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Alliance for Peace and Freedom
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The Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) is a far-right European political alliance and former European political party founded on 4 February 2015.[4] The main member parties were involved in the defunct European National Front.
Key Information
The alliance wishes to establish a network of nationalist movements across Europe that will cooperate to strengthen their shared ideals.[5] It cooperates and supports other nationalist groups across Europe that are not members, these include former party members Golden Dawn, Tricolour Flame,[6] Alternative for Sweden[7] and the ELAM.[8] The alliance is described as neo-Nazi by several newspapers,[9][10] and neo-fascist by others.[11][12]
The group works for "a Europe of sovereign nations in which the independent states work together on a confederated basis", and for the perennity and the safeguarding of ancestral European traditions such as the Christian tradition.[13]
Europa Terra Nostra
[edit]The Europa Terra Nostra is the official European political foundation of the APF. The ETN was founded 3 July 2015 in Berlin where it continues to operate as the official think-tank of the APF and serves as the European framework for national foundations/think-tanks recognised by APF member-parties.[14][15]
International connections
[edit]The APF works to co-ordinate European nationalist parties across the continent. It helped establish the Italy for the Italians coalition composed of APF member New Force along with Tricolour Flame. In 2017 the APF aided in the formation of the National Identity Bloc in Europe coalition, APF members, United Romania Party and Noua Dreaptă joined forces with the Greater Romania Party.[16] In 2019 The APF played a part in forming the ADÑ Identidad Española coalition, composed of APF member National Democracy, FE-JONS, Spanish Alternative and La Falange.[17]
The party also maintains contacts with the former leader of the National Front, Jean-Marie Le Pen, who was expelled from his party in 2015.[18] He joined the group in March 2018 as an Honorary Chairman and held this position until his death in January 2025.[19]
The APF maintains contacts with conservative circles in Russia with the group being invited to conferences hosted by the Kremlin.[20] The party supports Vladimir Putin and United Russia's leadership of Russia, especially in the Russo-Ukrainian War and Syrian Civil War.[21] The party is supportive of Alexander Lukashenko and maintains contacts with the Liberal Democratic Party of Belarus.[22]
The APF strongly supports Serbian nationalists and is opposed to international recognition of Kosovo, it has worked in the past with the Serbian Radical Party.[23] On 26 September 2021, the APF held a conference in Belgrade hosted by the Serbian Right.[24]
It maintained friendly relations with the Syrian Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party government with deputy chairman, Nick Griffin being invited to Syria by Bashar al-Assad multiple times as an ambassador.[25] Meetings between the party and the Syrian Social Nationalist Party have been held with the AFP publicly supporting the SSNP.[26] The group maintains contacts with Hezbollah and has hosted at least one meeting with Hezbollah leaders.[27] Michel Aoun, then president of Lebanon, received a delegation of the APF in 2018 and in 2019,[28][29] and the group claims to have been in regular contact with him and his party.[30]
Member parties
[edit]| Country | Party | Leader | Political group in 2024–2029 term |
European Parliament | National lower houses | Position in national legislature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nation | Hervé Van Laethem | None | 0 / 21
|
0 / 150
|
No seats | |
| Flanders and Identity[31] Vlaanderen Identitair (VLI) |
Rob Verreycken | None | 0 / 21
|
0 / 150
|
No seats | |
