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European People's Party Group

Centre-right political group of the European Parliament

European People's Party Group

Centre-right political group of the European Parliament

FieldValue
name
titleEuropean People's Party Group
image[[File:EPP EP group logo 2015.svg250pxLogo of the European People's Party in the European Parliament]]
from{{ubl11 September 1952
(unofficially)
23 June 1953<br />(officially)<ref name"EPP-EDChronology02"/}}
toPresent
englishabbrEPP Group, EPP
(22 June 2009 – present)
{{Collapsible listtitle=Older:
EPP-ED<ref name"t1s1"
(20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009)
EPP<ref name"t1s1"/
(17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999)
CD<ref name"t1s2"/
frenchabbrPPE
(22 June 2009 – present)
{{Collapsible listtitle= Older:
PPE-DE<ref name"t1s5"
(20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009)
PPE<ref name"t1s34"/
(17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999)
DC<ref name"t1s34"/
formalnameGroup of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats)
(22 June 2009 – present)
{{Collapsible listtitle= Older:
Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats)<br />and European Democrats<ref name"t1s5"/
(20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009)
Group of the European People's Party (Christian-Democratic Group)<ref name"t1s34"/
(17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999)
Christian Democratic Group <ref name"t1s34"/
(14 March 1978 – 17 July 1979)
Christian Democratic Group<ref name"t1s2"/
(23 June 1953 – 14 March 1978)
europartiesEuropean People's Party (majority)
European Christian Political Party (FAMILIE)
ideology{{ublclass=nowrap
Christian democracy<ref name"Slomp2011"/
Conservatism<ref name"Slomp2011"
position{{ublclass=nowrap
Centre-right{{refn<ref>{{cite newstitleHungary's Orban faces exclusion from EU centre-right groupurl=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-47454408publisher=BBC Newsdate=5 March 2019access-date=27 October 2019}}}}
chairsManfred Weber
meps
website
Note

the parliamentary group

(unofficially) |23 June 1953 (officially)}} (22 June 2009 – present) {{Collapsible list |title=Older: |EPP-ED (20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009) |EPP (17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999) |CD

(22 June 2009 – present) {{Collapsible list|title= Older: |PPE-DE (20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009) |PPE (17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999) |DC

(22 June 2009 – present) {{Collapsible list|title= Older: |Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats) and European Democrats (20 July 1999 – 22 June 2009) |Group of the European People's Party (Christian-Democratic Group) (17 July 1979 – 20 July 1999) |Christian Democratic Group (14 March 1978 – 17 July 1979) |Christian Democratic Group (23 June 1953 – 14 March 1978) European Christian Political Party (FAMILIE) |Christian democracy |Conservatism |Pro-Europeanism |Centre-right

The European People's Party Group (EPP Group or simply EPP) is a political group of the European Parliament consisting of deputies (MEPs) from the member parties of the European People's Party (EPP). Sometimes it also includes independent MEPs and/or deputies from unaffiliated national parties. The EPP Group comprises politicians of Christian democratic, conservative and liberal-conservative orientation.

The 2024 EPP manifesto reflects these views. The opening paragraph for instance reflects conservatism used to distinguish Europeans as a people "defined by shared history, heritage, Judea-Christian roots, and diversity." The manifesto refers to the history of christian democracy and the invention of the social market economy, as evidence of their commitment to Christian ethics & social teaching. Also linked is an article dedicated to the EPP view on social market economies, where they state "We believe our Christian democratic values are the strongest starting point for designing the future because they combine the best from conservative, liberal, and Christian-social ways of thinking."

The European People's Party was officially founded as a European political party in 1976. However, the European People's Party Group in the European Parliament has existed in one form or another since June 1953, from the Common Assembly of the European Coal and Steel Community, making it one of the oldest European-level political groups. It has been the largest political group in the European Parliament since 1999.

