European United Left–Nordic Green Left

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
European United Left–Nordic Green Left
European Parliament group
EUL/NGL logo
Name European United Left–Nordic Green Left
English abbr. EUL/NGL[1]
French abbr. GUE/NGL[2][3]
Formal name Confederal Group of the European United Left/Nordic Green Left[4][2][5]
Ideology Socialism, Communism
European parties Party of the European Left
Associated organizations Nordic Green Left
From 6 January 1995[6]
To n/a
Preceded by Confederal Group of the European United Left
Succeeded by n/a
Chaired by Alonso José Puerta,[5]
Francis Wurtz
MEP(s) 42 (July 20, 1999),
40 (July 20, 2004)
Website http://www.guengl.org/showPage.jsp

European United Left–Nordic Green Left is a socialist and green political group with seats in the European Parliament between 1995 and the present.

Contents

[edit] Organisation

The GUE-NGL is a confederal group: it is composed of MEPs from national parties. Those national parties must share common political objectives with the group, as specified in the group's constituent declaration. Nevertheless, those national parties, not the group, retain control of their MEPs. Thus, the Group may be divided on certain issues.

Members of the group meet regularly to prepare for meetings, debate on policies and vote on resolutions. The group also publishes reports on various topics (World Trade Organization, asbestos, sexual slavery, et al).

[edit] Subgroups

It combines the European United Left subgroup (which consists of a core of parties that are in the Party of the European Left and a periphery of unaffiliated leftist parties) and the Nordic Green Left subgroup consisting of MEPs from the Nordic Green Left Alliance parties of Sweden and Finland.

[edit] Position

The group is opposed to the present European political structure, but "deeply committed to the construction of Europe", as specified in the group's constituent declaration.[7] That declaration sets out three aims for the construction of another Europe: the total change of institutions to make them "fully democratic"; a new model of development and ecology aimed at creating a "social space" and breaking with neoliberalism; and a policy of co-development and equitable cooperation.

The group is ambiguous between reformism and revolution, leaving it up to each party to decide on the manner they deem best suited to achieve these aims. As such, it has simultaneously positioned itself as "insiders" within the European institutions, enabling it to influence the decisions made by co-decision, and as "outsiders" by its willingness to seek "another Union" which would abolish the Maastricht Treaty.

[edit] History

In 1995, the enlargement of the European Union led to the creation of the Nordic Green Left. The Nordic Green Left merged with the Confederal Group of the European United Left on 6 January 1995,[6]and the resultant Group was called the Confederal Group of the European United Left/Nordic Green Left.[4][2][5] It consisted of MEPs from the Finnish Left Alliance, Swedish Left Party, the Danish Socialist People's Party, United Left of Spain (including the Spanish Communist Party), the Greek Synaspismos, the French Communist Party, Portuguese Communist Party, the Communist Party of Greece, and the Communist Refoundation Party of Italy.

In 1999, the German Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS) and the Greek Democratic Social Movement (DIKKI) joined as full members, while the five MEPs elected from the list of the French Trotskyist alliance LO-LCR joined as associate members.

In 2002, four MEPs from the French Citizen and Republican Movement‎ also joined the group.

In 2004, no MEPs were elected from LO-LCR and DIKKI was dissolved. MEPs from the Portuguese Left Bloc, the Irish Sinn Féin, the Cypriot Progressive Party of Working People (AKEL) and the Czech Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia joined the group.

[edit] Membership

MEPs may be full or associate members.

  • Full members must accept the constitutional declaration of the Group.
  • Associate members need not fully do so but may sit with the full members.

National parties may be full or associate members.

  • Full member parties must accept the constitutional declaration of the Group.
  • Associate member parties may include parties that do not have MEPs (e.g. French Trotskyist parties which did not get elected in the 2004 European elections), are from states that are not part of the European Union, or do not wish to be full members.

[edit] Member parties

The following national political parties are full or associate members.

Country National Member Party Subgroup MEPs
Flag of Cyprus Cyprus Progressive Party of Working People UEL² 2
Flag of the Czech Republic Czech Republic Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia UEL² 6
Flag of Finland Finland Left Alliance NGL 1
Flag of France France French Communist Party UEL1 3
Flag of Germany Germany The Left UEL1 7
Flag of Greece Greece Communist Party of Greece UEL³ 3
Synaspismos UEL1 1
Flag of Ireland Ireland Sinn Féin UEL³ 1
Flag of the United Kingdom United Kingdom (Northern Ireland) 1
Flag of Italy Italy Communist Refoundation Party UEL1 5
Party of Italian Communists UEL² 2
Flag of the Netherlands Netherlands Socialist Party UEL³ 2
Flag of Portugal Portugal Portuguese Communist Party UEL³ 2
Flag of Spain Spain United Left UEL1 1
Flag of Sweden Sweden Left Party NGL 2
Associate Parties with MEPs
Flag of Portugal Portugal Left Bloc UEL1 1
Associate Parties without MEPs
Flag of Luxembourg Luxembourg The Left UEL1
Flag of Romania Romania Socialist Alliance Party UEL1
Flag of Slovakia Slovakia Communist Party of Slovakia UEL²
Associate Parties from outside the EU
Flag of Norway Norway Socialist Left Party NGL
Flag of Switzerland Switzerland Swiss Labour Party UEL1
Parties with MEPs as Associate Members of the Parliamentary Group
Flag of Denmark Denmark People's Movement against the EU 1

Notes

  • 1 - Party is a member of the Party of the European Left (PEL)
  • ² - Party is an observer in the PEL
  • ³ - Party is unaffiliated to either PEL or NGLA

[edit] Sources

[edit] References

Personal tools