Posted on 07/14/2026 6:42:48 AM PDT by MtnClimber
On July 7, the European Parliament voted 414-224 to open a formal review of whether a small pan-European political alliance called Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) still qualifies for EU registration and EU funding. Brussels insists this is a routine compliance matter. It is not. It is the first time in the history of the EU’s party-financing regime that this mechanism has been aimed at a party of the populist right, and everyone involved knows exactly which national party it is really about: Germany’s Alternative for Germany (AfD).
You would be forgiven for never having heard of ESN. It is a thin administrative shell, a European parliamentary grouping that AfD helped found after being pushed out of its previous alliance. But the vote was never really about ESN. It was about finding a way to hit the AfD that Germany’s own constitution does not currently allow.
That distinction matters, and Americans should understand exactly how it works, because it is a preview of the kind of soft, bureaucratic power supranational bodies can wield against elected opposition parties that lose at the ballot box less than they win.
A Ban By Another Name
Under German law, only the Federal Constitutional Court can ban a political party, and only on petition from the Bundestag, the Bundesrat, or the federal government. Even then, judges must find not only objectionable rhetoric but also an active, organized campaign against the free democratic order. That is a high bar, and past attempts to clear it, including against far smaller far-left and far-right parties, have often failed.
Brussels offers something much easier: strip a party of its status as a European political party and cut off its EU subsidies. No German court, no German plaintiff, no German constitutional threshold. Just a Brussels-based authority, a dossier, and a parliamentary vote.
The Bureaucrat Who Says the Quiet Part Out Loud
The case rests on a roughly 300-page dossier assembled by Pascal Schonard, director of the EU’s Authority for European Political Parties and European Political Foundations, alleging 26 incidents of racist, antisemitic, or homophobic statements by ESN-affiliated politicians across several countries from Bulgaria to the Czech Republic. Whatever one makes of those individual incidents, they were compiled into a single case file against the entire European alliance, and from there, into a case against the AfD by association.
You do not have to take my word for it. The Greens/EFA group in the European Parliament put out a press release referring plainly to “AfD’s European party, the ESN.” German Green MEP Daniel Freund, who helped drive the push, titled his own statement: “No more EU taxpayer money for AfD’s European party.” The European hard-left bloc, The Left, was even blunter, saying there could be “only one consequence”: cutting off the AfD’s European funding. Notice that none of them are talking about ESN. They are talking about the AfD.
Who, Exactly, Is Doing the Judging?
It is also worth asking who runs the authority making this case. Schonard spent years working inside the cabinet of the European Parliament’s secretary-general and its legal service before his appointment. For over a decade, the secretary-general’s office was led by Klaus Welle, previously the top staffer of the center-right European People’s Party (EPP) and its parliamentary group for years before that. Welle now chairs the academic council of the EPP’s own affiliated think tank. None of this proves personal bias. But it does mean that the agency now deciding the AfD’s European fate was shaped by the administrative culture of the very political family that competes with it most fiercely. A rival nationalist bloc, Patriots for Europe, already sued this same authority last year, alleging exactly that kind of institutional bias. The case has not been finally decided, but the concern is not invented out of thin air.
To be fair, the process does have a check: a six-member committee of independent figures, appointed jointly by Parliament, the Council, and the Commission, reviews the case before a final decision, and both Parliament and the Council can still object to the outcome. That is a real safeguard, and it is worth acknowledging. It does not, however, change who authored the dossier or where the bureaucracy sits.
Why This Should Matter in Washington
Imagine, for a moment, an international body with the power to strip a major American party of ballot access or campaign financing, not through any American court and not through any American voter, but through a foreign administrative dossier compiled by career staff drawn from the ranks of the opposing party’s own political network. That is roughly the mechanism now being tested on the AfD, and it works precisely because it never has to call itself a ban.
This is the quiet, procedural face of what used to require tanks or secret police: an elected opposition party gets strangled not by the voters who keep sending its candidates to parliament, but by an unelected authority thousands of miles from the voters it claims to be protecting.
The Bottom Line
Nothing that happened on July 7 legally bans the AfD. Germany’s constitutional court alone can do that, and it has not been asked. But Brussels has built something almost as useful to the AfD’s domestic opponents: a European seal of disapproval, manufactured through a dossier, laundered through press releases that openly call ESN “the AfD’s party,” and backed by an agency whose own leadership pedigree runs through the AfD’s chief political rivals.
Call it what it is: not the defense of democracy, but the construction of a precedent, one in which a supranational bureaucracy gets to decide, ahead of any ballot, which opposition parties are still allowed to compete. Americans who worry about unelected international bodies overriding national sovereignty should be watching this case closely. It will not stay in Germany.
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Maybe President Trump should suggest it be done to the DSA just to pull their chain. Can you imagine the outrage?
I’ve told this story before a Jewish expert on drafting constitutions wrote charters for developing countries. Because he was so aware of the holocaust, he included provisions that any party which opposes the Constitution or the principles therein would be outlawed.
Then he watched as each country devolved into dictatorship and used that clause to outlaw all the opposing parties.
The EU should ban all opposition parties ,LOL
AfD is probably the most popular party in Germany.
Yet, it is persecuted already, the leaders are accused of all kind of wrong doings and indicted in many phony crimes, which they were eventually cleared from.
No party will enter into coalition with them.
They rather join with neo communist Greens that with Afd!
Meanwhile, from the UK...
Rupert Lowe MP
@RupertLowe10
A Restore Britain Government will look to establish a ‘Deportation NATO’ - through which like-minded nations will inflict coordinated punishment on states that refuse to accept deported criminals, rapists and illegals.
Pakistan, to start.
1:20 PM · Jul 14, 2026 52.4K Views
https://x.com/RupertLowe10/status/2077020287724388645
"This is a routine compliance matter."
Time for regime change in the EU
We’re missing a certain set of cheerleaders on this thread.....
Maybe the muslim immigrants got them.
Quick.....call the international criminal court. (aptly named)
Maybe the AFD should submit their own dossier on the communist and green parties and ask they be banned from participation due to their violent terroristic activities.
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