History

The Common Assembly of the European Coal and Steel Community (the predecessor of the present day European Parliament) first met on 10 September 1952 and the first Christian Democratic Group was unofficially formed the next day, with Maan Sassen as president. The group held 38 of the 78 seats, two short of an absolute majority. On 16 June 1953, the Common Assembly passed a resolution enabling the official formation of political groups; further, on 23 June 1953 the constituent declaration of the group was published and the group was officially formed.

EPP share of votes in elections to the Eur. Parliament 1999–2019}}

The Christian Democrat group was the biggest group at formation, but as time wore on, it lost support and was the second-biggest group by the time of the 1979 elections. As the European Community expanded into the European Union, the dominant centre-right parties in the new member states were not necessarily Christian democratic, and the EPP (European People's Party, the pan-continental political party founded in 1976, to which all group members are now affiliated) feared being sidelined. To counter this, the EPP expanded its remit to cover the centre-right regardless of tradition and pursued a policy of integrating liberal-conservative parties.

This policy led to Greek New Democracy and Spanish People's Party MEPs joining the EPP Group. The British Conservative Party and Danish Conservative People's Party tried to maintain a group of their own, named the European Democrats (ED), but lack of support and the problems inherent in maintaining a small group forced ED's collapse in the 1990s, and its members crossed the floor to join the EPP Group. The parties of these MEPs also became full members of the EPP (with the exception of the British Conservative Party, which did not join) and this consolidation process of the European centre-right continued during the 1990s with the acquisition of members from the Italian party Forza Italia. However, the consolidation was not unalloyed and a split emerged with the Eurosceptic MEPs who congregated in a subgroup within the Group, also called the European Democrats (ED).

Nevertheless, the consolidation held through the 1990s, assisted by the group being renamed the European People's Party – European Democrats (EPP-ED) Group; after the 1999 European elections, the EPP-ED reclaimed its position as the largest group in the Parliament from the Party of European Socialists (PES) Group.

Size was not enough, however: the group did not have a majority. It continued therefore to engage in the Grand Coalition (a coalition with the PES Group, or occasionally the Liberals) to generate the majorities required by the cooperation procedure under the Single European Act.

Meanwhile, the parties in the European Democrats subgroup were growing restless, with the establishment in July 2006 of the Movement for European Reform, and finally left following the 2009 elections, when the Czech Civic Democratic Party and British Conservative Party formed their own right-wing European Conservatives and Reformists Group (ECR) group on 22 June 2009, abolishing the European Democrats subgroup from that date. The EPP-ED Group reverted to its original name – the EPP Group – immediately.

7th European Parliament (2009)

In the 7th European Parliament, the EPP Group remained the largest parliamentary group with 275 MEPs. It is currently the only political group in the European parliament to fully represent its corresponding European political party, i.e. the European People's Party. The United Kingdom was the only member state to not be represented in the group; this state of affairs ceased temporarily on 28 February 2018, when two MEPs suspended from the British Conservative Party left the ECR Group and joined the EPP. The two MEPs later joined a breakaway political party in the UK, The Independent Group.

8th European Parliament (2014)

Logo of European People's Party Group from 1999 to 2015.

After twelve member parties in the EPP called for Hungary's Fidesz's expulsion or suspension, Fidesz's membership was suspended with a common agreement on 20 March 2019. The suspension was applied only to the EPP but not to its group in the Parliament. On 3 March 2021, Fidesz decided to leave the EPP group, after the group's new rules, however still kept their membership in the party. On 18 March 2021, Fidesz decided to leave the European People's Party.

9th European Parliament (2019)

In the 9th European Parliament, the EPP won 182 seats out of a total of 751. They formed a coalition with Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats and Renew Europe to elect Ursula von der Leyen as president of the European Commission.

10th European Parliament (2024)

On June 18, 6 new parties joined the group, including the Hungarian Respect and Freedom Party (TISZA) and their 7 MEPs, the Dutch Farmer–Citizen Movement (BBB) and Czech Mayors and Independents (STAN), each with 2 MEPs, as well as the Danish Liberal Alliance, Dutch New Social Contract (NSC), and the German Family Party, each with 1 MEP. Combined, the group expanded by 14 MEPs.

