BRUSSELS - Centre-right parties across Europe on Monday hailed the results of voting for the European Parliament as a sign of voter distaste for big stimulus spending and corporate bailouts as solutions to the global economic crisis.

They pledged restrained government spending, pushing instead for bureaucracies to more quickly use money they've been given for job-creating projects like expanding broadband networks and upgrading gas pipelines.

Many Socialists ran campaigns that slammed centre-right leaders for failing to spend enough to stimulate faltering economies, but voters did not embrace their cause.

Right-leaning governments came out ahead in Germany, France, Italy and Belgium, while conservative opposition parties won in Britain, Spain and Bulgaria.

But far-right groups also made gains in Britain, Austria, the Netherlands and Hungary.

Joseph Daul, leader of the European People's Party, said his group of centre-right national parties would allocate no new money for stimulus, instead pushing for European governments to more quickly spend 19 billion euros (US$27 billion) in EU funds for job-creation.

Much of his focus was on issues other than the recession, such as common policies to reduce illegal immigration and lessen Europe's dependence on Russian natural gas.

Despite differences on the economic crisis, centre-right and centre-left parties across the continent share a fundamental consensus on the need for a capitalist system with strong social welfare protections. And the centre-right still favours spending more than Europe's free-market Liberal Democrats or many conservatives in the United States.

The EU parliament has evolved over five decades from a consultative legislature to one with the power to vote on or amend two-thirds of all EU laws, including on issues ranging from climate change to cellphone roaming charges.

The parliament can also amend the EU budget of 120 billion euros, equivalent to about US$170 billion this year, and approves candidates for the European Commission, the EU administration and the board of the European Central Bank.

But the Europe-wide elections were most important as a snapshot of national political sentiment.

In Britain, a scandal over MP expenses saw Prime Minister Gordon Brown's centre-left Labour party finishing third behind the anti-European U.K. Independence party -- a crushing defeat that cast more doubt on Brown's future. The Conservatives are expected to win Britain's next national elections.

The vote also saw the all-white British National party pick up two seats in the EU assembly -- joining far-right parties from the Netherlands, Hungary and Austria that excoriated Muslims, immigrants and minorities.

The June 4-7 elections that ended Sunday across the 27-country bloc saw only 43 per cent of 375 million eligible voters cast ballots for representatives to the 736-seat EU legislature. The record low turnout pointed to enduring voter apathy about the European Union.

Latest EU projections showed centre-right parties were expected to take the most seats -- 263. Centre-left parties were headed for 163. Green and pro-EU parties captured 53 seats, while far-right and anti-EU parties won around 40 seats. The remainder went to smaller groupings.

Conservative success was not uniform across Europe. Voters angry over unemployment, inflation and political scandals punished right-leaning ruling parties in Greece, Hungary and the tiny island of Malta.

Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, president of the European Socialists group, said his centre-left member parties would "continue to fight" for more money to stimulate the economy.

"Europe still needs a new direction. We are in the middle of a recession and it will not go away," he said.

Germans handed a lacklustre victory to Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservatives but a historic defeat to their centre-left rivals, a result that comes only months before Germany holds its own national election.

"We are the force that is acting level-headedly and correctly in this financial and economic crisis," said Volker Kauder, leader of Merkel's party in the German parliament.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy's governing conservatives trounced the Socialists, while an ecology-minded party vaulted to a surprisingly strong third place.

Voters in Italy handed a tepid win to scandal-plagued Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and rewarded the anti-immigrant party in his coalition. The 72-year-old billionaire media mogul spent much of the campaign fighting off his wife's allegations of an improper relationship with an 18-year-old model.

Austria's big winner was the rightist Freedom party, which more than doubled its strength over the 2004 elections to 13.1 per cent of the vote. It campaigned on an anti-Islam platform.

In the Netherlands, Geert Wilders' anti-Islamic party took 17 per cent of the country's votes, winning four of 25 seats.

Three of 22 seats in Hungary went to the far-right Jobbik party, which describes itself as Euro-skeptic and anti-immigration. Critics say the party is racist and anti-Semitic.