Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party - Wikipedia Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigation Jump to search This article is about European political party. For the former European Parliament Group, see Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe group. For the transnational political alliance, see Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. European political party Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party Abbreviation ALDE Party President Hans van Baalen Secretary-General Jacob Moroza-Rasmussen Founded 26 March 1976 (1976-03-26) Headquarters Rue d'Idalie 11, Brussels, Belgium Think tank European Liberal Forum Youth wing European Liberal Youth Ideology Liberalism[1] Pro-Europeanism Political position Centre International affiliation Liberal International European Parliament group ELDR (1976–2004) ALDE (2004–2019) Renew Europe (2019–present) Colours     Blue, magenta   Yellow (customary) European Parliament 68 / 705 European Council 6 / 27 European Commission 5 / 27 European Lower Houses 723 / 9,874 European Upper Houses 244 / 2,714 Website www.aldeparty.eu Politics of European Union Political parties Elections The Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party (ALDE Party) is a European political party composed of 60 national-level liberal parties from across Europe, mainly active in the European Union. The ALDE Party is affiliated with the Liberal International and a recognised European political party, incorporated as a non-profit association under Belgian law.[2] It was founded on 26 March 1976 in Stuttgart as a confederation of national political parties under the name "Federation of Liberal and Democrat Parties in Europe" and renamed "European Liberals and Democrats" (ELD) in 1977 and "European Liberal Democrats and Reformists" (ELDR) in 1986. On 30 April 2004, the ELDR was reformed as an official European party, the "European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party" (ELDR Party).[3] On 10 November 2012, the party chose its current name of ALDE Party, taken from its then-European Parliament group, the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE), which had been formed on 20 July 2004 in conjunction with the European Democratic Party (EDP). Prior to the 2004 European election the European party had been represented through its own group, the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party Group (ELDR) Group. In June 2019, the ALDE group was succeeded by Renew Europe. As of 2020[update], ALDE is represented in European Union institutions, with 65 MEPs and five members of the European Commission. Of the 27 EU member states, there are six with ALDE-affiliated Prime Ministers: Mark Rutte (VVD) in the Netherlands, Xavier Bettel (DP) in Luxembourg, Jüri Ratas (Estonian Centre Party) in Estonia, Andrej Babiš (ANO) in the Czech Republic, Alexander De Croo (Open VLD) in Belgium and Micheál Martin (FF) in Ireland. ALDE member parties are also in governments in four other EU member states: Croatia, Finland, Latvia and Slovenia. Some other ALDE member parties offer parliamentary support to governments in Croatia, Denmark, Italy, Romania and Sweden. Charles Michel, former Belgian Prime Minister, is current President of the European Council. ALDE's think tank is the European Liberal Forum. The youth wing of ALDE is the European Liberal Youth (LYMEC), which is predominantly based upon youth and student liberal organisations but contains also a small number of individual members. LYMEC is led by Antoaneta Asenova (MRF) of Bulgaria, and counts 200,000 members. Contents 1 Structure 1.1 Bureau 2 Presidents 3 History of pan-European liberalism 3.1 European Council 4 European Commissioners 5 Elected representatives of member parties 5.1 European institutions 5.2 National parliaments of European