Renew Europe
Renew Europe (Renew) is a pro-European liberal political group in the European Parliament, formed in June 2019 as the successor to the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) group following that year's elections.[1][2] The group unites members from centrist and liberal national parties committed to advancing economic growth, civil rights, rule of law, democracy, and sustainable security within a unified Europe.[3][4] In the 10th European Parliament (2024–2029), Renew holds 74 seats out of 720, representing parties from 20 member states and positioning it as a key player in centrist coalitions despite a decline from previous terms.[5] Its defining characteristics include advocacy for market-oriented policies, defense against illiberal tendencies, and support for EU enlargement and competitiveness, though it has faced challenges from rising nationalist sentiments reflected in electoral losses.[6][7]
History
Formation and Launch (2019)
Following the European Parliament elections of 23–26 May 2019, in which liberal and centrist parties collectively secured significant gains, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) group initiated a rebranding to form Renew Europe. This move incorporated newly elected MEPs from Emmanuel Macron's La République En Marche (LREM), which won 23 seats in France, alongside traditional ALDE affiliates, aiming to establish a broader pro-European liberal bloc focused on economic competitiveness, democratic renewal, and EU institutional reform.[8] On 12 June 2019, the ALDE group formally announced its transformation into Renew Europe, signaling a shift toward a more dynamic centrist identity less tied to classical liberalism and more aligned with pragmatic pro-EU governance. The name "Renew Europe" reflected aspirations for revitalizing the European project amid rising populism, with emphasis on sovereignty-sharing among member states while preserving liberal economic principles.[9] Renew Europe launched with 108 MEPs from national parties in 18 member states, positioning it as the third-largest group in the 9th European Parliament upon its constitutive session on 2 July 2019. On 19 June 2019, Dacian Cioloș, a former Romanian Prime Minister and European Commissioner, was elected as the group's inaugural president, defeating competitors to lead its parliamentary operations and strategic positioning.[10]Operations in the 9th European Parliament (2019–2024)
Renew Europe began operations in the 9th European Parliament on 2 July 2019, following its formal constitution on 20 June 2019 as the successor to the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, incorporating members from the former ALDE group and Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party, among others, to form the third-largest political group with 108 seats out of 705. The group emphasized pro-European liberalism, focusing on economic competitiveness, digital innovation, and rule-of-law enforcement, while positioning itself as a centrist force bridging traditional liberals and pragmatic reformers.[11] Dacian Cioloș, a former Romanian prime minister, was elected group president on 19 June 2019, leading Renew Europe until his resignation on 13 October 2021 to prioritize national politics with Romania's USR PLUS alliance. [12] Stéphane Séjourné, a French MEP aligned with Macron's Renaissance, succeeded him as president on 19 October 2021, serving through the term's end and steering the group toward enhanced coordination with the EPP-S&D majority on issues like recovery funding and Ukraine support.[13] [14] Under this leadership, Renew Europe MEPs secured vice-presidencies in the Parliament and chairs or rapporteur roles in committees such as Industry, Research and Energy, and Civil Liberties, enabling influence over legislative agendas. The group operated within the centrist majority, frequently aligning with EPP and S&D to pass key legislation, including the €723.8 billion NextGenerationEU recovery instrument adopted in 2020, which allocated 40% to climate goals and 20% to digital transitions, and REPowerEU in 2022 with €20 billion for energy diversification amid Russia's invasion of Ukraine.[11] [15] Renew Europe advocated for the European Green Deal's Fit for 55 package, achieving a 55% emissions reduction target by 2030 and a 2035 ban on new combustion-engine car sales, while pushing the Just Transition Fund with €19.2 billion for affected regions.[11] It also drove digital regulation, co-shaping the Digital Services Act and Digital Markets Act in 2022 for platform accountability, the AI Act as the first global AI framework, and the Cyber Resilience Act for product security.[15] On rule of law, Renew Europe supported the 2020 Conditionality Mechanism linking EU funds to democratic standards, applying it to withhold payments from Hungary and Poland, and established annual monitoring reports.[11] The group backed social measures like the 2021 EU Child Guarantee targeting 5 million at-risk children by 2030 and the Pay Transparency Directive to address a 13% gender pay gap, alongside ratifying the Istanbul Convention in 2023 against gender-based violence.