Later that day, the Hungarian Christian Democratic People's Party (KDNP) announced their departure from the EPP Group, due to the admission of the Tisza Party.

On 19 June, the group re-elected Manfred Weber as chairman of the group, and the 10 vice-chairpersons.

Membership at formation

The 38 members in the group on 11 September 1952 were as follows:

Member state
MEPs
Party
MEPs
Notes
Sources
Belgium5Christian Social Party5url=http://www.epp-ed.eu/group/en/MembersList.asptitle=EPPED Member Listpublisher=Epp-ed.euaccess-date=17 June 2010archive-date=1 May 2009archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090501181920/http://www.epp-ed.eu/group/en/MembersList.aspurl-status=dead }}
France5Christian People's Party (Saar)2
Republican People's Movement3
Germany8Christian Democratic Union
and Christian Social Union7
Federal Union Party1
Italy12Christian Democracy12
Luxembourg2Christian Social People's Party2
Netherlands6Anti-Revolutionary Party2
Catholic People's Party3
Christian Historical Union1

Structure

Organisation

The EPP Group is governed by a collective (referred to as the Presidency) that allocates tasks. The Presidency consists of the Group Chair and a maximum of ten Vice-Chairs, including the Treasurer. The day-to-day running of the EPP Group is performed by its secretariat in the European Parliament, led by its Secretary-General. The Group runs its own think-tank, the European Ideas Network, which brings together opinion-formers from across Europe to discuss issues facing the European Union from a centre-right perspective.

The EPP Group Presidency includes:

NamePositionSources
Manfred WeberChairurl=https://www.eppgroup.eu/newsroom/manfred-weber-and-the-new-epp-group-leadership-team-electedtitle=Manfred Weber and the new EPP Group leadership team electedpublisher=eppgroup.eudate=19 June 2024access-date=19 June 2024}}
François-Xavier BellamyVice-chair
Andrzej HalickiVice-chair
Jeroen LenaersVice-chair
Dolors MontserratVice-chair
Siegfried MureșanVice-chair
Lídia PereiraVice-chair
Massimiliano SaliniVice-chair
Tomas TobéVice-chair
Romana TomcVice-chair
Željana ZovkoVice-chair

The chairs of the group and its predecessors from 1952 to 2024 are as follows:

ChairTook officeLeft officeCountry
(Constituency)Party
Maan Sassen[[File:Maan Sassen 1968 (1).jpg70px]]19531958Netherlands
Pierre Wigny[[File:Minister Belgische Kabinet J. van Offelen (PVV), Minister Justitie en Franse Cultuur P. Wigny (CVP).jpg70px]]19581958Belgium
Alain Poher[[File:Alain Poher.jpg70px]]19581966France
Joseph Illerhaus19661969West Germany
Hans Lücker19691975West Germany
Alfred Bertrand19751977Belgium
Egon Klepsch[[File:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F061785-0005, Hamburg, CDU-Bundesparteitag, Egon Klepsch (cropped).jpg70px]]19771982West Germany
Paolo Barbi19821984Italy
Egon Klepsch[[File:Klepsch EC President Portrait (3x4 cropped).jpg70px]]19841992West Germany
/Germany
Leo Tindemans[[File:Leo Tindemans (2006) cropped.jpg70px]]19921994Belgium
(Dutch)
Wilfried Martens[[File:Flickr - europeanpeoplesparty - CDU Congress Karlsruhe (9) (cropped).jpg70px]]19941999Belgium
(Dutch)
Hans-Gert Pöttering[[File:Pöttering EC President Portrait (3x4 cropped).jpg70px]]19992007Germany
Joseph Daul[[File:2016-12-06 Joseph Daul CDU Parteitag by Olaf Kosinsky-10.jpg70px]]20072014France
(East)
Manfred Weber[[File:(Manfred Weber) Brexit debate - Manfred Weber (EPP, Germany) (48753411591) (cropped).jpg70px]]2014presentGermany

