Identity and Democracy
Identity and Democracy (ID) was a political group in the European Parliament that united nationalist and Eurosceptic parties from multiple European Union member states, emphasizing the preservation of national sovereignty and cultural identity over deeper European integration. Formed on 13 June 2019 as the successor to the Europe of Nations and Freedom group, it operated through the ninth parliamentary term until 2024, when its members dispersed into new formations such as Patriots for Europe and Europe of Sovereign Nations following the European Parliament elections.[1][2] The group's core member parties included France's National Rally, Italy's Lega, Germany's Alternative for Germany, and Austria's Freedom Party, which collectively advocated policies prioritizing border security, opposition to uncontrolled immigration, and repatriation of certain powers from EU institutions to national governments.[3][4] With seats fluctuating between approximately 62 and 73 during its existence, ID exerted influence in parliamentary committees and plenary debates, particularly on migration and internal security matters, often aligning with other Eurosceptic factions to block or amend supranational legislation.[5] Key defining characteristics included its rejection of federalist EU visions in favor of a confederation of sovereign states and its focus on protecting national identities from what members described as erosive globalist and multicultural policies.[6] Notable controversies encompassed allegations of financial mismanagement, with the European Parliament seeking repayment of at least €4.3 million in funds deemed improperly used by the group between 2019 and 2024 for activities outside strict parliamentary purposes.[7][8] Despite such issues, ID's platform resonated with voters concerned about demographic changes and EU overreach, contributing to the broader electoral gains of nationalist parties in the 2024 elections.[9]
History
Formation and Early Development (2019)
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group was established on 13 June 2019, immediately following the 2019 European Parliament elections, as a successor to the Europe of Nations and Freedom (ENF) group from the previous parliamentary term.[10][11] This formation brought together 73 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from Eurosceptic and nationalist parties across 10 member states, including Italy's Lega, France's Rassemblement National, Germany's Alternative for Germany (AfD), Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ), Belgium's Vlaams Belang, the Netherlands' Party for Freedom (PVV), Denmark's Danish People's Party, Finland's Finns Party, Estonia's Conservative People's Party, and the Czech Republic's Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD).[10][11] The group's creation reflected a strategic consolidation of right-leaning forces emphasizing national sovereignty over deeper European integration, amid a post-election landscape where such parties gained seats but failed to form a single broader alliance with other conservative groupings.[12] Initial leadership was shared by co-chairs Marco Zanni of Lega and Nicolas Bay of Rassemblement National, who announced the group's formation via a press conference in the European Parliament.[13] By 2 July 2019, Zanni was formally elected as the group's chair, overseeing its integration into the ninth parliamentary term's political structures.[14] The ID group adopted statutes that articulated its foundational principles, including the defense of member states' sovereignty, the preservation of distinct national identities, and opposition to supranational federalism, positioning it as a counterweight to mainstream pro-integration blocs.[15] In its early months, ID focused on organizational setup, including the election of a bureau and the allocation of parliamentary committee seats, while beginning to coordinate positions on key issues like immigration control and EU budget reforms.[1] The group quickly established itself as the fifth-largest in the 751-seat Parliament, leveraging its numerical strength to amplify sovereigntist voices, though internal cohesion was tested by national divergences and the exclusion of more extreme elements that remained non-attached.[10][11] This period marked ID's emergence as a formalized platform for parties prioritizing border security, cultural preservation, and resistance to centralized EU policies, setting the stage for its activities through the term.[15]Performance in the 2019 European Parliament Elections