Union member states 5.3 National parliaments outside the European Union 6 Member parties 6.1 Outside the EU 7 See also 8 References 9 External links Structure[edit] Part of a series on Liberalism History Age of Enlightenment List of liberal theorists (contributions to liberal theory) Ideas Civil and political rights Cultural liberalism Democracy Democratic capitalism Economic freedom Economic liberalism Egalitarianism Free market Free trade Freedom of the press Freedom of religion Freedom of speech Gender equality Harm principle Internationalism Laissez-faire Liberty Market economy Natural and legal rights Negative/positive liberty Non-aggression Principle Open society Permissive society Private property Rule of law Secularism Separation of church and 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Green Gu Guizot Hayek Herbert Hobbes Hobhouse Hobson Holbach Hu Humboldt Jefferson Jubani Kant Kelsen Kemal Keynes Korais Korwin-Mikke Kymlicka Lamartine Larra Lecky Li Lincoln Locke Lufti Macaulay Madariaga Madison Martineau Masani Michelet Mill (father) Mill (son) Milton Mises Molteno Mommsen Money Montalembert Montesquieu Mora Mouffe Naoroji Naumann Nozick Nussbaum Obama Ohlin Ortega Paine Paton Popper Price Priestley Prieto Quesnay Qin Ramírez Rathenau Rawls Raz Renan Renouvier Renzi Ricardo Röpke Rorthy Rosmini Rosselli Rousseau Ruggiero Sarmiento Say Sen Earl of Shaftesbury Shklar Sidney Sieyès Şinasi Sismondi Smith Soto Polar Spencer Spinoza Staël Sumner Tahtawi Tao Thierry Thorbecke Thoreau Tocqueville Tracy Troeltsch Turgot Villemain Voltaire Ward Weber Wollstonecraft Zambrano Organizations Africa Liberal Network Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party Arab Liberal Federation Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats European Democratic Party European Liberal Youth European Party for Individual Liberty International Alliance of Libertarian Parties International Federation of Liberal Youth Liberal International Liberal Network for Latin America Liberal parties Liberal South East European Network Regional variants Europe Latin America Albania Armenia Australia Austria Belgium Bolivia Brazil Bulgaria Canada China Chile Colombia Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech lands Denmark Ecuador Egypt Estonia Finland France Georgia Germany Greece Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Iran Israel Italy Japan Latvia Lithuania Luxembourg Macedonia Mexico Moldova Montenegro Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Nigeria Norway Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Romania Russia Senegal Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain South Africa South Korea Sweden Switzerland Thailand Tunisia Turkey Ukraine United Kingdom United States Arizona School Classical Modern Uruguay Venezuela Zimbabwe Related topics Bias in academia Bias in the media  Liberalism portal  Politics portal v t e Bureau[edit] The day-to-day management of the ALDE Party is handled by the Bureau, the members of which are:[4] Office Name State member Party member President Hans van Baalen  Netherlands VVD Vice-Presidents Henrik Bach Mortensen  Denmark Venstre Dita Charanzová MEP  Czech Republic ANO Senator Timmy Dooley  Ireland FF Baroness Sal Brinton  United Kingdom LibDem Luis Garicano MEP  Spain Cs Ilhan Kyuchyuk MEP  Bulgaria MRF Daniel Berg  Hungary M Annelou van Egmond  Netherlands D66 Alexander Graf Lambsdorff  Germany FDP Treasurer Gašper Koprivšek  Slovenia SMC Ex officio members Secretary-General Jacob Moroza-Rasmussen  Denmark Venstre President of Liberal International Hakima El Haite  Morocco / (MP) Group Chair in the PACE Jacques Maire MP  France / (LREM) Leader in the European Parliament Dacian Cioloș MEP  Romania PLUS Leader in the European Committee of the Regions François Decoster  France / President of the European