MEPs

10th European Parliament

Main article: List of members of the European Parliament (2024–2029)

StateNational partyEuropean partyurl=https://www.europarl.europa.eu/meps/en/search/tabletitle=MEPs by Member State and political groupaccess-date=17 July 2024}}European UnionTotal
AustriaAustrian People's Party
Österreichische Volkspartei (ÖVP)EPP
BelgiumChristian Democratic and Flemish
Christen-Democratisch & Vlaams (CD&V)EPP
Christian Social Party
Christlich Soziale Partei (CSP)None
BulgariaCitizens for European Development of Bulgaria
Граждани за европейско развитие на България (GERB)EPP
Union of Democratic Forces
Съюз на демократичните сили (SDS)EPP
Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria
Демократи за силна България (DSB)EPP
CroatiaCroatian Democratic Union
Hrvatska demokratska zajednica (HDZ)EPP
CyprusDemocratic Rally
Δημοκρατικός Συναγερμός (DISY)EPP
Czech RepublicTOP 09
TOP 09EPP
Mayors and Independents
Starostové a nezávislí (STAN)None
Christian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party
Křesťanská a demokratická unie – Československá strana lidová (KDU–ČSL)EPP
DenmarkConservative People's Party
Konservative Folkeparti (C)EPP
Liberal Alliance
Liberal Alliance (I)None
EstoniaFatherland
IsamaaEPP
FinlandNational Coalition Party
Kansallinen Kokoomus (KK)EPP
FranceThe Republicans
Les Républicains (LR)EPP
GermanyChristian Democratic Union
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU)EPP
Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern e.V. (CSU)EPP
Ecological Democratic Party
Ökologisch-Demokratische Partei (ÖDP)None
EFA individual member
Family Party of Germany
Familienpartei Deutschlands (FAMILIE)ECPP
GreeceNew Democracy
Νέα Δημοκρατία (ND)EPP
HungaryRespect and Freedom Party
Tisztelet és Szabadság Párt (Tisza)None
IrelandFine Gael
Fine Gael (FG)EPP
ItalyForward Italy
Forza Italia (FI)EPP
South Tyrolean People's Party
Südtiroler Volkspartei (SVP)EPP
LatviaNew Unity
Jaunā Vienotība (JV)EPP
LithuaniaHomeland Union – Lithuanian Christian Democrats
Tėvynės sąjunga – Lietuvos krikščionys demokratai (TS-LKD)EPP
LuxembourgChristian Social People's Party
Chrëschtlech Sozial Vollekspartei (CSV)EPP
MaltaNationalist Party
Partit Nazzjonalista (PN)EPP
NetherlandsChristian Democratic Appeal
Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA)EPP
Farmer–Citizen Movement
BoerBurgerBeweging (BBB)None
New Social Contract
Nieuw Sociaal Contract (NSC)None
PolandCivic Coalition
Koalicja Obywatelska (KO)None
Polish People's Party
Polskie Stronnictwo Ludowe (PSL)EPP
PortugalSocial Democratic Party
Partido Social Democrata (PPD/PSD)EPP
Democratic and Social Centre - People's Party
Centro Democrático e Social - Partido Popular (CDS–PP)EPP
RomaniaNational Liberal Party
Partidul Național Liberal (PNL)EPP
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania
Romániai Magyar Demokrata Szövetség (RMDSZ)
Uniunea Democrată Maghiară din România (UDMR)EPP
SlovakiaChristian Democratic Movement
Kresťanskodemokratické Hnutie (KDH)EPP
SloveniaSlovenian Democratic Party
Slovenska Demokratska Stranka (SDS)EPP
New Slovenia – Christian Democrats
Nova Slovenija – Krščanski demokrati (NSi)EPP
SpainPeople's Party
Partido Popular (PP)EPP
SwedenModerate Party
Moderata Samlingspartiet (M)EPP
Christian Democrats
Kristdemokraterna (KD)EPP

