UKIP today announced the launch of a new group in the European Parliament – the Europe of Freedom and Democracy Group.

The group will replace the now defunct Independence & Democracy Group and is comprised as follows…

Denmark: Dansk Folkeparti, 2 MEPs
Finland: True Finns, 1 MEP
France: Libertas (Mouvement pour la France – CPNT), 1 MEP
Greece: LAOS, 2 MEPs
Italy: Lega Nord, 9 MEPs
Netherlands: Staatkundig Gereformeerde Partij, 1 MEP
Slovakia: Slovenská národná strana, 1 MEP
United Kingdom: UKIP, 13 MEPs

30 MEPs in total, from 8 countries, comfortably meeting the new threshold of 25 MEPs from 7 countries (was originally 20 MEPs from 6 countries).

Nigel Farage, UKIP leader and President of the new group said…

“I am delighted to announce the formation of this group. It is a cohesive and broad based Group that will be able to build on the effectiveness of the Independence/Democracy Group from the last Parliament.

It will be able to provide real opposition to the centralising consensus of the other groups. Something that this Parliament, and the free peoples of Europe have been crying out for”.

EU Observer reports that

Whatever its final formation, the name reflects the Ukip-Lega-Nord axis that represents the core leadership of the new group. Italy’s Lega-Nord or Northern League, in government domestically, is to join with the British eurosceptics from their now defunct grouping in the parliament, the conservative Union for a Europe of the Nations (UEN).

It also seems that, reflecting Lega Nord’s strength, that the co-president of the group will be Francesco Speroni.

And while the group meets the necessary criteria, we shouldn’t be surprised if more join in the coming week or two

Mr Farage said the party was still in negotiations with several other parties around Europe and hoped to bring more deputies on board before the first plenary session in Strasbourg on 14 July.

Mr Farage also outlined the new party’s four-point political programme on Wednesday, with the document placing strong emphasis on the principles of democracy and the sovereignty of nation states.

“The group favours an open, transparent, democratic and accountable co-operation among sovereign European states and rejects the bureaucratisation of Europe and the creation of a single centralised European superstate,” reads the programme.

It all looks rather good at the moment. Let’s hope the group is stronger than its Ind/Dem predecessor and manages to further the view of a Europe of independent and cooperating nations.