Macron’s Republic on the Move party would cripple the French leader’s grand ambitions for a more united Europe. He wants EU countries to share budgets and soldiers and work even more closely together to keep Europe globally relevant and prevent conflict.

For Mr Macron, Ms Le Pen represents the “leprosy” of nationalism that is eating the EU from within. For Ms Le Pen, the race is a battle to preserve European civilisation from the threat of “massive immigration” and uncontrolled globalisation.

As far-right parties court the youth vote, Ms Le Pen is counting on 23-year-old Jordan Bardella to lead her National Rally party to victory, then revamp the EU from within.

Ms Le Pen’s party, then called the National Front, won France’s European parliamentary elections in 2014, but now she is looking beyond home territory. She has travelled to numerous European capitals recently to lend support to populist candidates, with the goal of enlarging their parliamentary group.

France has 34 lists of candidates in the European election, but Mr Macron crushed France’s traditional right and left parties in 2017 when he won the presidency, and they are still struggling.

GERMANY

Germany’s governing parties look likely to lose some ground in the European Union’s most populous country, while the environmentalist Greens and the far-right Alternative for Germany parties are eyeing gains.

The vote is shaping up to be a particularly tough test for the centre-left Social Democrats, the junior partners in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s governing coalition.

They have been struggling badly in polls and there is widespread speculation that a poor performance could hasten the end of Mrs Merkel’s coalition government.

Angela Merkel
The poll results could put domestic pressure on Angela Merkel (Markus Schreiber/AP)

For Mrs Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union, it is the first test for new leader Annegret Kramp-Karrenbauer since Germany’s longtime chancellor gave up her party’s leadership last year.

The Greens have been soaring in polls, partly at the Social Democrats’ expense, and hope to convert that support into votes.

And Alternative for Germany hopes to strengthen its presence in the European Parliament, adding to its strong contingent in Germany’s national legislature.

Many of Germany’s 96 seats in the European Parliament are also likely to go to a variety of fringe parties.

HUNGARY

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban describes the European Parliament vote as “decisive” for Hungary and Europe, an opportunity for populist and anti-migration forces to have a larger say in setting the agenda in Brussels.

While his party’s victory in Hungary is unquestioned, where the allegiances of Mr Orban and his right-wing Fidesz party will lie after the election on the European scene is far less certain.

Fidesz’s membership in the centre-right European People’s Party, currently the largest group in the EU legislature, was suspended in March because of concerns about the state of Hungary’s democracy. So Mr Orban has spent the past few weeks hosting far-right, nationalist and populist politicians at his new office in Buda Castle.

Viktor Orban
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban casts his vote in Budapest (Szilard Koszticsak/MTI/AP)

He said he wants to stay in the centre-right bloc while getting the EPP to co-operate more closely with nationalist and populist parties like Matteo Salvini’s League in Italy. That notion has been emphatically rejected by leading politicians from the EPP, including Germany’s Angela Merkel.

If Mr Salvini’s populists do well on Sunday, Mr Orban could leave the EPP and try to get some of the party’s more right-wing members to join Mr Salvini in a new, more radical alliance.

While Hungary has largely stemmed migration, Mr Orban’s opposition to migrants still bears fruit, and pollsters expect Fidesz to win as many as 14 of Hungary’s 21 seats in the EU parliament.

BRITAIN

Britain was not supposed to take part in the European Parliament elections at all, but had to organise a last-minute campaign when its planned March exit from the EU was postponed.

The polling on Thursday came amid intense political turmoil sparked by the country’s 2016 referendum to quit the EU. Embattled Prime Minister Theresa May will now step down as Conservative Party leader on June 7 after failing to deliver Brexit.

Both Britain’s Conservatives and the Labour Party are predicted to be heading for an electoral pasting in the European vote due to the chaos over Brexit.

Nigel Farage
Nigel Farage’s Brexit Party is likely to have done well in the poll (PA)

The Brexit Party, led by Nigel Farage, has appeared to gain strength in recent voter surveys. Mr Farage said he hopes to have the shortest possible tenure as a European Parliament politician because he wants Britain to leave the EU as quickly as possible.

The UK has 73 seats at the European Parliament, and its MEPs would lose their jobs when their country leaves the EU.

AUSTRIA

Sunday’s European Parliament vote in Austria has been upended by the sudden collapse of Austria’s governing coalition in a scandal that has tarnished the far-right Freedom Party. It will serve as a first test of support ahead of an early national election expected in September.

Heinz-Christian Strache quit last weekend as vice chancellor and Freedom Party leader after a leaked video showed him appearing to offer favours to a purported Russian investor during a boozy meeting on the Spanish island of Ibiza two years ago.

Sebastian Kurz
Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz’s governing coalition collapsed amid scandal involving his deputy Heinz-Christian Strache (Michael Gruber/AP)

Chancellor Sebastian Kurz then called for a new election and is now running an interim government with experts replacing the Freedom Party’s ministers.

The European Parliament election should offer clues as to whether the popular Mr Kurz’s conservative People’s Party will benefit from the scandal.

However, regardless of the result, Mr Kurz is expected to face a small opposition party’s no-confidence motion in parliament on Monday, and it is unclear whether he will keep his job.