9th European Parliament

Main article: List of members of the European Parliament (2019–2024)

StateNational partyEuropean partyMEPsEuropean UnionTotal
AustriaAustrian People's Party
Österreichische Volkspartei (ÖVP)EPP
BelgiumChristian Democratic and Flemish
Christen-Democratisch & Vlaams (CD&V)EPP
The Committed Ones
Les Engagés (LE)EPP
Christian Social Party
Christlich Soziale Partei (CSP)None
BulgariaCitizens for European Development of Bulgaria
Граждани за европейско развитие на България (GERB)EPP
Union of Democratic Forces
Съюз на демократичните сили (SDS)EPP
Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria
Демократи за силна България (DSB)EPP
CroatiaCroatian Democratic Union
Hrvatska demokratska zajednica (HDZ)EPP
CyprusDemocratic Rally
Δημοκρατικός Συναγερμός (DISY)EPP
Czech RepublicKDU-ČSL
KDU–ČSLEPP
TOP 09
TOP 09EPP
Mayors and Independents
Starostové a nezávislí (STAN)None
DenmarkConservative People's Party
Konservative Folkeparti (KF)EPP
EstoniaFatherland
IsamaaEPP
FinlandNational Coalition Party
Kansallinen Kokoomus (KK)EPP
FranceThe Republicans
Les Républicains (LR)EPP
The Centrists
Les Centristes (LC)None
GermanyChristian Democratic Union
Christlich Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU)EPP
Christian Social Union in Bavaria
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern e.V. (CSU)EPP
Family Party of Germany
Familienpartei Deutschlands (FAMILIE)ECPM
GreeceNew Democracy
Νέα Δημοκρατία (ND)EPP
HungaryChristian Democratic People's Party
Kereszténydemokrata Néppárt (KDNP)EPP
IrelandFine Gael
Fine Gael (FG)EPP
ItalyForward Italy
Forza Italia (FI)EPP
South Tyrolean People's Party
Südtiroler Volkspartei (SVP)EPP
LatviaUnity
VienotībaEPP
LithuaniaHomeland Union
Tėvynės Sąjunga (TS-LKD)EPP
LuxembourgChristian Social People's Party
Chrëschtlech Sozial Vollekspartei (CSV)EPP
MaltaNationalist Party
Partit Nazzjonalista (PN)EPP
NetherlandsChristian Democratic Appeal
Christen-Democratisch Appèl (CDA)EPP
Christian Union
ChristenUnie (CU)ECPM
PolandCivic Platform
Platforma Obywatelska (PO)EPP
Polish People's Party
Polskie Stronnictwo Ludowe (PSL)EPP
Independents
Magdalena Adamowicz, Janina OchojskaIndependent
PortugalSocial Democratic Party
Partido Social Democrata (PSD)EPP
Democratic and Social Centre – People's Party
Centro Democrático e Social – Partido Popular (CDS–PP)EPP
RomaniaNational Liberal Party
Partidul Național Liberal (PNL)EPP
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania
Romániai Magyar Demokrata Szövetség (RMDSZ)
Uniunea Democrată Maghiară din România (UDMR)EPP
People's Movement Party
Partidul Mișcarea Populară (PMP)EPP
SlovakiaChristian Democratic Movement
Kresťanskodemokratické Hnutie (KDH)EPP
Democrats
Demokrati (D)EPP
Slovakia
SlovenskoEPP
SloveniaSlovenian Democratic Party
Slovenska Demokratska Stranka (SDS)EPP
New Slovenia – Christian Democrats
Nova Slovenija – Krščanski demokrati (NSi)EPP
Slovenian People's Party
Slovenska ljudska stranka (SLS)EPP
SpainPeople's Party
Partido Popular (PP)EPP
SwedenModerate Party
Moderata Samlingspartiet (M)EPP
Christian Democrats
Kristdemokraterna (KD)EPP
The People's List
FolklistanNone