The 2019 European Parliament elections occurred from 23 to 26 May 2019 across EU member states, resulting in nationalist and sovereignist parties securing seats that enabled the formation of the Identity and Democracy (ID) group with 73 members in the 751-seat chamber.[16] [11] This represented a substantial increase from the 36 seats held by its predecessor group, Europe of Nations and Freedom (ENF), in the 2014–2019 term.[17] The ID group was constituted on 13 June 2019, comprising MEPs from at least seven member states as required by Parliament rules.[18] Performance varied by country, with strongest results in Italy and France, where domestic political dynamics favored anti-immigration platforms amid debates over EU migration policies and national sovereignty. In Italy, Lega under Matteo Salvini achieved 34.3% of the vote, translating to 28 seats.[19] In France, Rassemblement National led by Marine Le Pen obtained 23.3% of the vote for 22 seats, capitalizing on dissatisfaction with centrist governance.[19] Other notable gains included Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ) with 17.2% and 3 seats, and Sweden Democrats with 15.3% and 3 seats.[19]| Country | Party | Seats | Vote Share (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Italy | Lega | 28 | 34.3 |
| France | Rassemblement National | 22 | 23.3 |
| Austria | Freedom Party (FPÖ) | 3 | 17.2 |
| Sweden | Sweden Democrats | 3 | 15.3 |
| Belgium | Vlaams Belang | 3 | N/A |
| Czech Republic | Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD) | 2 | N/A |
| Finland | Finns Party (PS) | 2 | N/A |
| Others (Denmark, Estonia) | Various | 2 | N/A |
Activities and Internal Dynamics During the Ninth Term (2019–2024)
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group operated during the ninth European Parliament term with a focus on advocating for greater national sovereignty, stricter border controls, and resistance to expanded EU competencies, as outlined in its founding statutes adopted on June 13, 2019.[15] These priorities included the principle that member states retain the right to repatriate powers previously delegated to EU institutions and opposition to any further transfer of authority in areas such as migration policy, economic governance, or foreign affairs.[15] Under the consistent chairmanship of Italian MEP Marco Zanni from Lega, elected on July 2, 2019, the group positioned itself as a counterweight to federalist tendencies, frequently tabling amendments and resolutions critiquing EU-wide initiatives like the Green Deal.[14] [21] In legislative activities, ID MEPs demonstrated high cohesion on core issues, consistently voting against major EU climate and environmental legislation, earning the lowest rankings in independent scorecards evaluating parliamentary performance on such measures—for instance, a 6/100 score from climate NGOs assessing votes from 2019 to 2024.[22] [23] The group opposed binding targets for emissions reductions and renewable energy mandates, arguing they imposed undue economic burdens on national industries without sufficient evidence of global impact. On migration, ID members pushed for reforms emphasizing external border enforcement and bilateral national agreements over EU-wide relocation schemes, including vocal opposition to the 2024 EU Migration Pact during its negotiation phases.[24] Socio-economically, despite rhetorical support for protecting workers from globalization, ID voting patterns aligned more closely with conservative fiscal restraint than expansive labor protections, diverging from left-leaning proposals on minimum wages and social security harmonization.[24] The group's 73 MEPs, including a notably high proportion of newcomers (59 out of 73), contributed to committee work primarily through the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs, where they advocated for prioritizing internal security over supranational human rights frameworks.[25] Internally, ID maintained relative cohesion under Zanni's leadership, which emphasized pragmatic alliances on sovereignty issues while avoiding deeper ideological entanglements that could fracture the group.[14] However, dynamics were marked by occasional departures linked to national party scandals or personal alignments, such as Dutch MEP Lars Patrick Berg's exit to non-attached status on May 12, 2021, amid internal Dutch Freedom Party disputes, and French MEP Gilbert Collard's departure on January 25, 2022, following shifts in Rassemblement National strategy.[26] [27] Tensions escalated in early 2024 with the expulsion of the German Alternative for Germany (AfD) delegation, comprising 15 MEPs, after controversies involving alleged ties to extremist elements, including remarks by an AfD candidate evoking Nazi rhetoric; Zanni cited the need to preserve the group's focus on policy over reputational risks as justification for the board's vote.[28] These events highlighted underlying challenges in balancing diverse national delegations, from Italy's Lega to France's Rassemblement National, amid varying degrees of Euroskepticism and domestic pressures, though no full-scale splits occurred until the term's end.[28]2024 European Parliament Elections and Group Dissolution