[15] In foreign policy, it condemned Russia's 2022 aggression, nominating Ukraine for the 2022 Sakharov Prize and advancing the EU Magnitsky Act for sanctions on human rights abusers.[11] Renew Europe secured €16 billion in additional multiannual financial framework investments, tripling health funding and directing 30% to climate action.[15] Despite these contributions, the group's seat count fluctuated, declining to around 97 by term's end due to national-level defections and absences, reflecting internal tensions over ideological purity versus pragmatic alliances.[16] Cohesion challenges arose, particularly on migration, where Renew Europe supported the 2024 Pact on Migration and Asylum for burden-sharing but faced criticism from more restrictive national members.[11] Overall, its operations emphasized legislative pragmatism, with high voting discipline in the centrist bloc on economic and security files, though it occasionally diverged on fiscal orthodoxy to prioritize growth-oriented reforms.[17]2024 Elections and the 10th European Parliament
In the 2024 European Parliament elections, held from 6 to 9 June across the 27 EU member states, Renew Europe secured 77 seats out of 720, marking a net loss of 24 seats from the 101 held during the 2019–2024 term.[18][19] This decline positioned Renew as the fourth-largest group, behind the European People's Party (188 seats), Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (136 seats), and the newly formed Patriots for Europe (84 seats). The results reflected broader voter shifts toward right-leaning and Eurosceptic parties, with Renew's losses concentrated in key member states like France, where Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party dropped from 23 to 8 seats amid domestic challenges including legislative elections later that year.[20][21] The group's electoral platform emphasized economic liberalization, rule of law, and a competitive single market, but turnout varied widely (averaging 51% EU-wide), and national contexts influenced outcomes; for example, strong performances in the Netherlands (via VVD and D66) and Denmark (Venstre) partially offset heavier defeats elsewhere.[22] Post-election, several national parties affiliated with Renew, including those from Estonia, Latvia, and Slovenia, retained or gained representation, maintaining the group's multinational composition spanning 18 member states. Analysts attributed the overall setback to voter fatigue with centrist governance on issues like migration and inflation, though Renew's pro-EU stance preserved its role in the Parliament's centrist bloc.[23] The 10th European Parliament convened its constitutive session on 16 July 2024 in Strasbourg, with Renew Europe reconstituting as a cohesive group under new leadership. French MEP Valérie Hayer was elected group president on 17 July, succeeding interim arrangements from the prior term and focusing on pragmatic alliances to advance legislative priorities.[24] Renew continued to coordinate with the EPP and S&D to form a pro-European majority, influencing key votes such as the election of Ursula von der Leyen for a second term as Commission President on 18 July (securing 401 votes, with Renew's support pivotal).[25] By late 2024, the group had assigned MEPs to parliamentary committees, emphasizing scrutiny on the EU's multiannual financial framework and competitiveness agenda, while navigating internal debates over enlargement and defense policy.[26] No major defections occurred, though the reduced seat count limited Renew's negotiating leverage compared to the 9th term.Ideology and Principles
Foundational Liberal Values
Renew Europe identifies its foundational liberal values as rooted in liberal democracy, encompassing the rule of law, fundamental rights, and democratic institutions. The group commits to protecting these principles by advocating for an EU-wide monitoring mechanism to ensure adherence across member states and by proposing the withholding of EU funds from governments that undermine them.[27] This stance reflects a prioritization of institutional accountability to prevent democratic backsliding, as evidenced by Renew Europe's initiatives to hold non-compliant regimes responsible.[28] Central to its ideology is the defense of individual freedoms and civil rights, which the group promotes through efforts to expand personal liberties and combat intolerance. Renew Europe supports equality and non-discrimination policies, such as the Simone Veil Pact, while centering citizens in policy debates on issues like artificial intelligence and the future of Europe.[27] It also establishes bodies like the Special Committee on the European Democracy Shield to bolster resilience against foreign interference and authoritarian influences, underscoring a proactive approach to safeguarding liberal democratic norms.[29] Economically, Renew Europe embraces liberal principles by advocating for reduced regulatory burdens to enable business innovation and job creation, aiming for broad prosperity without excessive state intervention. This includes specific measures like simplifying compliance for sectors such as agriculture and empowering entrepreneurs to address competitiveness challenges.[29] The group's pro-European orientation integrates these values into a vision of deeper integration, viewing a united Europe as essential for realizing individual and collective freedoms while countering declinist or isolationist tendencies.[3]Shifts Toward Centre-Right Pragmatism
