The
member states of the European Union have many common policies within the EU and on behalf of the EU that are sometimes suggestive of a federal state. It has a common policy-setting body, the
European Council (of national Heads of Government) that defines the overall political direction and priorities of the
European Union. It has a common executive (the
European Commission) to oversee execution of policies and to verify compliance with Treaty obligations, including a single
High Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy. It has a common
European Security and Defence Policy, a single internal market for goods and services,
freedom of movement of persons for work, a
European citizenship granting European rights, a supreme court (
Court of Justice of the European Unionbut only in matters of
European Union law or areas affected by it), a common bi-cameral legislature in the form of the directly elected
European Parliament and the
Council of the EU (of national ministers, meeting in formations of specialised ministers for each policy area) representing Member States and which, on most subjects, acts by a (weighted) majority vote. It also has numerous agencies and other bodies to implement European law and coordinate policies such as
EUROPOL or the
European Environment Agency. European Law also takes precedence over national law in all areas granted to it by member states (but not otherwise), ranging from energy and environmental policy to consumer rights and criminal justice. It has a common currency, the
euro used by all but six of its member states while two other member countries of the European Union have linked their currencies to the euro in
ERM II. (Non-EU
Andorra,
Monaco,
San Marino, the
Vatican City,
Kosovo and
Montenegro also use the euro.) Several pan-European institutions exist separate from the EU. The
European Space Agency counts almost all EU member states in its membership, but it is independent of the EU and its membership includes nations that are not EU members, notably Switzerland, Norway and as a result of
Brexit, the United Kingdom. The
European Political Community is an annual intergovernmental meeting of 47 European states (all except Russia and Belarus) established in 2022 following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. At present, the European Union is a free association of sovereign states which is not officially characterised as a federation or as a confederation, even though it has some features of each. Its single market is run along quasi federal lines, whereas on foreign policy and security issues it is an inter-governmental confederation. Other than the vague aim of "ever closer union" in the preamble and Article 1 of the
Treaty on European Union, the EU has not defined its future form. However, in the past, many of its "founding fathers" such as
Jean Monnet and
Robert Schuman did refer to the ultimate ambition of a federal Europe. In the United States of America, the concept enters serious discussions of whether a unified Europe is feasible and what impact increased European unity would have on the United States of America's relative political and economic power. Glyn Morgan, a
Harvard University associate professor of government and social studies, uses it unapologetically in the title of his book
The Idea of a European Superstate: Public Justification and European Integration. While Morgan's text focuses on the security implications of a unified Europe, a number of other recent texts focus on the economic implications of such an entity. Important recent texts here include
T. R. Reid's
The United States of Europe and
Jeremy Rifkin's
The European Dream. Neither the
National Review nor the
Chronicle of Higher Education doubt the appropriateness of the term in their reviews.
European federalist organisations Various federalist organisations have been created over time supporting the idea of a federal Europe. These include the
Union of European Federalists, the
European Movement International, the (former)
European Federalist Party,
Stand Up For Europe and
Volt Europa.
Union of European Federalists The
Union of European Federalists (UEF) is a European non-governmental organisation campaigning for a Federal Europe. It consists of 20 national sections and it has been active at the European, national and local levels for more than 50 years. A youth branch called the
Young European Federalists also exists in 30 countries of Europe.
European Movement International The
European Movement International is a lobbying association that coordinates the efforts of associations and national councils with the goal of promoting European integration, and disseminating information about it.
European Federalist Party The
European Federalist Party was a pro-European, pan-European and federalist political party from 2011 to 2016 which advocated further integration of the European Union.
Stand Up for Europe As the successor movement of the
European Federalist Party,
Stand Up For Europe is a pan-European NGO that advocates the foundation of a European Federation. Contrary to movements like the UEF or the former EFP, Stand Up for Europe does not command any national levels anymore, but only consists of regional city teams and the European level.