The national parties affiliated with the Identity and Democracy (ID) group experienced varied but generally positive results in the European Parliament elections held from June 6 to 9, 2024, contributing to an overall rightward shift in the chamber.[29] Eurosceptic and nationalist parties previously in ID, such as France's National Rally and Austria's Freedom Party, capitalized on voter concerns over immigration and national sovereignty, with the broader category of such parties achieving record levels of support across the EU.[30] However, internal divisions had already surfaced prior to the vote, notably the expulsion of Germany's Alternative for Germany (AfD) from the ID group on May 23, 2024, following controversial remarks by an AfD candidate regarding the SS, which strained alliances with other ID members wary of reputational damage.[31] Following the elections, the ID group dissolved without reconstituting in the 10th European Parliament term, as it failed to meet the minimum threshold of 23 MEPs from at least seven member states required to form a political group.[32] A majority of former ID MEPs, including those from the National Rally, Austria's Freedom Party, and Belgium's Vlaams Belang, integrated into the newly formed Patriots for Europe group, announced on June 30, 2024, by leaders including Hungary's Viktor Orbán, and officially established on July 8, 2024.[33] [34] This new alliance rapidly expanded to 84 MEPs, positioning it as the Parliament's third-largest group ahead of the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) with 78 seats.[35] Some former ID affiliates joined the ECR, while the AfD's 15 MEPs initially remained non-attached, reflecting ongoing fragmentation among nationalist forces despite electoral gains.[32] The dissolution marked the end of ID's structure after the Ninth Term, driven by strategic realignments aimed at consolidating influence through larger, more cohesive blocs.[32]Post-Dissolution Investigations (2024–2025)
Following the dissolution of the Identity and Democracy (ID) group in July 2024, European Parliament auditors conducted a review of its final financial report, uncovering irregularities in the expenditure of approximately €4.3 million in EU funds allocated for group operations between 2019 and 2024.[7][36] These funds, intended for parliamentary activities such as staff salaries, office costs, and events, were found to have been misallocated, including payments for non-compliant services and potential overstaffing beyond authorized limits.[37][38] On July 8, 2025, the European Public Prosecutor's Office (EPPO) initiated a formal investigation into the alleged misuse, prompted by the Parliament's internal audit, focusing on potential fraud involving public funds.[39] The probe targets former ID leadership and staff, examining whether expenditures violated EU financial regulations, such as those prohibiting the use of group allowances for national party activities or undeclared benefits.[37] Critics from left-leaning groups, including the Socialists and Democrats, described the findings as evidence of systemic abuse by far-right formations, demanding full repayment and legal accountability, while defenders, such as representatives from successor groups, characterized the scrutiny as politically motivated double standards, noting similar past irregularities in other parliamentary groups received less attention.[40][41] In September 2025, the European Parliament's Bureau escalated the matter by seeking recovery of the misspent funds from the Patriots for Europe group, ID's primary successor, which absorbed a majority of ID's MEPs (73 out of 84) and retained continuity in staff and operations following the 2024 elections.[42][7] The Budgetary Control Committee endorsed this approach in its opinion on ID's 2024 financial report, recommending sanctions and repayment to the EU budget, with the complexity arising from personnel transitions that blurred lines between the dissolved entity's liabilities and the new group's resources.[38] As of late 2025, the EPPO investigation remains ongoing, with no charges filed, amid debates over enforcement consistency across political groups.[39][43]Ideology and Policy Positions
Core Ideological Foundations
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group in the European Parliament was established on 12 June 2019 with foundational principles centered on safeguarding national sovereignty and cultural identity. Its statutes emphasize upholding freedom, sovereignty, subsidiarity, and the identity of European peoples and nations, recognizing the Greco-Roman and Christian heritage as pillars of European civilization.[15] The group promotes a model of voluntary cooperation among sovereign nation-states, explicitly rejecting the creation of a European superstate and opposing Turkey's accession to the EU.