In the aftermath of the 2024 European Parliament elections, where Renew Europe saw its seats decline from 101 to 80, the group adopted a more pragmatic orientation, emphasizing deal-making within the centrist majority alongside the European People's Party (EPP) and Socialists & Democrats (S&D). This approach was formalized in a November 2024 cooperation agreement committing the three groups to joint priorities on treaty reform, economic competitiveness, and security, positioning Renew as a pivotal "pro-European deal maker" to counter fragmentation.[30][31] Renew's leadership, under President Valérie Hayer, highlighted this shift by advocating "pragmatic, future-focused policies" that prioritize resilience, prosperity, and defense over ideological purity.[29] A key manifestation of this pragmatism appeared in Renew's alignment with centre-right positions on migration, supporting the full implementation of the EU Migration and Asylum Pact adopted in April 2024, which introduced stricter border screening, accelerated asylum procedures, and enhanced returns mechanisms. Renew MEPs, including those from France's Renaissance party, defended the pact as a balanced reform enhancing EU control amid rising irregular arrivals, rejecting far-right "wrecking" attempts while moving away from earlier open-border liberal emphases toward enforcement-focused realism.[32][29] This stance aligned with broader European trends, where even centrist groups hardened policies in response to public pressures, as evidenced by Renew's endorsement of expanded Frontex operations and burden-sharing solidarity.[33] Economically, Renew's pivot incorporated centre-right emphases on competitiveness and deregulation, critiquing excessive Green Deal burdens while pushing for pragmatic adjustments to the Stability and Growth Pact revival in 2024 to foster growth without austerity rigidity. The group led negotiations for a reformed fiscal framework allowing member states flexibility for investments in defense and innovation, reflecting a departure from traditional liberal interventionism toward market-oriented realism amid post-election losses to more fiscally conservative rivals.[11] This evolution was underscored in October 2025 plenary priorities, where Renew stressed uniting EPP, S&D, and itself as the "only viable and stable pro-European platform" for tangible outcomes over partisan divides.[34]Policy Positions
Economic and Competitiveness Policies
Renew Europe advocates for an open, competitive market economy that prioritizes innovation, entrepreneurship, and reduced regulatory burdens to foster sustainable growth and job creation across the European Union. The group emphasizes pragmatic reforms to address Europe's stagnating economic performance, including flat growth projections and a decline in the EU's share of the global economy relative to the United States and China, where the EU's economy had shrunk to approximately 80% of the U.S. size by 2022 from 90% before the 2008 financial crisis.[35] Central to this stance is the promotion of a business-friendly environment, particularly for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), through smarter regulation and administrative simplification to enhance competitiveness in a fragmenting global economy.[29] In its priorities for the 2024–2029 European Parliament term, Renew Europe commits to cutting red tape with 50 concrete measures, such as reduced reporting requirements for farmers, a unified digital platform for maritime operations, and a single corporate rulebook to streamline compliance and lower costs for businesses.[29] The group draws on recommendations from the Draghi report to implement bold reforms tackling excessive bureaucracy, which it identifies as a key barrier stifling innovation and investment in infrastructure, green technologies, and digital industries.[36] These efforts aim to boost household purchasing power, combat inflation, improve energy affordability, and create high-quality jobs, especially for young Europeans, while maintaining fair competition and preventing monopolies.[29] [37] To regain Europe's competitive edge, Renew Europe proposed a ten-point plan in March 2024, focusing on streamlining regulations, attracting foreign direct investment amid declining inflows, and enhancing the appeal of the EU for businesses as indicated by enterprise surveys.[35] The group has actively supported legislative initiatives like the September 2025 investment omnibus deal, which exempts many SMEs from onerous reporting obligations to ease operational burdens.[38] In budget negotiations, Renew Europe led a coalition in April 2025 to advocate for a stronger 2026 EU budget that increases funding for the Horizon Europe program, aiming to support at least 50% of high-quality research proposals, bolster SME participation, and retain scientific talent to drive innovation-led growth.[39] This approach integrates economic policies with strategic investments in research, digital transformation, and the single market to counter global challenges.[35]Foreign Policy and Security Stance
