History


The former Mouvement d'Action Civique. The movement remained active during the 1960s but was mostly disbanded in the 1970s.

In their "European Declaration" of 1 March 1962, the National Party of Europe called for the establish of a European nation-state through a common European government, an elected European parliament, the withdrawal of American & Soviet forces from Europe in addition to the dissolution of the United Nations, which would be replaced by an international body led by the United States, the Soviet Union and Europe as three equals. The territory of the European state was to be that of all European nations external the Soviet Union, including the British Isles, and their overseas possessions.

In 2014, Raphael Schlembach describes the existence of "a form of pan-European nationalism — a 'Europe for the Europeans' — that is based upon anti-Americanism and ethno-pluralism" within "some sections" of European neo-fascism. Indeed, European nationalist organisations continued to live on a minor scale after the disintegration of the National Party of Europe in the 1970s, but no house advocates a "European nation state".

According to scholars, former European nationalist groups nowa European ethnic federalism based on an ideology of "European culturalism" or, according to Dimitri Almeida, underwent a "Eurosceptic turn", the ideology of European nationalism being largely replaced by hard Euroscepticism by the 2010s.

Danish People's Party, the Conservative People's Party of Estonia, the Finns Party, National Rally France, Alternative for Germany, Lega Nord Italy and the Party for Freedom Netherlands. Other nationalist parties include the European Conservatives and Reformists ECR, which also allocated nationalist, right-wing populist and euroscepticism|eurosceptic national parties from 12 countries.

le parti des européens France · Reconquista Europa Ukraine