European Free Alliance | |
---|---|
Abbreviation | EFA |
President | Lorena Lopez de Lacalle (ES) |
Secretary-General | Jordi Solé (ES) |
Founded | 9 July 1981 |
Headquarters | Boomkwekerijstraat 1, 1000 Brussels, Belgium |
Think tank | Coppieters Foundation |
Youth wing | European Free Alliance Youth |
Ideology | Regionalism Autonomism Separatism |
Political position | Big tent[1] |
European Parliament group | Greens/EFA (3 MEPs) ECR (N-VA, 3 MEPs) EPP Group (Manuela Ripa, direct member, 1 MEP) The Left (Pernando Barrena, direct member, 1 MEP) |
Colours | Purple |
European Parliament | 8 / 720
|
European Council | 0 / 27
|
European Commission | 0 / 27
|
Website | |
e-f-a | |
The European Free Alliance (EFA) is a European political party that consists of various regionalist,[2][3][4] separatist[5] and minority[4] political parties in Europe. Member parties advocate either for full political independence and sovereignty, or some form of devolution or self-governance for their country or region.[6] The party has generally limited its membership to centre-left and left-wing parties;[7][8] therefore, only a fraction of European regionalist parties are members of the EFA.
Since 1999, the EFA and the European Green Party (EGP) have joined forces within Greens–European Free Alliance (Greens/EFA) group in the European Parliament, although some EFA members have joined other groups from time to time, for example the New Flemish Alliance which sits with the European Conservatives and Reformists Group.
The EFA's youth wing is the European Free Alliance Youth (EFAY), founded in 2000.
As of 2024, two European regions are led by EFA politicians: Flanders with Jan Jambon of the New Flemish Alliance and Corsica with Gilles Simeoni of Femu a Corsica.
Center-left and left-wing regionalist parties are typically associated with EFA. An exception is the Nieuwe-Vlaamse Alliantie, one of the heirs of the Flemish Volksunie, which belonged to the European Popular party in the period 2004 through 2009 and later became affiliated with EFA.