Renew Europe emphasizes a robust European security posture that complements NATO commitments, prioritizing deterrence against authoritarian threats, particularly Russian aggression, and fostering EU strategic autonomy in defence capabilities. The group advocates for increased defence spending across member states, aiming to bolster the EU's industrial base and procurement of European-made equipment to reduce dependencies on non-EU suppliers. This includes support for initiatives like the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP), which directs EU funding preferentially to European companies to enhance production capacities and support Ukraine's modernization efforts.[40][41] In response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Renew Europe has consistently pushed for Ukraine's military victory as the pathway to lasting stability, coupled with accelerated EU and NATO support, including arms deliveries and integration processes. The group views Ukraine's prospective NATO membership as a critical guarantee against future Russian incursions, urging faster EU accession talks and enhanced military aid packages. Renew MEPs have demanded stronger EU measures against Russian airspace violations, such as expanded surveillance through NATO's Eastern Sentry operation and rapid response mechanisms.[42][43] On broader defence architecture, Renew Europe promotes a "European Defence Union" by 2030, including treaty reforms to grant the European Parliament greater oversight of security matters and the establishment of joint capabilities in areas like cyber defence and missile shielding. Proposals include an EU cyber coordination centre for threat detection and response, as well as a European Sky Shield Initiative to provide continent-wide air and missile defence coverage. The group supports EU enlargement to pro-Western states like Moldova, framing it as a bulwark against hybrid threats from Russia. While maintaining transatlantic solidarity, Renew prioritizes EU-led interoperability and spending targets to address capability gaps exposed by the Ukraine conflict.[44][45][34]Migration, Social Issues, and Environment
Renew Europe advocates for the effective implementation of the European Union's Migration and Asylum Pact, a framework it helped shape to establish a common European approach to managing irregular migration and asylum claims.[29] The group emphasizes prioritizing border security through increased funding for Frontex, the EU's border agency, alongside robust returns policies involving transparent agreements with third countries that respect human rights, and closing exploitable loopholes in the existing Returns Directive.[46] It opposes unilateral national initiatives or costly, ineffective "white elephant" projects that undermine collective EU efforts, particularly in response to hybrid threats like migrant weaponization by Russia and Belarus, urging additional resources to support frontline states such as Poland, Finland, and the Baltic countries.[46] On social issues, Renew Europe positions itself as a defender of civil liberties and equality, prioritizing protections for vulnerable groups including those with disabilities, who comprise approximately 20% of the EU population and face barriers in employment, education, and access to services.[47] The group actively supports LGBTIQ+ rights, having led efforts in the European Parliament to combat coordinated attacks on minorities and women's rights, and calling for the reversal of policies restricting recognition of same-sex parents' children, as seen in its criticism of Italy's 2023 municipal decisions.[48] [49] It has championed the recognition of same-sex partnerships across member states and addressed disparities in rainbow family treatments at regional levels.[50] [51] Regarding reproductive rights, Renew Europe has initiated parliamentary resolutions to enshrine access to safe, legal abortion in the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights, highlighting that abortion remains banned or severely restricted in countries like Malta and Poland, and advocating for an EU financial mechanism to ensure uniform access without forcing women to travel abroad or incur high costs.[52] [11] In environmental policy, Renew Europe endorses the full rollout of the European Green Deal, which it has influenced through ambitious targets like a legally binding 57% reduction in EU greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 compared to 1990 levels and net-zero emissions by 2050 via the EU Climate Law.[29] [53] The group backs measures to reduce and capture emissions, including final regulations adopted in April 2024, while promoting a "Clean Industrial Deal" to foster industrial resilience and innovation without undermining economic competitiveness.[54] [55] It advocates balancing environmental ambition with prosperity, urging strong EU positions at international forums like COP30 to sustain global climate agreements.[3]Leadership and Internal Structure
