Technical Group of the European Right | |
---|---|
European Parliament group | |
Name | Technical Group of the European Right |
English abbr. | ER |
French abbr. | DR[1] |
Formal name | Technical Group of the European Right[2][1][3] |
Ideology | |
Political position | Far-right |
From | 25 July 1989[2] |
To | 18 July 1994[2] |
Preceded by | Group of the European Right |
Chaired by | Jean-Marie Le Pen[2] |
MEP(s) | 17 (25 July 1989)[4] |
The Technical Group of the European Right (French: Groupe technique des droites européennes, abbr. ER) was a far-right[5] political group that operated in the European Parliament between 1989 and 1994. It was led by the neo-fascist National Front of Jean-Marie Le Pen. Its members also were The Republicans and Vlaams Blok. In the aftermath of the 1994 European Parliament election, ER was dissolved due to not obtaining enough seats to continue as a group.
Following the 1989 elections, the Group of the European Right lost its Ulster Unionist[6] and Greek EPEN MEPs. The situation was further complicated when the perennial problem of the European far-right, its inability to form transnational alliances,[7] reasserted itself when MEPs from the German Republikaner party refused to ally themselves with the Italian MSI due to disagreements over the status of South Tyrol.[6][8] Eventually, the "Technical Group of the European Right" was formed from MEPs from the French Front National,[7] German Republikaner[6][7] and Belgian Vlaams Blok[6][7] parties.
In the 1994 elections, the Republikaners failed to reach the 5% cutoff point for German elections and lost all its MEPs. The Technical Group of the European Right no longer had enough MEPs to qualify as a Group[8] and its MEPs returned to the ranks of the independents.
Country | Name | Ideology | MEPs[4] | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
France | National Front | FN | Neo-fascism Right-wing populism |
10 / 518
| |
Germany | The Republicans | REP | National conservatism Right-wing populism |
6 / 518
| |
Belgium | Vlaams Blok | VB | Flemish nationalism Right-wing populism |
1 / 434
|