[15] Central to ID's ideology is the assertion that the nation-state represents the highest level of democratic legitimacy, prioritizing citizen control over supranational bureaucracy. Members advocate reforming the EU to enhance subsidiarity, transparency, accountability, and direct democracy, while opposing further transfers of sovereignty, such as a eurozone budget or direct EU taxation.[15] This stance reflects a commitment to reclaiming competencies devolved to Brussels, ensuring decisions remain closest to affected citizens.[15] On identity preservation, the group seeks to protect European civilization, national identities, and Christian heritage against perceived erosions from globalization and mass migration. It defends the rule of law and freedom of speech as essential values.[15] Immigration policy forms a core pillar, with emphasis on member states' rights to regulate and limit inflows, enforce returns of illegal entrants, and secure external borders to prioritize national security and cultural continuity.[15] These positions underscore ID's broader critique of EU policies that, in the group's view, undermine democratic self-determination and homogeneous national communities.[15]Stance on European Integration and Sovereignty
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group positioned itself as staunchly Eurosceptic, prioritizing the sovereignty of European nation-states over deeper supranational integration within the European Union. In its statutes, the group explicitly upheld the freedom, sovereignty, subsidiarity, and identity of European nations, viewing the nation-state as the optimal framework for achieving full democracy and rejecting any evolution toward a European superstate.[15] It opposed further transfers of power from member states to EU institutions, advocating instead for voluntary cooperation among sovereign nations rather than centralized federal structures.[15] Central to ID's platform was a call for profound reform of the EU to restore powers to member states, including the repatriation of competencies lost to Brussels and the prevention of new EU-level authorities or the erosion of national veto rights.[15] The group demanded enhancements to subsidiarity, transparency, accountability, and the introduction of direct democratic mechanisms to counteract perceived democratic deficits in EU governance.[15] Economically, it rejected proposals for a eurozone budget or direct taxation powers at the EU level, arguing these would undermine national fiscal autonomy.[15] This stance aligned with broader critiques from ID-affiliated parties, which consistently emphasized national sovereignty as a bulwark against overreach in areas like economic policy and border control.[44] ID also expressed opposition to EU enlargement that could dilute national identities, notably rejecting Turkey's potential accession and prioritizing the protection of Europe's Christian heritage alongside diverse national cultures.[15] During its tenure from 2019 to 2024, the group frequently voted against treaty revisions or initiatives perceived to advance integration, such as enhanced EU fiscal capacity, reinforcing its commitment to a confederation-like model over a unified polity.[45] This position reflected a causal view that excessive centralization erodes democratic legitimacy, as sovereignty resides fundamentally with electorates in individual states rather than unelected supranational bodies.[46]Positions on Immigration, Borders, and National Identity
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group advocated for stringent controls on immigration to protect national sovereignty and cultural cohesion across Europe. In its foundational political declaration, the group emphasized the need for enhanced security along the European Union's external borders, asserting that "a better protection of the EU's external borders is needed" to prevent unauthorized entries.[15] This stance reflected a broader rejection of EU-wide mechanisms perceived to undermine member states' autonomy, such as mandatory relocation quotas for asylum seekers, which ID members consistently opposed during votes in the Ninth European Parliament term (2019–2024).[47] ID positioned immigration policy as a core defense against threats to public security and economic stability, calling for the termination of asylum rights for economic migrants while prioritizing the deportation of those entering illegally. The group argued that uncontrolled inflows, particularly from non-European regions, strained welfare systems and increased crime rates, citing data from member states like Italy and France where ID-affiliated parties governed or held significant influence. For instance, in 2019–2023, Italy under Lega's influence repatriated over 50,000 irregular migrants annually through bilateral agreements with origin countries, a model ID sought to replicate EU-wide but without supranational oversight.