| Jeanne Committees[32] (Associate) Comités Jeanne (CJ) |
Vacant | None | 0 / 74
|
0 / 577
|
No seats | |
| The Nationalists[33][24] Les Nationalistes |
Yvan Benedetti | None | 0 / 74
|
0 / 577
|
No seats | |
| The Homeland[14] Die Heimat |
Peter Schreiber | None | 0 / 96
|
0 / 709
|
No seats | |
| Popular Greek Patriotic Union[34] Laiki Elliniki Patriotiki Enosi (LEPEN) |
Christos Rigas | None | 0 / 21
|
0 / 300
|
No seats | |
| New Force[14] Forza Nuova (FN) |
Roberto Fiore | None | 0 / 73
|
0 / 630
|
No seats | |
| Dutch People's Union
Nederlandse Volks-Unie (NVU) |
Constant Kusters | None | 0 / 14
|
0 / 150
|
No seats | |
| New Right[6] Noua Dreaptă (ND) |
Tudor Ionescu | None | 0 / 32
|
0 / 136
|
No seats | |
| People's Party - Our Slovakia[14] Ľudová strana – Naše Slovensko (ĽSNS) |
Marian Kotleba | None | 0 / 14
|
0 / 150
|
No seats | |
| National Democracy[14] Democracia Nacional (DN) |
Luis Mateos de Vega | None | 0 / 54
|
0 / 350
|
No seats |
Former member parties
[edit]| Country | Party | Abbr. | Leader | Left the AFP |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Workers' Party of Social Justice Czech: Dělnická strana sociální spravedlnosti |
DSSS | Tomáš Vandas | 2024 (party dissolved) | |
| Party of the Danes Danish: Danskernes Parti |
DP | Daniel Carlsen | 2017 (party dissolved)[35] | |
| The French Dissent[36] French: La Dissidence Française |
DF | Vincent Vauclin[37] | 2020 (party dissolved) | |
| Golden Dawn Greek: Χρυσή Αυγή |
ΧΑ | Nikolaos Michaloliakos | 2020 (party banned)[38] | |
| National Popular Consciousness[39] Ethnikí Laïkí Syneídisi |
ELASYN | Giannis Lagos | 2023 (party dissolved) | |
| United Romania Party[14] Romanian: Partidul România Unită |
PRU | Robert Bugă | 2019 (party dissolved) | |
| Party of the Swedes Swedish: Svenskarnas parti |
SvP | Stefan Jacobsson | 2015 (party dissolved)[40] | |
| The Phalanx Spanish: La Falange |
FE/La Falange | Manuel Andrino Lobo | 2024 (party dissolved) |
Executive Board
[edit]| Member | Position | Country | Political party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roberto Fiore[41] | President/Chairman | FN | |
| Nick Griffin[41] | Deputy chairman | ||
| Jean-Marie Le Pen[42] | Honorary chairman | CJ | |
| Tomáš Vandas[41] | Board member | ||
| Gonzalo Martín García[41] | Board member | DN | |
| Hervé Van Laethem[41] | Board member | Nation | |
| Olivier Wyssa[41] | Board member | ||
| Martin Beluský[41] | Board member | ĽSNS | |
| Ingo Stawitz[41] | Board member | NPD |
MEPs
[edit]Eighth European Parliament (2014–2019)
[edit]| Member | Political group | Country | Political party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jean Marie Le Pen | Non-Inscrits | CJ | |
| Udo Voigt | Non-Inscrits | NPD |
Ninth European Parliament (2019–2024)
[edit]| Member | Political group | Country | Political party |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ioannis Lagos | Non-Inscrits | ELASYN |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Kremlin 'hosts' the European extreme right". osw.waw.pl. 25 March 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
- ^ Shaffer, Ryan (2018). "Pan-European thought in British fascism: the International Third Position and the Alliance for Peace and Freedom". Patterns of Prejudice. 52: 78–99. doi:10.1080/0031322X.2017.1417191. S2CID 148834755.
The APF was founded in 2015 as a pan-European political party that included dozens of leading fascist officials from parties throughout Europe...
- ^ Mützel, Daniel (27 April 2016). "European Parliament funding of neo-Nazi conference rings alarm bells". EURACTIV. Retrieved 3 August 2019.
- ^ European political party#Former European parties
- ^ "Where we stand". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2020. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
- ^ a b "Milan Congress and Meeting". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
- ^ "Alliance for Peace and Freedom". en-gb.facebook.com.