Liberal Youth Antoaneta Asenova  Bulgaria MRF Presidents[edit] Hans van Baalen 1978–1981: Gaston Thorn 1981–1985: Willy De Clercq 1985–1990: Colette Flesch 1990–1995: Willy De Clercq 1995–2000: Uffe Ellemann-Jensen 2000–2005: Werner Hoyer 2005–2011: Annemie Neyts-Uyttebroeck 2011–2015: Graham Watson 2015–present: Hans van Baalen History of pan-European liberalism[edit] Main article: History of pan-European liberalism ELDR Party logo (2009–2012). Pan-European liberalism has a long history dating back to the foundation of Liberal International in April 1947. On 26 March 1976, the Federation of Liberal and Democrat Parties in Europe was established in Stuttgart. The founding parties of the federation were the Free Democratic Party of Germany, Radical Party of France, Venstre of Denmark, Italian Liberal Party, Dutch People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and Democratic Party of Luxembourg.[5] Observer members joining later in 1976 were the Danish Social Liberal Party, French Radical Party of the Left and Independent Republicans, British Liberal Party, and Italian Republican Party.[5] In 1977, the federation was renamed European Liberals and Democrats, in 1986, European Liberal Democrats and Reformists. It evolved into the European Liberal Democrat and Reform Party (ELDR Party) in 2004, when it was founded as an official European party under that name and incorporated under Belgian law at an extraordinary Congress in Brussels, held on 30 April 2004 the day before the enlargement of the European Union. At the same time the matching group in the European Parliament, the European Liberal Democrats and Reformists Group allied with the members of the newly elected European Democratic Party, forming the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE) with a matching ALDE Group in the European Parliament. On 10 November 2012, the ELDR Party adopted the name of the alliance between the two parties, to match the parliamentary group and the alliance. On 12 June 2019, the ALDE group was succeeded by a new enlarged group, Renew Europe, which primarily consists of ALDE and EDP member parties and France's La République En Marche! (LREM).[6] European Council[edit] Member Representative Political party Member since Photo Netherlands Prime Minister Mark Rutte VVD 14 October 2010 Luxembourg Prime Minister Xavier Bettel DP 4 December 2013 Estonia Prime Minister Jüri Ratas Kesk 23 November 2016 Czech Republic Prime Minister Andrej Babiš ANO 6 December 2017 Belgium Prime Minister Sophie Wilmès MR 27 October 2019 Ireland Taoiseach Micheál Martin FF 27 June 2020 European Union President Charles Michel MR (ALDE) 1 December 2019 European Commissioners[edit] ALDE Member Parties contribute four out of the 28 members of the European Commission: State Commissioner Portfolio Political party Photo Denmark Margrethe Vestager A Europe Fit for the Digital Age, Executive Vice President Competition, Commissioner RV  Czech Republic Věra Jourová Values and Transparency, Vice President ANO Slovenia Janez Lenarčič Crisis Management, Commissioner Ind.  Estonia Kadri Simson Energy, Commissioner KESK  Belgium Didier Reynders Justice, Commissioner MR Elected representatives of member parties[edit] European institutions[edit] Organisation Institution Number of seats  European Union European Commission 5 / 27 European Council (Heads of Government) 6 / 27 Council of the EU (Participation in Government) 10 / 27 European Parliament 65 / 705  Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly 28 / 318 National parliaments of European Union member states[edit] Country Institution Number of seats Member parties Status  Austria National Council 15 / 183 NEOS Opposition  Belgium Chamber of Representatives Lower house 26 / 150 MR 14 / 26 Government Open Vld 12 / 26 Government Senate Upper house 11 / 60 MR 6 / 11 Government