Green politics in Europe emerged from several grassroots political movements, including the peace movements, the ecology movement and movements for women's rights. The
anti-nuclear movement in Germany first had political expression as
Vereinigung Die Grünen, which formed in March 1979, and established itself as a party for the European Parliament in January 1980. Similarly, activists in Britain's
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament had formed the
Ecology Party in 1975. However, it also brought in ecological movements, which had become active across Western European nations in the 1970s. Environmental groups became especially political after the
Chernobyl disaster in 1986, which strengthened groups such as the
Italian Green Party. In the Netherlands, feminists dominated
GroenLinks party. The following 11 members of this grouping, which was briefly known as the
Rainbow Group, came from parties which went on to be part of the European Greens: At the convention, 32 Green parties from across Europe joined this new pan-European party. As such, the European Greens became a trans-national party, and the very first European political party. In the
2009 European Parliament election, even though the European Parliament was reduced in size, the European Greens' member parties won 46 seats, the best result of the Green Parties in 30 years. The Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament secured 55 seats in total. In the
2014 European Parliament election, the Green candidates were
José Bové and
Ska Keller. These elections marked the first time there were primaries including
Spitzenkandidaten at the European elections, which allows Europeans to not only vote for who should represent them in the European Parliament, but also help to decide who should lead the European Commission. In May they presented a common programme including the
Green New Deal at the launch of the European Greens' campaign which called for "a new direction of economic policy aimed at reducing our carbon footprint and improving our quality of life". The slogan of the campaign was 'Change Europe, vote Green'. The Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament obtained 50 seats in total. The candidates for the
2019 European Parliament election were
Ska Keller and
Bas Eickhout, who campaigned for climate protection, a social Europe, more democracy and stronger rule of law. That year, the Greens made the strongest ever showing across Europe, and the impact of youth movements for climate. The strongest surge was in Germany as
Alliance 90/The Greens replaced the centre-left
Social Democratic Party of Germany as the second-strongest party. The Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament obtained 74 seats in total. The Greens' results signified a new balance of power as the
European People's Party (EPP) and the
Progressive Alliance of Socialists and Democrats (S&D) lost their majority. By 2023,
The Economist analysed that "the policies espoused by environmentalists sit squarely at the centre of today's political agenda".
Terry Reintke and
Bas Eickhout were elected by the European Greens to be lead candidates for the 2024 European Parliament election. The campaign ran under the slogan "Choose Courage". They were elected by more than 300 delegates at an Extended Congress in Lyon, France in February 2024. The campaign is focused on a Green and Social Deal, and the fight against the rise of the
far right in Europe. At the 2024
Maastricht Debate, organised by
Politico and the
University of Maastricht, European Green top candidate
Bas Eickhout asked directly to
Ursula von der Leyen, top candidate of the
European People's Party, what her position was towards the far right in Europe,
European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR) and
Identity and Democracy. Von der Leyen told the audience that a collaboration with the ECR "depends very much on how the composition of the Parliament is, and who is in what group." Numerous analyses in European quality media consider this as a win for the Greens and the turning point of the 2024 election campaign. The European Greens criticised heavily that von der Leyen, as incumbent president of the European Commission and lead candidate for the EPP, opened the door to collaboration with the far right. On 1 November 2024, during the
2024 United States presidential election, the
European Greens released a statement, signed by representatives from 16 European countries, asking Green candiate
Jill Stein to drop out of the presidential election and endorse Kamala Harris, arguing that "Harris is the only candidate who can block Donald Trump and his anti-democratic,
authoritarian policies." Stein's team said it was disappointed that "one group of Greens [would] tell another to stop participating in democracy" and that it "would never betray our legion of supportersand the many supporters who have already cast votesby abandoning our mission now". == Organisational structure ==