In the first week, IND/DEM assigned a UKIP MEP to the Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality. The MEP, Godfrey Bloom, promptly made comments including "No self-respecting small businessman with a brain in the right place would ever employ a lady of child-bearing age" and "I am here to represent Yorkshire women who always have dinner on the table when you get home. I am going to promote men's rights." The remarks engendered outrage from a range of fellow politicians.[28]
One UKIP MEP never made it to IND/DEM. MEP Ashley Mote was expelled from UKIP[29] prior to IND/DEM's formation[30] when it became known that he faced charges for housing benefit fraud.[29] Mote went on to join the far-right Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty group before being convicted in 2007.[31]
The Northern League MEPs eventually all left the group after their expulsion from IND/DEM following an incident involving a T-shirt and the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy.[32] MEPs from the League of Polish Families also left the group, although not all and not all at once.[32][33][34]
After having been suspended from UKIP following his arrest on fraud allegations,[35] MEP Tom Wise left IND/DEM in June 2008.
After the 2009 European Parliament elections, 18[14] IND/DEM MEPs from four Member States were elected for the 2009–2014 term (the Seventh European Parliament). The great majority of these seats (thirteen) were from the UK Independence Party, with others being two from the ChristianUnion – Reformed Political Party of the Netherlands, two from the Popular Orthodox Rally of Greece, and one from Libertas France. But that didn't meet the threshold laid down in the European Parliament's Rules of Procedure.[36][37] So when the Seventh European Parliament started on 14 July 2009, IND/DEM would not qualify as a group.
On 30 June 2009, it was reported the remnants of IND/DEM were to unite with the remnants of another collapsing group, Union for a Europe of Nations (UEN), to create a new group whose official name was not yet determined.[38]
IND/DEM was a coalition of MEPs from two distinct wings of Euroscepticism: a reformist subgroup (sometimes referred to as Eurorealists) made up of those MEPs who believed that the EU was essentially desirable if reformed and who supported greater transparency and control over the EU bureaucracy, and a secessionist subgroup consisting of those MEPs (notably UKIP[40]) who believed that the EU was inherently wrong even if reformed and who advocated withdrawal from the EU.[1][41]
Organisation
IND/DEM had a joint political leadership. The group's co-chairs were Nigel Farage[42] (UKIP) and Hanne Dahl,[42] the latter succeeding Kathy Sinnott,[42] who in turn succeeded long-time MEP Jens-Peter Bonde (June Movement) on his retirement in May 2008. Farage represented the secessionist subgroup, and Sinnott the reformist subgroup. The leadership was loose, enabling the two subgroups to unite around the broad principles of democracy and transparency[40] which were embodied in its statute and to which IND/DEM MEPs were expected to adhere.[43] The day-to-day running of the group was performed by its secretariat, and its secretaries-general were Claudine Vangrunderbeeck and Herman Verheirstraeten.[44]
Membership
11 June–1 July 2009
IND/DEM percentage of elected MEPs by member state 11 June 2009 (see description for sources)
IND/DEM percentage of MEPs by member state December 2007 (see description for sources)
no MEPs
1% to 5%
5% to 10%
10% to 20%
20% to 30%
30% to 40%
40% to 50%
50% plus
A December 2007 European Parliament document considered the groups. Page 9 of that document had a table. That table gave the number of MEPs for each group and member state at December 2007. That table's data for IND/DEM is depicted as percentages in the diagram on the right.[49]
Such support for IND/DEM as was expressed came from Northern European states, with especial reference to the member states of the North-West. Its strongholds were Sweden and Denmark, who sent "June list" MEPs from June List and June Movement to the Parliament, and the United Kingdom, with 13% of its MEPs at December 2007 coming from UKIP and sitting with IND/DEM. As of December 2007 no member state had more than 13% of its MEPs sitting with IND/DEM and eighteen member states (Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain) had none.
Membership at formation at 20–23 July 2004
IND/DEM percentage of elected MEPs by member state 20–23 July 2004 (see description for sources)
no MEPs
1% to 5%
5% to 10%
10% to 20%
20% to 30%
30% to 40%
40% to 50%
50% plus
The IND/DEM MEPs at 20–23 July 2004 were as follows:
Activities performed by IND/DEM in the period between 1 June 2004 and 1 June 2008 that resulted in an entry on Google News include:
seeking to allow Parliament to be filmed;
criticising EC PresidentBarroso for taking a cruise on a yacht owned by Spiro Latsis prior to the Commission giving a Latsis shipyard a grant of €10 million;[87][88]
trying to get a European Parliament auditor's report on alleged abuses of staff allowances published;[89][90]
The debates and votes in the European Parliament are tracked by its website[113] and categorised by the Groups that participate in them and the rule of procedure that they fall into. The results give a profile for each Group by category and the total indicates the Group's level of participation in Parliamentary debates. The activity profile for each Group for the period 1 August 2004 to 1 August 2008 in the Sixth European Parliament is given on the diagram on the right. IND/DEM is denoted in orange.
The website shows IND/DEM as participating in 43 motions, making it one of the most inactive Groups during the period.
Publications
IND/DEM publications included the Prague Declaration of October 2005, which restated their disapproval of the Constitution Treaty and belief that the values it embodied should not be resurrected,[2] and the Delphi Declaration of July 2007, which made similar points concerning the Treaty of Lisbon.[3] IND/DEM also published a newsletter called EU Watch, which gave a eurosceptic view on the EU activities of the day.[114]
^ abc"The Declaration of Delphi"(PDF). Independence/Democracy Group in the European Parliament. July 2007. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 September 2009. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
^Mesežnikov, Grigorij; Gyárfášová, Oľga; Smilov, Daniel (2008). Populist Politics and Liberal Democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. Bratislava: Institute for Public Affairs. p. 90. ISBN978-80-89345-06-9.
^Ruzza, Carlo (2009). "Populism and euroscepticism: Towards uncivil society?". Policy and Society. 28 (1): 87–98. doi:10.1016/j.polsoc.2009.02.007. As a second type of dividing nationalism, (3) euroscepticism is different and particularly prominent in that its main theme allows for more international collaboration than is the case with radical nation-state nationalism. Thus its associations can more easily span national boundaries and constitute international alliances based on international fora. These include European Parliament parties such as the Independence/Democracy Group in the European Parliament, and a civil society organization such as the transnational Research Centre Free Europe
^Manners, Ian (2011). "Denmark and the European Union". EU Som et Politisk System - Uviklinger og Udfordringer. 8.
^Pankowski, Rafal (2010). The Populist Radical Right in Poland: The Patriots. Routledge. p. 129. ISBN9781135150976.
^Dočekalová, Pavla (2006). "Radical Right-Wing Parties in Central Europe: Mutual Contacts and Cooperation". Politics in Central Europe. 2 (2): 17.
^Mudde, Cas (2007). Populist Radical Right Parties in Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 179. ISBN978-0-511-34143-4.
^Gora, Magdalena; Styczynska, Natasza; Zubek, Marcin (2020). Contestation of EU Enlargement and European Neighbourhood Policy. Djof Forlag. p. 187. ISBN9788771983234.
^Roy H. Ginsberg, Demystifying the European Union: The Enduring Logic of Regional Integration, p. 170, Rowman & Littlefield, 2010, ISBN0742566927