Open Vld 5 / 11 Government  Bulgaria National Assembly 25 / 240 MRF Opposition  Croatia Sabor 12 / 151 HNS 4 / 12 Government HSLS 1 / 12 Support Glas 4 / 12 Opposition IDS-DDI 3 / 12 Opposition Pametno 0 / 12 Extraparliamentary  Czech Republic Chamber of Deputies Lower house 78 / 200 ANO Government Senate Upper house 7 / 81 ANO Government  Denmark Folketing 58 / 175 RV 16 / 58 Support V 42 / 58 Opposition  Estonia State Council 59 / 101 EK 25 / 59 Government ER 34 / 59 Opposition  Finland Parliament 41 / 200 Kesk 31 / 41 Government SFP 10 / 41 Government  France National Assembly Lower house 36 / 577 UDI 18 / 36 Opposition MR 18 / 36 Opposition Senate Upper house 46 / 348 UDI 31 / 46 Opposition MR 15 / 46 Opposition  Germany Bundestag 80 / 631 FDP Opposition  Hungary Országgyűlés 1 / 199 Liberálisok 1 / 1 Opposition M 0 / 1 Extraparliamentary  Ireland Dáil Lower house 37 / 160 FF Government Seanad Upper house 20 / 60 FF Government  Italy Chamber of Deputies Lower house 2 / 630 RI, +E Support Senate of the Republic Upper house 1 / 315 RI, +E Support  Lithuania Seimas 33 / 141 LRLS 12 / 33 Government Freedom Party 11 / 33 Government DP 10 / 33 Opposition  Latvia Saeima 13 / 100 LA Government  Luxembourg Chamber of Deputies 12 / 60 DP Government  Netherlands House of Representatives Lower house 51 / 150 VVD 39 / 51 Government D66 19 / 51 Government Senate Upper house 19 / 75 VVD 12 / 19 Government D66 7 / 19 Government  Poland Sejm Lower house 8 / 460 .Nowoczesna Opposition Senat of Poland Upper house 1 / 100 .Nowoczesna Opposition  Portugal Assembly of the Republic 1 / 230 IL Opposition  Romania Chamber of Deputies Lower house 55 / 329 USR Support Senate Upper house 25 / 136 USR Support  Slovakia National Council 0 / 150 PS Extraparliamentary  Slovenia National Assembly 27 / 90 SMC 8 / 27 Government LMŠ 14 / 27 Opposition SAB 5 / 27 Opposition  Spain Congress of Deputies Lower house 10 / 350 Cs Opposition Senate Upper house 8 / 266 Cs Opposition  Sweden Riksdag 50 / 349 C 31 / 50 Support L 19 / 50 Support National parliaments outside the European Union[edit] Country Institution Number of seats Member parties  Andorra General Council 4 / 28 PLA  Armenia National Assembly 17 / 132 ANC, Bright Armenia  Azerbaijan National Assembly 0 / 125 Musavat  Bosnia and Herzegovina House of Representatives 4 / 42 Naša Stranka  Georgia Parliament 0 / 150 Republican, FD  Iceland Althing 4 / 63 Viðreisn  Moldova Parliament 0 / 101 PL  Montenegro Assembly 1 / 81 LPCG  Norway Storting 8 / 169 Venstre   Switzerland National Council Lower house 45 / 200 FDP, GLP Council of States Upper house 12 / 46 FDP  Ukraine Verkhovna Rada 20 / 450 Voice  United Kingdom House of Commons Lower house 12 / 650 Lib Dems, Alliance House of Lords Upper house 94 / 775 Lib Dems Gibraltar Parliament unicameral 3 / 17 Libs Member parties[edit] Proportion of ALDE Party MEPs per country as of 2004[update]   States with full (and possibly associate) member parties   States with associate member parties Country or Region Party MEPs  Austria NEOS – The New Austria and Liberal Forum 1 / 18  Belgium (Dutch) Open Flemish Liberals and Democrats 3 / 12  Belgium (French) Reformist Movement 2 / 8  Bulgaria Movement for Rights and Freedoms 3 / 17  Croatia Croatian People's Party – Liberal Democrats 0 / 11 Croatian Social Liberal Party 0 / 11 Istrian Democratic Assembly 1 / 11 Civic Liberal Alliance 0 / 11 Pametno 0 / 11  Cyprus United Democrats 0 / 6 Democratic Alignment 0 / 6  Czech Republic ANO 2011 6 / 21  Denmark Social Liberal Party 2 / 13 Venstre 3 / 13  Estonia Estonian Centre Party 1 / 6 Estonian Reform Party 2 / 6  Finland Centre Party 2 / 13 Swedish People's Party of Finland 1 / 13  France Radical Movement 1 / 74 Union of Democrats and Independents 0 / 74  Germany Free Democratic Party 5 / 96  Hungary Hungarian Liberal Party 0 / 21 Momentum Movement 