[47][15] Members frequently highlighted empirical correlations between migration surges—such as the 2015–2016 crisis involving over 1 million arrivals—and rises in specific criminal offenses, including sexual assaults in Germany (up 10% per official statistics from 2015 to 2016), to justify demands for immediate border fortifications and naval interdictions in the Mediterranean.[47] Regarding borders, ID upheld the principle that "every nation has the right to control its borders and to decide who can enter its territory," opposing any EU policies that centralized decision-making on admissions.[47][15] This included resistance to the 2024 EU Migration and Asylum Pact, which ID criticized for facilitating secondary movements and burden-sharing that disregarded national capacities. The group's resolutions in plenary sessions, such as those in 2020–2023, proposed reallocating EU funds from internal redistribution to frontier defenses, including fences and patrols, drawing on successful implementations in Hungary (which reduced crossings by 99% post-2015 border barrier) as evidence of efficacy.[47] On national identity, ID framed immigration restrictions as essential to preserving the ethnic, cultural, and historical distinctiveness of European nations against dilution from mass settlement. The group's statutes explicitly aimed "to safeguard the identity of the citizens and nations in Europe," viewing multiculturalism as incompatible with democratic self-determination and prioritizing assimilation for limited legal entrants.[15] This perspective was articulated in interventions by leaders like Marco Zanni (Lega), who in 2021 debates argued that unchecked demographic shifts—Europe's non-EU migrant population rising from 3.8% in 1990 to 7.5% by 2020 per Eurostat—eroded social trust and native birth rates (falling to 1.5 children per woman EU-wide). ID thus linked border integrity to identity preservation, contending that porous frontiers enabled parallel societies, as evidenced by integration failures in suburbs of Paris and Brussels where native populations dropped below 50% in some districts by 2020 census data.[15][47]Economic and Social Policy Views
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group in the European Parliament lacked a unified manifesto, relying instead on a brief declaration emphasizing national sovereignty, which extended to economic policy by prioritizing member states' autonomy over EU-level fiscal and regulatory harmonization.[48] ID MEPs consistently advocated for repatriating economic decision-making competencies, opposing mechanisms like the EU's common budget expansions or fiscal transfers that they viewed as infringing on national priorities, with voting records showing near-unanimous rejection of proposals for deeper economic union during the 2019–2024 term.[44] This stance reflected the group's composition of parties favoring protectionist trade policies to shield domestic industries from global competition, as seen in support for tariffs on non-EU imports and opposition to free trade agreements like those with Mercosur, arguing that such deals eroded jobs in sectors such as agriculture and manufacturing.[49] Economically, ID positions diverged from liberal free-market orthodoxy, blending elements of interventionism with nationalism; for instance, parties like France's Rassemblement National and Italy's Lega pushed for state-backed industrial policies and "economic patriotism," including subsidies for strategic sectors and resistance to EU antitrust rules perceived as anti-competitive toward national champions.[48] In parliamentary votes on socio-economic issues from 2019 to 2024, ID MEPs aligned more frequently with right-leaning positions than their rhetorical emphasis on worker protection suggested, supporting deregulation in labor markets and opposing expansive EU social spending directives, such as those expanding minimum wages or worker consultation rights across borders.[50] They critiqued the EU's Green Deal as economically burdensome, voting against its implementation in 2021 due to projected costs exceeding €1 trillion by 2030, prioritizing energy security and national fossil fuel interests over supranational climate mandates.[24] On social policy, ID prioritized the preservation of national welfare systems tailored to citizens, embodying welfare chauvinism by advocating restrictions on benefits for non-nationals to ensure sustainability amid demographic pressures like aging populations and immigration.[51] This approach, evident in votes opposing EU-wide expansions of migrant access to social assistance, aligned with member parties' platforms limiting family allowances, housing aid, and healthcare to long-term residents, as articulated in Austria's Freedom Party's 2019 program capping welfare for recent arrivals.[52] Socially conservative elements unified the group against EU interventions in family structures, with MEPs rejecting resolutions promoting gender quotas or comprehensive sex education in 2022, favoring policies that incentivize native birth rates through tax breaks for families while decrying multiculturalism as diluting social cohesion.[50] ID's statutes underscored subsidiarity in social matters, opposing centralized EU standards on issues like euthanasia or parental rights, to safeguard diverse national traditions rooted in Christian heritage and local customs.[15]Organizational Structure and Leadership
