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HowTheyVote.eu - how we make European Parliament roll-call votes more accessible

UA2.118 (Henriot) | Day 2 | 13:45 - 13:55 | Speakers: Linus Hagemann, Till Prochaska

HowTheyVote.eu - how we make European Parliament roll-call votes more accessible
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Abstract

We present HowTheyVote.eu, a free and open-source website that makes roll-call votes in the European Parliament more accessible and transparent. We briefly showcase the site’s features and how we built it, focusing on the different official data sources we combine. We will discuss good and not-so-good practices of the European Parliament’s websites and take stock of what we learned from four years of scraping parliamentary data. Lastly, we present examples of HowTheyVote.eu data being used in journalism, research, and civil society, showcasing how accessible voting records can inform debates and thus ultimately strengthen European democracy.

The European Parliament is the only directly democratically elected EU institution, and, as such, the voting behavior of its members is of particular interest. With a significantly larger number of right-wing MEPs since last year's elections, keeping an eye on the developments in Parliament has become more important than ever. Although the Parliament publishes information such as roll-call vote results and plenary minutes on its website, it can be difficult to find out what exactly MEPs voted on or how a particular vote turned out, as the data is scattered across multiple sources, published in different formats, and made available at different times.

We started HowTheyVote.eu in 2021 as a free and open-source project to address these problems. On HowTheyVote.eu, users can search for votes and view results. We also publish our entire dataset under an open-data license.

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Speakers

Linus Hagemann

I am a Data Scientist & Software Engineer, currently mostly working at the intersection of Politics & Data.

I co-created HowTheyVote.eu, where we make vote results of the European Parliament transparent and accessible – for citizens, journalists, researchers, and activists.

I am currently obtaining a M.Sc. in Data Science for Public Policy at the Hertie School in Berlin. Previously, I studied IT Systems Engineering in Potsdam (HPI) and spent a few year developing the FOSS live-programming IDE lively.next.

I was also involved in different research projects at the intersection of data, technology and politics: Investigating information dissemination on Twitter in the context of elections and, most recently, the public perception of election polls in Germany, as part of zweitstimme.org.

Till Prochaska

Till is one of the developers behind HowTheyVote.eu. Before deciding to return to university to pursue a master’s degree, Till worked on software that supports journalists in data-driven investigations.

Photo: Gino Giove | MIZ Babelsberg


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