2 / 21  Ireland Fianna Fáil 2 / 13  Italy More Europe 0 / 73 Team Köllensperger 0 / 73  Latvia For Latvia's Development 1 / 8 Movement For! 0 / 8  Lithuania Labour Party 1 / 11 Liberal Movement 1 / 11 Freedom Party 0 / 11  Luxembourg Democratic Party 2 / 6  Netherlands Democrats 66 2 / 26 People's Party for Freedom and Democracy 4 / 26  Poland .Nowoczesna 0 / 51  Portugal Liberal Initiative 0 / 21  Romania Save Romania Union[7] 4 / 33  Slovakia Progressive Slovakia 2 / 13  Slovenia List of Marjan Šarec 2 / 8 Modern Centre Party 0 / 8 Party of Alenka Bratušek 0 / 8  Spain Citizens 6 / 54  Sweden Centre Party 2 / 20 Liberals 1 / 20 Outside the EU[edit] Liberal Party of Andorra Armenian National Congress Bright Armenia Musavat Liberal Party of Freedom and Progress Liberal Democratic Party Our Party Free Democrats Republican Party of Georgia Reform Party New Kosovo Alliance Liberal Party Liberal Party of Montenegro Liberal Democratic Party Liberal Party People's Freedom Party Yabloko FDP.The Liberals Green Liberal Party of Switzerland[7] Civil Position European Party of Ukraine Syla Lyudey Voice Liberal Democrats Alliance Party of Northern Ireland Liberal Party of Gibraltar See also[edit] European Liberal Youth Liberal International Political parties of the world References[edit] ^ Nordsieck, Wolfram (2019). "European Union". Parties and Elections in Europe. Archived from the original on 8 June 2017. Retrieved 30 May 2019. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 13 November 2013. Retrieved 13 November 2013.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) ^ "European Liberal Democrats change party name to ALDE Party | ALDE Party". Eldr.eu. Archived from the original on 13 February 2013. Retrieved 23 September 2013. ^ "ALDE-party Bureau". ^ a b Dimitri Almeida (2012). The Impact of European Integration on Political Parties: Beyond the Permissive Consensus. Taylor & Francis. pp. 102–103. ISBN 978-1-136-34039-0. ^ "Macron-Liberal alliance to be named Renew Europe". Politico. 12 June 2019. ^ a b "ALDE Party Council meets in Zürich". ALDE. 28 June 2019. External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party. Official website European Liberal Youth (LYMEC) v t e Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party European Parliament group: Renew Europe Parties Member parties (EU) NEOS Open Vld MR DPS/ДПС HNS HSLS IDS/DDI Glas Pametno EDI/Ε.ΔΗ. DiPa/ΔηΠα ANO B V K RE Kesk./C RKP/SFP MR UDI FDP Liberálisok Momentum FF +E TK LA Par! DP LP LRLS DP D66 VVD Nowoczesna IL USR PS LMŠ SMC SAB C's C L Member parties (non-EU) PLA ANC/ՀԱԿ BA/ԼՀ Müsavat PFP/ПСП LDS NS Respublikelebi/რესპუბლიკელები OG-DF/ჩს-თდ Viðreisn AKR PL LPCG LDP/ЛДП V RPR-PARNAS/РПР-ПАРНАС Yabloko/Я́блоко FDP.DL/PLR.LLR/PLR.IL/PLD.IL glp/pvl/pvl/pvl EPU/ЄПУ CP/ГП SL/CЛ Holos/Голос Alliance Lib Dems Libs Party Presidents Gaston Thorn Willy De Clercq Colette Flesch Willy De Clercq Uffe Ellemann-Jensen Werner Hoyer Annemie Neyts-Uyttebroeck Graham Watson Hans van Baalen European Parliament Group Presidents Yvon Delbos René Pleven Cornelis Berkhouwer Jean Durieux [fr] Jean-François Pintat [fr] Martin Bangemann Simone Veil Valery Giscard d'Estaing Yves Galland Gijs de Vries Pat Cox Graham Watson Guy Verhofstadt Dacian Cioloș see European Parliament European Commissioners Věra Jourová Janez Lenarčič Didier Reynders Kadri Simson Margrethe Vestager see Von der Leyen Commission Heads of government at the European Council Alexander De Croo (Belgium) Andrej Babiš (Czech Republic) Jüri Ratas (Estonia) Xavier Bettel (Luxembourg) Mark Rutte (Netherlands) Micheál Martin (Ireland) see European Council Category v t e Renew Europe European Parliament group Member parties European parties Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party European Democratic Party National parties NEOS MR Open Vld DPS/ДПС IDS/DDI ANO V