Leadership Roles and Changes
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group established its leadership structure upon formation in June 2019, with Marco Zanni, a Member of the European Parliament (MEP) from Italy's Lega party, elected as chair on July 2, 2019.[14] Zanni, previously an advisor to Matteo Salvini on foreign affairs, led the group through its entire term, overseeing internal coordination, strategic positioning, and responses to key events such as the expulsion of Germany's Alternative for Germany (AfD) in May 2024.[53] The chair role involved representing the group in plenary sessions, negotiating alliances, and directing policy priorities focused on national sovereignty and immigration controls.[54] Nicolas Bay, an MEP from France's National Rally (formerly National Front), served as deputy chair or co-chair alongside Zanni from the group's inception.[53] Bay's position supported Zanni in managing the bureau and coordinating among the diverse national parties, which often held divergent views on European integration. No major leadership transitions occurred during the ninth parliamentary term (2019–2024), reflecting relative stability despite internal tensions, including the AfD ejection prompted by controversies over candidate statements on Nazi history.[55] The ID group's leadership ended with its dissolution in July 2024 following the European Parliament elections, as member parties fragmented to join new formations like Patriots for Europe, led by figures including Hungary's Fidesz and Italy's Lega.[55] [32] Zanni's tenure concluded on July 15, 2024, after which former ID MEPs and staff transitioned to successor groups, amid ongoing European Parliament scrutiny over the prior group's financial management.[14] [7]Bureau and Internal Governance
The Identity and Democracy (ID) Group's internal governance was outlined in its statutes, adopted upon formation on 12 June 2019.[15] The primary decision-making body was the Group Meeting, comprising all members, which operated by simple majority vote unless otherwise specified, such as the two-thirds majority required for statute amendments.[15] A quorum of one-quarter of members and representing Member States was necessary for meetings.[15] All meetings, including those of the Bureau and Presidency, were confidential, with minutes maintained by the Secretariat.[15] The Bureau served as the executive organ, preparing strategic and political decisions, legislative priorities, budgets, and Secretariat composition.[15] It convened at least once per Strasbourg part-session, with extraordinary sessions callable within one week by one-quarter of members or national delegations.[15] Composition included the Presidency, up to four Vice-Presidents, heads of national delegations, and designated European Parliament officeholders.[15] The Presidency consisted of the President, Treasurer, and non-voting Chief Whip, responsible for day-to-day leadership and representation.[15] Leadership positions were elected by secret ballot in the Group Meeting for terms of 2.5 years, aligning with the European Parliament President's tenure.[15] Nominations required endorsement by three heads of national delegations and five members' signatures, with no proxy or postal voting permitted.[15] Marco Zanni, an Italian MEP from Lega, served as President from the group's inception in June 2019.[56] Jaak Madison, an Estonian MEP, held the Treasurer position during the ninth term.[57] Casual vacancies were filled temporarily by the Bureau until elections.[15] National delegations retained significant autonomy, able to establish internal rules and handle member suspensions or exclusions, reflecting the group's emphasis on national sovereignty.[15] While members were expected to adhere to the group line, provisions allowed voting according to conscience, coordinated by the Chief Whip.[15] Specialized bodies included Committee Working Groups, each led by a Coordinator elected from assigned members, and broader Working Groups chaired by Coordinators to propose parliamentary speakers and strategies.[15] The Secretariat, headed by a Secretary-General appointed by the Bureau, provided administrative support.[15] These structures facilitated decentralized yet coordinated operations until the group's dissolution following the 2024 elections.[56]Affiliated National Parties
