Alliance of Independent Democrats in Europe
Alliance of Independent Democrats in Europe Allianz der unabhängigen Demokraten in Europa Alliance des Démocrates Indépendants en Europe Alleanza dei democratici indipendenti in Europa Alianza de demócratas independientes en Europa | |
---|---|
President | Patrick Louis MEP |
Founded | 28 October 2005 |
Dissolved | 30 December 2008 | , defunded 2 February 2009
Headquarters | 34, rue Pasteur, 69007 Lyon |
Ideology | Euroscepticism[1] Right-wing populism National conservatism[1] |
European Parliament group | Independence and Democracy |
International affiliation | None |
Colours | Blue |
The Alliance of Independent Democrats in Europe (AIDE) (Alliance des Démocrates Indépendants en Europe (ADIE) in French) was a Eurosceptic,[1] nationalist[2] European political party.
Creation
AIDE was created on 28 October 2005 in the Rhône prefecture.[3] Its stated purpose was "to gather political movements, and elected members of the national and regional assemblies of the Member States of the European Union, that adhere to the policy defined in its charter."[3]
Position
AIDE described itself as the centre-right faction of the eurosceptic IND/DEM group, with the EUDemocrats, the United Kingdom Independence Party and the European Christian Political Movement comprising the other factions of that group.
Website
As of January 2007, the group operated a limited French-language website. The group's website implied the existence of British, Czech, French, Greek, Irish, Italian and Polish delegations and identified Movement for France (MpF) MEP Patrick Louis as the president of AIDE. By February 2009, the ADIE website had devolved from providing original content to simply redisplaying feeds from the www.observatoiredeleurope.com website associated with the Independence/Democracy group
Membership
In light of the defection of Lega Nord (Italy) to UEN, it was believed that the members of AIDE as of January 2007 were as follows:
- Czech Republic
- Independent Democrats (Czech: Nezávislí demokraté)
- France
- Movement for France (French: Mouvement pour la France)
- Greece
- Popular Orthodox Rally (Greek: Λαϊκός Ορθόδοξος Συναγερμός)
- Poland
- Urszula Krupa MEP and Witold Tomczak MEP (an apparent faction of the League of Polish Families)
- United Kingdom
- Jim Allister MEP (a Non Attached MEP from the Traditional Unionist Voice, formerly representing the Democratic Unionist Party and then an independent).
Dissolution
AIDE was dissolved with effect from 31 December 2008[4] and was defunded in the February 2009 meeting of the Bureau of the European Parliament.[5][6]
See also
- European political party
- Authority for European Political Parties and European Political Foundations
- European political foundation
References
- ^ a b c Nordsieck, Wolfram (2013). "European Union". Archived from the original on 7 December 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2019.
- ^ Nathalie Brack; Olivier Costa (2014). How the EU Really Works. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 120. ISBN 978-1-4724-1465-6.
- ^ a b Entry in "Les Journaux Officiels : le plus court chemin entre la loi et vous"
- ^ "Critères de reconnaissance d’un parti politique européen" Archived 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine, MCSInfo, Robert Schuman University, Strasbourg
- ^ "Libertas bid for funding comes a cropper", European Voice, 03.02.2009
- ^ "Parliament says 'Yes' then 'No' to funding for Libertas", European Voice, 05.02.2009