- ^ "Alliance for Peace and Freedom". en-gb.facebook.com.
- ^ Mützel, Daniel (28 April 2016). "Le Parlement européen finance une conférence néonazie". EurActiv (in French).
- ^ Stroobants, Jean-Pierre (30 April 2016). "Des fonds européens pour un rassemblement de néonazis". Le Monde (in French). ISSN 1950-6244.
- ^ Palmeri, Tara (20 April 2016). "Manfred Weber calls for defunding of 'neo-fascist' political group". Politico Europe.
- ^ "Jean-Marie Le Pen rejoint un parti européen néofasciste". Le Monde (in French). 5 April 2018.
- ^ "Statement of Principles". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 6 August 2016. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f "STATUTES". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 5 January 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2019.
- ^ "Über uns". europa-terra-nostra.com. Archived from the original on 16 May 2020. Retrieved 8 June 2019.
- ^ "Partidul lui Sebastian Ghiță, la braț cu PRM și "Noua Dreaptă"". cotidianul.ro. 27 March 2017.
- ^ "Alliance for Peace and Freedom". en-gb.facebook.com.
- ^ "Success for APF conference in Paris". apfeuropa.com. 22 March 2016. Archived from the original on 15 April 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
- ^ "France's Jean-Marie Le Pen joins European far-right alliance". thelocal.fr. 7 April 2018. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
- ^ "The Far-Right "International Russian Conservative Forum" to Take Place in Russia". interpretermag.com.
- ^ "To Russia with love, from Europe's far-right fringe". Financial Times. 22 March 2015. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
- ^ "Belarus – report on APF delegation to a stronghold of social nationalism". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 13 July 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
- ^ "Nick Griffin visits Serbia – more APF expansion on the way". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 25 September 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
- ^ a b "APF Congress in Belgrade". October 2021.
- ^ "Alliance of Peace and Freedom delegation: Europe must take Syria's side and fight terrorism". Syria Times. 6 June 2015.
- ^ "REPORT ON LATEST APF VISIT TO SYRIA". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 26 June 2019. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
- ^ "Hizbullah Official In Beirut Receives Visiting Far-Right 'Alliance For Freedom And Peace' Party Members From UK, Italy, Belgium, Germany, And Croatia – Who Express Support For Hizbullah's Fight Against Israel". memri.org (in Arabic and English). Middle East Media Research Institute. 19 March 2019. Archived from the original on 22 August 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
- ^ Rabah, Makram (17 June 2018). "Lebanese politicians play populist card in face-off with UNHCR". The Arab Weekly. Retrieved 10 October 2025.
- ^ "Aoun Deplores International Community's Stance on Refugees". Naharnet. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 10 October 2025.
- ^ "Alliance for Peace and Freedom". facebook.com.
- ^ Jacobsson, Stefan. "APF welcomes "Vlaanderen Identitair" (VLI) as partner in Flanders – APF". Archived from the original on 22 February 2020. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
- ^ "France's Jean-Marie Le Pen joins European far-right alliance". thelocal.fr. 7 April 2018.
- ^ "Après New York, l'Allemagne : Marine Le Pen est-elle maudite dans son tour du monde des populistes ?". Atlantico.fr (in French). 27 January 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^ "The Popular Hellenic Patriotic Union (LEPEN) is a member of the European Political Party, Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF)". ΛΑ'Ι'ΚΗ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΠΑΤΡΙΩΤΙΚΗ ΕΝΩΣΗ. 5 July 2018. Retrieved 11 June 2019.
- ^ "Danskernes Parti nedlægger sig selv: Partiformanden har trukket sig – Politik". 26 June 2017. Archived from the original on 26 June 2017.
- ^ "La Dissidence Française rejoint l'APF". Dissidence Française (in French). 6 August 2019. Archived from the original on 14 September 2019. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^ "VINCENT VAUCLIN". Dissidence Française (in French). 9 March 2016. Archived from the original on 7 November 2020. Retrieved 8 September 2019.