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group comprised Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) primarily from national parties advocating nationalist, Eurosceptic, and anti-immigration positions, drawn from ten European Union member states during its 2019–2024 term.[4] These affiliations formed the basis of the group's 73 MEPs at its peak, though membership fluctuated due to internal dynamics and expulsions.[31] Key affiliated parties included:| Country | Party Acronym | Core Positions | MEPs (approx. peak) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Austria | FPÖ | National sovereignty, anti-immigration | 3 |
| Belgium | VB | Flemish independence, border security | 3 |
| Denmark | DF | Welfare for Danes only, EU skepticism | 1 |
| Estonia | EKRE | Traditional values, anti-globalism | 1 |
| Finland | PS | Populism, anti-EU centralization | 2 |
| France | RN | National identity, economic protectionism | 23 |
| Germany | AfD | Anti-euro, migration halt (until 2024) | 11 |
| Italy | Lega | Federalism, anti-mass migration | 24 |
| Sweden | SD | Cultural preservation, strict asylum | 3 |
Parliamentary Membership
Composition in the Ninth European Parliament
The Identity and Democracy (ID) group was established on 13 June 2019 in the Ninth European Parliament, comprising 73 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) from ten member states following the constitutive session after the 2019 elections.[60] These MEPs represented nationalist and Eurosceptic parties prioritizing national sovereignty, immigration control, and opposition to further EU integration. The group's delegations were distributed across Austria (3 seats), Belgium (3 seats), Czechia (2 seats), Denmark (1 seat), Estonia (1 seat), Finland (2 seats), France (22 seats), Germany (11 seats), and Italy (28 seats).[60] Key affiliated national parties included Lega (Italy), Rassemblement National (France), Alternative für Deutschland (Germany), Freiheitliche Partei Österreichs (Austria), Vlaams Belang (Belgium), Svoboda a přímá demokracie (Czechia), Dansk Folkeparti (Denmark), and Konservatiivne Rahvaerakond (Estonia).[58] The Perussuomalaiset (Finns Party) from Finland initially aligned but withdrew its MEPs from the group shortly after formation in July 2019 due to internal disagreements. Italy's Lega provided the largest single-party contingent with 28 MEPs, reflecting its strong electoral performance of 34.3% in the 2019 Italian vote, while France's Rassemblement National contributed 22 MEPs from its 23 elected seats.[60]| Country | Initial Seats (2019 Constitutive Session) |
|---|---|
| Austria | 3 |
| Belgium | 3 |
| Czechia | 2 |
| Denmark | 1 |
| Estonia | 1 |
| Finland | 2 |
| France | 22 |
| Germany | 11 |
| Italy | 28 |
| Total | 73 |
Notable Members and Their Contributions
Marco Zanni, an Italian MEP from Lega, served as president of the Identity and Democracy (ID) group from its formation on 13 June 2019 until its dissolution in 2024.[61][62] In this role, he coordinated the group's parliamentary activities, emphasizing national sovereignty, opposition to EU federalism, and reforms to prioritize member state interests over supranational authority. Zanni delivered key statements on behalf of ID, such as advocating for a "better Europe" through repatriation of competencies and stricter border controls, and was ranked 97th in the 2023 MEP Influence Index for his impact on internal market and other files.[61][63] Marine Le Pen, a French MEP from Rassemblement National, played a pivotal role in launching the ID group in June 2019, uniting sovereignist parties to challenge mainstream EU policies.[62] As a prominent voice, she contributed to shaping ID's focus on immigration restriction, national identity preservation, and critiquing EU fiscal and migration frameworks during plenary debates and committee work throughout the ninth term (2019-2024). Le Pen's efforts helped expand ID's membership to 73 MEPs initially, amplifying the group's influence on sovereignty-related resolutions.[62] Other notable contributors included Nicolas Bay, a French RN MEP who served as vice-chair of ID and led initiatives on security and anti-terrorism measures, aligning with the group's emphasis on border protection. German AfD MEPs, such as Nicolaus Fest, advanced ID's Eurosceptic positions until AfD's departure in 2024, tabling amendments against EU enlargement and centralization. These members collectively drove ID's legislative opposition, with the group often voting cohesively against federalist proposals, though lacking formal committee chairs due to cordon sanitaire practices.760403_EN.pdf)
Former and Departed Members