B K RE Kesk./C RKP/SFP Agir LREM MoDem MR FDP FW Momentum FF IV AP! DP LRLS DP D66 VVD PLUS USR PS LMŠ C's EAJ-PNV C L Leadership President: Dacian Cioloș First Vice-President: Malik Azmani Vice-Presidents: Sylvie Brunet, Katalin Cseh, Fredrick Federley, Luis Garicano, Morten Løkkegaard, Iskra Mihaylova, Frédérique Ries, Dominique Riquet, Michal Simecka Secretary General: Anders Rasmussen v t e Member parties of international liberal organisations Liberal International Andorra: PLA Belgium: MR, VLD Bosnia and Herzegovina: LDS* Botswana: BMD* Bulgaria: DPS, NDSV Burkina Faso: ADF-RDA* Burma: NLD-LA* Burundi: ADR Cambodia: PSR Canada: Liberal Party Colombia: U* DR Congo: ANADER, ARC*, URC* Costa Rica: PML Côte d'Ivoire: RDR Croatia: HSLS Cuba: PLC, PSD, ULC Denmark: RV, Venstre Egypt: FEP, Ghad* Equatorial Guinea: UDENA Estonia: RE Ethiopia: EDP* Finland: Keskusta, SFP Georgia: RPG* Germany: FDP Gibraltar: Liberal Party Guatemala: MR*, PP Guinea: UFDG*, UFR* Honduras: PLH Hungary: MLP Iceland: FSF Indonesia: PD* Ireland: FF* Israel: Shinui Italy: Rad, FdL* Kenya: LDP* Kosovo: PLK* Latvia: LPP/LC Lebanon: Future Movement* Lithuania: LCU Luxembourg: DP Madagascar: MFM* Malawi: UDF Malaysia: Gerakan*, PKR* Mali: PCR* Mexico: NA* Moldova: PRL* Mongolia: IZN Montenegro: LSCG Morocco: AdL*, UC, MP Mozambique: PPDD* Netherlands: D66 , VVD Nicaragua: PLI* North Macedonia: LDP Norway: Venstre Paraguay: PLRA Philippines: LP Romania: PNL Russia: Yabloko Senegal: PDS Serbia: LDP Seychelles: SNP* Slovakia: ANO Slovenia: LDS South Africa: DA Spain: CDC Sri Lanka: LP Sweden: C, L Switzerland: FDP.The Liberals Taiwan: DPP Tanzania: CCW/CUF Thailand: DP Ukraine: UM* United Kingdom: APNI, Lib Dems Zambia: UNDP* National groups: Brazilian Group* German Group Israeli Group Netherlands Group Catalan Group British Group * observer Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party v t e Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party European Parliament group: Renew Europe Parties Member parties (EU) NEOS Open Vld MR DPS/ДПС HNS HSLS IDS/DDI Glas Pametno EDI/Ε.ΔΗ. DiPa/ΔηΠα ANO B V K RE Kesk./C RKP/SFP MR UDI FDP Liberálisok Momentum FF +E TK LA Par! DP LP LRLS DP D66 VVD Nowoczesna IL USR PS LMŠ SMC SAB C's C L Member parties (non-EU) PLA ANC/ՀԱԿ BA/ԼՀ Müsavat PFP/ПСП LDS NS Respublikelebi/რესპუბლიკელები OG-DF/ჩს-თდ Viðreisn AKR PL LPCG LDP/ЛДП V RPR-PARNAS/РПР-ПАРНАС Yabloko/Я́блоко FDP.DL/PLR.LLR/PLR.IL/PLD.IL glp/pvl/pvl/pvl EPU/ЄПУ CP/ГП SL/CЛ Holos/Голос Alliance Lib Dems Libs Party Presidents Gaston Thorn Willy De Clercq Colette Flesch Willy De Clercq Uffe Ellemann-Jensen Werner Hoyer Annemie Neyts-Uyttebroeck Graham Watson Hans van Baalen European Parliament Group Presidents Yvon Delbos René Pleven Cornelis Berkhouwer Jean Durieux [fr] Jean-François Pintat [fr] Martin Bangemann Simone Veil Valery Giscard d'Estaing Yves Galland Gijs de Vries Pat Cox Graham Watson Guy Verhofstadt Dacian Cioloș see European Parliament European Commissioners Věra Jourová Janez Lenarčič Didier Reynders Kadri Simson Margrethe Vestager see Von der Leyen Commission Heads of government at the European Council Alexander De Croo (Belgium) Andrej Babiš (Czech Republic) Jüri Ratas (Estonia) Xavier Bettel (Luxembourg) Mark Rutte (Netherlands) Micheál Martin (Ireland) see European Council Category Liberal South East European Network Bosnia and Herzegovina: LDS Bulgaria: DPS, NSDV Croatia: HNS-LD, HSLS, IDS Hungary: SzDSz Kosovo: PLK North Macedonia: LPM, LDP Romania: PNL Serbia: LS Slovenia: LDS Council of Asian Liberals and Democrats Cambodia: PSR Hong Kong: DP (represented through two individual members) Indonesia: PDI-P, PKB** Japan: DPJ** Malaysia: PGRM Mongolia: IZN Myanmar: NCUB Pakistan: LFP* Philippines: LP Singapore: SDP Sri Lanka: LP ROC Taiwan: DPP Thailand: DP *associate member **observer Africa Liberal Network