Volt Europa Volt Europa describes itself a pan-European, progressive movement that stands for a new and inclusive way of doing politics and that wants to bring change for European citizens. The party claims that a new pan-European approach is needed to overcome current and future challenges, such as – among others – climate change, economic inequality, migration, international conflict, terrorism, and the impact of the technological revolution on jobs. Volt says that national parties are powerless in front of these challenges, because they go beyond national borders and need to be tackled by Europeans, as one people. As a transnational party, it believes it can help the European people unite, create a shared vision and understanding, exchange good practices across the continent, and come up with working policies. Volt Europa is the first European federalist movement to have elected members in two national parliaments, namely in the Netherlands and Bulgaria, as well as having elected five MEPs from Germany and the Netherlands.
Politicians Guy Verhofstadt Following the negative referendums about the
European Constitution in France and the Netherlands, the former Belgian prime minister
Guy Verhofstadt released in November 2005 his book, written in
Dutch,
Verenigde Staten van Europa ("United States of Europe") in which he claims – based on the results of a
Eurobarometer questionnaire – that the average European citizen wants more Europe. He thinks a federal Europe should be created between those states that wish to have a federal Europe (as a form of enhanced cooperation). In other words, a core federal Europe would exist within the current EU. He also states that these core states should federalise the following five policy areas: a European social-economic policy, technology cooperation, a common justice and security policy, a common diplomacy and a
European army. Following the ratification of the
Treaty of Lisbon (December 2009) by all member states of the EU, the outline of a common diplomatic service, known as the
External Action Service of the European Union (EEAS), was set in place. On 20 February 2009, the
European Parliament also voted in favour of the creation of
Synchronised Armed Forces Europe (SAFE) as a first step towards a forming a true European military force. Verhofstadt's book was awarded the first
Europe Book Prize, which is organised by the association Esprit d'Europe and supported by former
president of the European Commission Jacques Delors. The prize money was €20,000. The prize was declared at the European Parliament in Brussels on 5 December 2007. Swedish crime fiction writer Henning Mankell was the president of the jury of European journalists for choosing the first recipient. While receiving the reward, Verhofstadt said: "When I wrote this book, I in fact meant it as a provocation against all those who didn't want the European Constitution. Fortunately, in the end a solution was found with the treaty, that was approved".
Viviane Reding In 2012,
Viviane Reding, then a Luxembourgish Vice-president of the
European Commission called in a speech in
Passau Germany and in a series of articles and interviews for the establishment of the United States of Europe as a way to strengthen the unity of Europe.
Matteo Renzi The Italian Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi said in 2014 that under his leadership Italy would use its six-month-long presidency of the European Union to push for the establishment of a United States of Europe. In 2024, Matteo Renzi, serving as the leader of
Italia Viva, and
Emma Bonino, head of the
More Europe party, formed an
electoral list for the
2024 European Parliament election under the name "
United States of Europe". Renzi described the initiative as an effort to "bring to Brussels several MEPs who are not sovereignists or populists—people who believe in the United States of Europe. People who do politics." Alongside Italia Viva and More Europe, the list includes the
Italian Socialist Party, the
Italian Radicals, the
European Liberal Democrats and
L'Italia c'è.
Martin Schulz In December 2017,
Martin Schulz, who was then the new leader of the German
Social Democratic Party, called for a new constitutional treaty for a "United States of Europe". He proposed that this constitution should be written by "a convention that includes civil society and the people" and that any state that declined to accept this proposed constitution should have to leave the bloc.
Silvio Berlusconi The former Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi repeatedly expressed support for deeper European integration under the banner of a “United States of Europe.” In a November 2019 address to the
European People's Party in
Zagreb, he argued that “unificare le Forze armate di tutti gli Stati” (“unifying the armed forces of all Member States”) was imperative for the EU to matter on the world stage, adding that it would also serve as a deterrent to large-scale migration and maintain strategic parity with global powers such as the United States, Russia, and
China.
Notable individuals Freddy Heineken In 1992, Dutch businessman
Freddy Heineken, after consulting with historians of the
University of Leiden,
Henk Wesseling and
Willem van den Doel published a brochure "
United States of Europe, Eurotopia?". In his work he put forward the idea of creating the United States of Europe as a confederation of 75 states that would be formed according to an ethnic and linguistic principle with a population of 5 to 10 million people. == Predictions ==