The Alternative for Germany (AfD) delegation, comprising 10 MEPs, was expelled from the Identity and Democracy (ID) group on 23 May 2024.[31] [59] The expulsion stemmed from remarks by AfD lead candidate Maximilian Krah, who described members of the Waffen-SS as "not automatically all criminals," alongside ongoing concerns over AfD's alleged extremist links, including espionage scandals involving staff and divergences in foreign policy stances such as attitudes toward Russia.[64] [65] This action was precipitated by an ultimatum from ID's Danish People's Party delegation, demanding Krah's removal, which AfD rejected.[66] Dutch MEP Marcel de Graaff, representing the Forum for Democracy (FvD), left ID on 24 October 2022 to sit as a non-attached member.[67] De Graaff cited irreconcilable differences over the group's perceived anti-Russian position, particularly amid the Ukraine conflict, arguing it conflicted with his support for closer ties to Moscow. De Graaff had been FvD's sole remaining MEP in ID following internal party scandals in 2020–2021 that led to the departure or resignation of other FvD representatives from national and European politics.[67] These departures contributed to ID's shrinking influence in the ninth European Parliament, reducing its cohesion ahead of the June 2024 elections; the AfD MEPs subsequently formed part of the short-lived Europe of Sovereign Nations group with other former ID affiliates. Individual resignations and national substitutions also occurred, such as those due to deaths or incompatibilities, but political expulsions and voluntary exits like the above highlighted internal ideological fractures over extremism thresholds and geopolitical alignments.[31][68]Electoral and Political Influence
Electoral Gains and Voter Shifts
In the 2019 European Parliament elections, parties forming the Identity and Democracy (ID) group collectively secured significant representation, with the predecessor Europe of Nations and Freedoms group holding 36 seats prior to expansion, leading to an initial ID total of around 73 MEPs that later stabilized at 49 after departures.[18] Key member parties drove these results, including Italy's Lega with 28 seats from 34.3% of the vote, France's National Rally (RN) with 23 seats from 23.3%, and Austria's Freedom Party (FPÖ) with 3 seats from 16.2%.[18] These gains reflected growing voter discontent with EU integration, immigration policies, and economic stagnation in national contexts, particularly among rural and industrial regions. Subsequent national elections amplified ID-affiliated parties' advances. In Austria, the FPÖ surged to 28.9% in the September 29, 2024, National Council election, marking its first national victory and attributed to voter priorities on migration control and national sovereignty amid rising asylum inflows.[69] France's RN achieved 33.2% in the first round of the July 2024 legislative elections, nearly forming a government before tactical voting intervened, signaling sustained momentum from its 2019 EP performance. In Belgium, Vlaams Belang increased to 13.9% in the June 2024 federal election, consolidating Flemish nationalist support. These outcomes stemmed from empirical trends in voter realignment, where economic pressures and cultural identity concerns eroded traditional center-left bases.[44] The 2024 European Parliament elections further boosted ID-aligned forces, with member parties collectively gaining vote shares in multiple states despite the group's subsequent fragmentation into Patriots for Europe.[70] RN expanded to 31 seats from 31.4% of the French vote (up from 23 seats), FPÖ to approximately 6 seats from 27%, and Vlaams Belang to 4 seats from 16.8%, contributing to Patriots for Europe's 84-86 seats overall.[71] Lega in Italy declined to 9 seats from 8.8% amid competition from Fratelli d'Italia, but the broader nationalist right advanced in 22 of 27 EU countries.[30] This represented a net rightward shift, with ID predecessor parties' total influence rising amid stagnant or declining center groups.[72] Voter demographics for ID parties shifted toward less-educated working-class males, rural residents, and younger cohorts, particularly men under 30, driven by causal factors like immigration surges and perceived cultural erosion.[73] In the 2024 EP vote, far-right support among 18-24-year-old men reached highs in France (RN at 29%) and Germany (AfD at 25%), reversing prior youth leftward tilts via concerns over job competition and identity preservation.[74] Working-class voters, historically social democratic, migrated rightward; for instance, RN's blue-collar support rose to 40% in France from globalization's discontents and policy failures on integration.[75] These patterns, evidenced in exit polls, underscore a realignment prioritizing national borders over supranational ideals, with mainstream sources like Reuters noting immigration as the top issue for 30-40% of far-right voters across states.[29]| Country | Party | 2019 EP Vote % / Seats | 2024 EP Vote % / Seats | National Gain Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| France | National Rally | 23.3% / 23 | 31.4% / 31 | 33.2% in 2024 legislative first round |
| Austria | FPÖ | 16.2% / 3 | ~27% / ~6 | 28.9% national win Sept 2024[69] |
| Belgium | Vlaams Belang | 11.9% / 3 | 16.8% / 4 | 13.9% federal June 2024 |
| Italy | Lega | 34.3% / 28 | 8.8% / 9 | Stable regional holds amid FdI rise[30] |