Angola: PLD Burkina Faso: ADF-RDA DR Congo: ANADER Côte d'Ivoire: RDR Equatorial Guinea: UDENA Madagascar: MFM Malawi: UDF Morocco: MP, UC Mozambique: PDD Senegal: PDS Seychelles: SNP South Africa: DA Tanzania: CUF, UDP Tunisia: PSL Zambia: UNDP Liberal Network for Latin America Argentina: Recrear, PPG Costa Rica: PML Guatemala: MR Mexico: NA Peru: JN Arab Liberal Federation Comoros: NAC Egypt: DFP, FEP, GTP Lebanon: NLP, FM Morocco: MP, UC Sudan: LDP Tunisia: PR v t e Pan-European political organisations Political parties recognised by the EU Current European Conservatives and Reformists Party Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party European Christian Political Movement European Democratic Party European Free Alliance European Green Party European People's Party Identity and Democracy Party Party of European Socialists Party of the European Left Defunct Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe Alliance for Europe of the Nations Alliance of Independent Democrats in Europe Europeans United for Democracy European Alliance for Freedom Libertas Movement for a Europe of Liberties and Democracy Political parties not recognised by the EU Current Alliance for Peace and Freedom Alliance of European National Movements Animal Politics EU Europe–Democracy–Esperanto European Federalist Party European Pirate Party European Party for Individual Liberty Initiative of Communist and Workers' Parties Now the People! Volt Europa Defunct European National Front Europe United Party Movement for European Reform Newropeans Party groups in the Nordic Council Centre Group Nordic Freedom Nordic Green Left Alliance The Social Democratic Group (SAMAK) Conservative Group PACE political groups Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe European Conservatives Group and Democratic Alliance Socialists, Democrats and Greens Group Unified European Left Group Other confederations of national parties Current European Anti-Capitalist Left Liberal South East European Network Defunct Euronat European Democrat Union National parties by European organisation Political groups of the European Parliament Political foundations at European level European parliamentary elections European Council composition by party Politics portal Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Alliance_of_Liberals_and_Democrats_for_Europe_Party&oldid=998975298" Categories: Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Liberal International Hidden categories: CS1 maint: archived copy as title EngvarB from January 2020 Articles with short description Short description is different from Wikidata Use dmy dates from January 2020 Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2020 All articles containing potentially dated statements Articles containing potentially dated statements from 2004 Commons category link is on Wikidata Navigation menu Personal tools Not logged in Talk Contributions Create account Log in Namespaces Article Talk Variants Views Read Edit View history More Search Navigation Main page Contents Current events Random article About Wikipedia Contact us Donate Contribute Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file Tools What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages Permanent link Page information Cite this page Wikidata item Print/export Download as PDF Printable version In other projects Wikimedia Commons Languages Asturianu Català Čeština Dansk Deutsch Eesti Ελληνικά Español Esperanto Français 한국어 Հայերեն Hrvatski Bahasa Indonesia Italiano ქართული Latina Latviešu Lëtzebuergesch Magyar Nederlands 日本語 Norsk bokmål Polski Português Română Русский Slovenščina Српски / srpski Srpskohrvatski / српскохрватски Suomi Svenska Українська اردو Vèneto 中文 Edit links This page was last edited on 7 January 2021, at 22:28 (UTC). 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