Former members

CountryPartyEuropean partyMEPs
Fidesz – Hungarian Civic Alliance
Fidesz – Magyar Polgári Szövetség (Fidesz)None
50PLUS (50+)None

7th and 8th European Parliament

CountryNamesNames (English)MEPs 2009–14MEPs 2014–19
Österreichische VolksparteiAustrian People's Party65
Christian Democratic and Flemish32
Humanist Democratic Centre11
Christian Social Party11
Граждани за европейско развитие на България
(Grazhdani za Evropeysko Razvitie na Balgariya)Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria56
Съюз на демократичните сили
(Sayuz na Demokratichnite Sili)Union of Democratic Forces10
Демократи за силна България
(Demokrati za Silna Balgariya)Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria11
Hrvatska demokratska zajednicaCroatian Democratic Union44
Hrvatska seljačka strankaCroatian Peasant Party11
(Dimokratikós Sinayermós)Democratic Rally21
Křesťanská a demokratická unie – Československá strana lidováChristian and Democratic Union – Czechoslovak People's Party23
TOP 09TOP 093
Starostové a nezávislíMayors and Independents1
Det Konservative FolkepartiConservative People's Party11
Erakond IsamaaPro Patria11
Kansallinen KokoomusNational Coalition Party33
Suomen kristillisdemokraatitChristian Democrats10
Les RépublicainsThe Republicans2718
Union des Démocrates et IndépendantsUnion of Democrats and Independents60
Independent2
Christlich Demokratische Union DeutschlandsChristian Democratic Union3429
Christlich-Soziale Union in Bayern e.V.Christian Social Union of Bavaria85
Νέα Δημοκρατία
(Néa Dimokratiá)New Democracy75
Kereszténydemokrata NéppártChristian Democratic People's Party11
Fine GaelFine Gael44
Forza ItaliaForza Italia1912
Alternativa PopolarePopular Alternative1
Unione di CentroUnion of the Centre61
South Tyrolean People's Party11
VienotībaUnity44
Tėvynės Sąjunga – Lietuvos Krikščionys DemokrataiHomeland Union – Lithuanian Christian Democrats42
Independent1
Christian Social People's Party33
Partit NazzjonalistaNationalist Party23
Christen-Democratisch AppèlChristian Democratic Appeal55
Platforma ObywatelskaCivic Platform2518
Polskie Stronnictwo LudowePolish People's Party44
Partido Social DemocrataSocial Democratic Party86
Centro Democrático e Social – Partido PopularDemocratic and Social Centre – People's Party21
Partidul Național LiberalNational Liberal Party128
Democratic Alliance of Hungarians in Romania32
Partidul Mișcarea PopularăPeople's Movement Party
Independent2
Kresťanskodemokratické hnutieChristian Democratic Movement23
Strana Maďarskej Koalície – Magyar Koalício PártjaParty of the Hungarian Community21
Most–HídMost–Híd1
Independent1
Slovenska demokratska strankaSlovenian Democratic Party33
Nova Slovenija – Krščanska Ljudska StrankaNew Slovenia – Christian People's Party11
Slovenska ljudska strankaSlovenian People's Party1
People's Party2416
Independent1
Moderata samlingspartietModerate Party43
KristdemokraternaChristian Democrats11
Change UKChange UK (defection from Conservative Party/ECR)01
Renew Party (defection from Conservative Party/ECR)01
Total274219

Activities

In the news

Activities performed by the group in the period between June 2004 and June 2008 include monitoring elections in Palestine and Ukraine; encouraging transeuropean rail travel, telecoms deregulation, energy security, a common energy policy, the accession of Bulgaria and Romania to the Union, partial reform of the CAP and attempts to tackle illegal immigration; denouncing Russian involvement in South Ossetia; supporting the Constitution Treaty and the Lisbon Treaty; debating globalisation, relations with China, and Taiwan; backing plans to outlaw Holocaust denial; nominating Anna Politkovskaya for the 2007 Sakharov Prize; expelling Daniel Hannan from the Group; the discussion about whether ED MEPs should remain within EPP-ED or form a group of their own; criticisms of the group's approach to tackling low turnout for the 2009 elections; the group's use of the two-President arrangement; and the group's proposal to ban the Islamic Burka dress across the EU.