Group Presidency and Bureau
The Renew Europe Group in the European Parliament is headed by a President, elected by its Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) for the duration of the parliamentary term. Valérie Hayer, a French MEP affiliated with Renaissance, has served as President since 25 January 2024, when she was elected unopposed to replace Dacian Cioloș; she was re-elected on 25 June 2024 following the constitution of the 10th Parliament after the June elections.[56][57] The President's role involves representing the group in the Conference of Presidents, setting strategic priorities, and coordinating internal decision-making.[58] The Presidency comprises the President, a First Vice-President, and additional Vice-Presidents, who assist in leadership duties and ensure balanced representation across the group's factions, including the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) and the European Democratic Party (EDP). On 26 June 2024, Irish MEP Billy Kelleher was elected First Vice-President, with seven further Vice-Presidents selected to form the core leadership team; MEPs Svenja Hahn (representing ALDE) and Sandro Gozi (representing EDP) were co-opted into the Presidency to reflect the group's multinational and ideological composition.[59] The Bureau serves as the group's primary executive organ, overseeing operational matters, resource allocation, and implementation of political strategies. It includes the full Presidency, leaders of Renew Europe's national party delegations, group members serving in the European Parliament's Bureau (such as Sophie Wilmès of Belgium, a Vice-President of the Parliament), and chairs of parliamentary committees with Renew affiliation.[58] This composition, which integrates national and institutional roles, totaled over a dozen members as of mid-2024, with figures like Nathalie Loiseau (France), Urmas Paet (Estonia), and Dainius Žalimas (Lithuania) holding Bureau positions alongside their committee responsibilities.[60][61][62] The Bureau meets regularly to prepare group positions on legislation and maintain cohesion among the approximately 80 MEPs from 15 member states in the 10th Parliament.[58]Decision-Making Processes and Committees
Renew Europe's decision-making is coordinated through its Bureau and regular group meetings, where strategic and legislative positions are formulated by consensus or majority vote among Members of the European Parliament (MEPs). The Bureau, which includes the group President, Vice-Presidents, leaders of national delegations, Renew members of the European Parliament Bureau, and chairs of parliamentary committees, oversees key internal governance and alignment on policy priorities.[58] Internal working groups, structured parallel to the European Parliament's standing committees, facilitate specialized discussions; for example, Working Group B handles external affairs, encompassing the Committee on Foreign Affairs (AFET) and related portfolios.[63] In parliamentary committees, Renew Europe appoints a coordinator per standing committee to negotiate amendments, report positions, and build cross-group alliances, with selections confirmed collectively following elections, as occurred on July 23, 2024, for the 10th term.[64] Coordinators ensure group cohesion during trilogue negotiations and committee votes, drawing on input from national delegations to reflect diverse liberal perspectives. Voting lines for plenary sessions are established in weekly group meetings, where MEPs debate and adopt positions via internal ballots when necessary, prioritizing pro-European liberal principles over strict discipline to allow conscience votes on sensitive issues.[65] This process was applied, for instance, in a January 14, 2025, vote to expel the Democratic Party of Serbia (DPS) for alleged misalignment with group values.[65] Renew has secured chairs in three committees for the 2024-2029 term—Security and Defence (SEDE), International Trade (INTA), and Budgetary Control (CONT)—enhancing its influence in negotiations.[64]Membership Composition
Affiliated National Parties
Renew Europe affiliates with national parties whose members of the European Parliament (MEPs) sit in the group, reflecting a network of liberal, centrist, and pro-European formations primarily from ALDE Party and European Democratic Party families.[66] Following the 2024 European Parliament elections, the group holds 77 seats in the 10th legislature (2024-2029), drawn from 23 member states.[66] The composition by country and party is detailed below:| Country | Party | MEPs |