Parliamentary activity profile

EPP-ED: 659 motions}}

The debates and votes in the European Parliament are tracked by its website and categorised by the groups that participate in them and the rule of procedure that they fall into. The results give a profile for each group by category and the total indicates the group's level of participation in Parliamentary debates. The activity profile for each group for the period 1 August 2004 to 1 August 2008 in the Sixth Parliament is given on the diagram on the right. The group is denoted in blue.

Publications

The group produces many publications, which can be found on its website.

Notes

References

References

  1. "Democracy in the European Parliament".
  2. "Political Groups of the European Parliament". Kas.de.
  3. "EPP-ED on Europe Politique". Europe-politique.eu.
  4. "Political Groups Annual Accounts 2001–2006". European Parliament.
  5. {{EP MEP info/archive. 1253. Hans-Gert Pöttering
  6. {{EP MEP info/archive. 1253. Joseph Daul
  7. "1979 Constitutive session {{!".
  8. "Group names 1999". European Parliament.
  9. {{EP MEP info/archive. 1267. Egon Klepsch
  10. Slomp, Hans. (26 September 2011). "Europe, A Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics". ABC-CLIO.
  11. (5 March 2019). "Hungary's Orban faces exclusion from EU centre-right group". [[BBC News]].
  12. de Carbonnel, Alissa. (29 March 2019). "Centre-right to top European Parliament vote, edging out nationalists: poll". [[Reuters]].
  13. (5 June 2014). "Weber elected new EPP leader".
  14. Staab, Andreas. (2011). "The European Union Explained, Second Edition: Institutions, Actors, Global Impact". Indiana University Press.
  15. Robert Thomson. (2011). "Resolving Controversy in the European Union: Legislative Decision-Making Before and After Enlargement". Cambridge University Press.
  16. Senem Aydin-Düzgit. (2012). "Constructions of European Identity: Debates and Discourses on Turkey and the EU". Palgrave Macmillan.
  17. Tapio Raunio. (2012). "The Institutions of the European Union". Oxford University Press.
  18. Lluís Maria de Puig. (2008). "International Parliaments". Council of Europe.
  19. Lori Thorlakson. (2013). "Towards a Federal Europe". Taylor & Francis.
  20. "EPP Manifesto 2024 - Our Europe, a safe and good home for the people".
  21. "Building a social market economy that cares".
  22. "Composition of the Common Assembly (10–13 September 1952)".
  23. "EPPED Chronology 02". Epp-ed.eu.
  24. "Sassen, Emanuel Marie Joseph Anthony (1911–1995)".
  25. "Microsoft Word – 2006EN-3-DEF-CH.doc".
  26. [http://www.cvce.eu/obj/common_assembly_resolution_16_june_1953-en-fe53a389-5c07-410f-a190-78e9dcab80d6.html Common Assembly Resolution (16 June 1953) in ''Journal officiel de la CECA'', 21 July 1953, S. 155] {{webarchive. link. (4 October 2012)
  27. "Statement of formation of the Christian-Democratic Group (Strasbourg, 23 June 1953)".
  28. ""Shaping Europe – 25 years of the European People's Party" by Wilfried Martens, President of the European People's Party". Epp-ed.europarl.eu.int.
  29. Mulvey, Stephen. (11 July 2006). "Tories urged to make EPP split". BBC News.
  30. "Manfred Weber on Twitter". Twitter.
  31. (16 April 2019). "Change UK party approved for European elections". BBC News.
  32. Őry, Mariann. (2 March 2021). "Orbán emelte a tétet a Néppárt vitájában". Magyar Hírlap Kiadói Kft.
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  34. [https://www.politico.eu/article/fidesz-meps-remain-in-the-epp-group-for-now/ Fidesz MEPs remain in the EPP for now] Retrieved 27 January 2020.
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