|---|---|---|
| Austria | NEOS | 2 |
| Belgium | MR (Mouvement Réformateur) | 3 |
| Belgium | Open VLD | 1 |
| Belgium | Les Engagés | 1 |
| Bulgaria | DPS/ДПС (Movement for Rights and Freedoms) | 3 |
| Bulgaria | PP/ПП (We Continue the Change) | 2 |
| Denmark | V (Venstre) | 2 |
| Denmark | RV (B) (Radikale Venstre) | 1 |
| Denmark | M (Moderaterne) | 1 |
| Estonia | ER (Eesti Reformierakond) | 1 |
| Estonia | KE (Eesti Keskerakond) | 1 |
| Finland | KESK (Keskusta) | 2 |
| Finland | SFP/RKP (Svenska folkpartiet) | 1 |
| France | Renaissance | 5 |
| France | MoDem | 4 |
| France | Horizons | 2 |
| France | UDI (Independent Democrats) | 1 |
| France | Independents | 1 |
| Germany | FDP (Freie Demokratische Partei) | 5 |
| Germany | FW (Freie Wähler) | 3 |
| Ireland | FF (Fianna Fáil) | 4 |
| Ireland | Independents/Neamhspleách | 1 |
| Ireland | Independents | 1 |
| Latvia | LA (Latvijas attīstībai) | 1 |
| Lithuania | LS (Laisvės sąjunga) | 1 |
| Lithuania | LP (Laisvės partija) | 1 |
| Luxembourg | DP/PD (Demokratesch Partei) | 1 |
| Netherlands | VVD (Volkspartij voor Vrijheid en Democratie) | 4 |
| Netherlands | D66 | 3 |
| Poland | Polska 2050 | 1 |
| Portugal | IL (Iniciativa Liberal) | 2 |
| Romania | USR (Uniunea Salvați România) | 2 |
| Romania | PMP (Partidul Mișcarea Populară) | 1 |
| Slovakia | PS (Progresívne Slovensko) | 5 |
| Slovakia | Independents | 1 |
| Slovenia | Svoboda! (Freedom Movement) | 2 |
| Spain | EAJ – PNV (Partido Nacionalista Vasco) | 1 |
| Sweden | C (Centerpartiet) | 2 |
| Sweden | L (Liberalerna) | 1 |
Representation in the 10th European Parliament
In the 2024 European Parliament elections held from 6 to 9 June, Renew Europe obtained 77 seats out of 720 in the 10th parliamentary term (2024–2029), down from 101 seats in the preceding 9th term (2019–2024).[67] This reduction reflected electoral losses for several affiliated liberal and centrist parties amid a broader rightward shift in voter preferences across the EU.[68] The group's MEPs hail from 20 member states, spanning a range of national delegations from major economies like France and Germany to smaller ones like Latvia and Luxembourg.[67] The largest contingent originates from France, with 13 MEPs primarily from President Emmanuel Macron's Renaissance party (5 seats), the MoDem (4 seats), Horizons (2 seats), and smaller contributions from the UDI (1 seat) and an independent (1 seat).[66] Germany's 8 seats derive from the FDP (5) and Freie Wähler (3), while the Netherlands contributes 7 via the VVD (4) and D66 (3).[66] Other notable delegations include Ireland (6 seats, including 4 from Fine Gael affiliates and independents), Slovakia (6, mostly from Progressive Slovakia), and Belgium and Bulgaria (5 each, from MR/Open VLD/Les Engagés and DPS/PP parties, respectively).[66] Smaller representations, such as single seats from Poland (Polska 2050), Spain (EAJ–PNV), and Latvia (unaffiliated liberal), underscore the group's multinational but uneven footprint.[66]| Country | Number of MEPs |
|---|---|
| Austria | 2 |
| Belgium | 5 |
| Bulgaria | 5 |
| Denmark | 4 |
| Estonia | 2 |
| Finland | 3 |
| France | 13 |
| Germany | 8 |
| Ireland | 6 |
| Latvia | 1 |
| Lithuania | 2 |
| Luxembourg | 1 |
| Netherlands | 7 |
| Poland | 1 |
| Portugal | 2 |
| Romania | 3 |
| Slovakia | 6 |
| Slovenia | 2 |
| Spain | 1 |
| Sweden | 3 |
Electoral Performance and Influence
Results in European Parliament Elections
Renew Europe was established on 20 June 2019, immediately following the 2019 European Parliament elections held from 23 to 26 May, when member parties secured 108 seats in the ninth legislature, forming the group's initial composition from 14 member states plus the United Kingdom (whose representatives departed after Brexit).[10] This marked a significant increase from the 67 seats held by its predecessor, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) group, after the 2014 elections.[69] Key contributors included France's Renaissance-led list with 21 seats, Romania's USR-PLUS alliance with 8, and Spain's Ciudadanos with 8.[10] In the 2024 European Parliament elections, conducted from 6 to 9 June across the 27 EU member states, Renew-affiliated parties won 77 seats in the tenth legislature, a net loss of 31 from the prior term, reducing the group's share amid broader shifts toward centre-right and right-wing formations.[67] France remained the largest source with 13 seats (down from 21), followed by Germany (8), the Netherlands (7), and Ireland (6).[67] Other notable declines occurred in Romania (from 8 to 3) and Spain (from 8 to 1), while Slovakia saw gains to 6 seats via Progressive Slovakia.[67][10] The following table summarizes Renew Europe's seat counts across relevant election cycles:| Election Cycle | Seats | Total Parliament Seats |
|---|---|---|
| 2014–2019 (ALDE) | 67 | 751 |
| 2019–2024 | 108 | 705 (post-Brexit adjustment) |
| 2024–2029 | 77 | 720 |