- ^ "Greek court rules that Golden Dawn party is a criminal group". AP News. 7 October 2020. Retrieved 1 July 2025.
- ^ "Στην ευρωομάδα APF η ΕΛΑΣΥΝ. Ο Γ. Λαγός εκπρόσωπος της ομάδας στο ευρωκοινοβούλιο [+βιδεο]" (in Greek). Retrieved 24 September 2020.
- ^ "Svenskarnas parti läggs ned | Expressen". Expressen. 10 May 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Our Board". apfeurope.com. Archived from the original on 6 January 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
- ^ "France's Jean-Marie Le Pen joins European far-right alliance". thelocal.fr. 7 April 2018.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Several parties, such as the DSSS or Die Heimat, are openly neo-Nazi or, like DN, have clear ties to neo-Nazism. Several board members such as Tomáš Vandas or Stefan Jacobsson are or have past leadership in neo-Nazi parties.
External links
[edit]Alliance for Peace and Freedom
View on GrokipediaHistory
Founding and predecessor organizations
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) was established in February 2015 as a European-level political alliance to coordinate nationalist parties across member states.[1] Its founding was led by Roberto Fiore, chairman of Italy's Forza Nuova party, who has headed the organization since its inception; Nick Griffin, former leader of the British National Party, served as deputy chairman, while Luc Van Laethem of Belgium's Nation party acted as treasurer.[1] The initiative aimed to unite groups excluded from larger European Parliament groupings, enabling access to EU funding for cross-border activities estimated at up to €600,000 in its early years. Initial member parties included Forza Nuova (Italy), the National Democratic Party (NPD) of Germany, Golden Dawn of Greece, and Nation (Belgium), with the NPD, Golden Dawn, and elements from Hungary's Jobbik contributing to its formation amid dissatisfaction with existing alliances.[4] These parties sought to advance shared goals of national sovereignty and opposition to EU federalism, registering APF as a formal Europarty to facilitate joint campaigns and policy coordination. APF had no direct predecessor organization but emerged from fragmented networks of third-positionist and nationalist groups active in prior decades. Earlier efforts, such as the Euronat alliance (active 1997–2009), had attempted similar pan-European coordination among nationalist parties but dissolved due to internal divisions and limited electoral success.[5] The concurrent Alliance of European National Movements (AENM, founded 2009) provided a partial template, with overlapping memberships like the NPD initially participating in both, though APF differentiated itself by emphasizing anti-globalist and traditionalist platforms over AENM's broader focus. Fiore's background in the International Third Position think tank further linked APF to intellectual currents promoting economic nationalism and cultural preservation outside mainstream right-wing structures.[5]Expansion and key milestones (2015–2020)
Following its establishment, the Alliance for Peace and Freedom pursued formal recognition as a European political party to gain legal personality and access to EU funding streams designated for such entities. On 12 May 2016, the European Parliament announced the launch of a compliance verification procedure by its Constitutional Affairs Committee, assessing whether the APF upheld the Union's core values of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms, and the rule of law, amid concerns over affiliations with parties espousing ultranationalist positions.[2] A pivotal development occurred on 14 February 2018, when the Authority for European Political Parties and European Political Foundations registered the APF as a European political party under Regulation (EU, Euratom) No 1141/2014, enabling it to operate with EU-wide legal status and eligibility for partial public financing based on representation criteria.[6] This step marked an attempt to institutionalize the alliance's pan-European coordination among its constituent nationalist groups, though the APF held no seats in the European Parliament during the 2014–2019 term and thus received no direct funding allocations.[7] Membership growth remained constrained, with the alliance incorporating a small number of additional fringe nationalist organizations from countries such as the Netherlands and Slovakia, maintaining its focus on ultranationalist formations excluded from larger Europarty frameworks due to ideological incompatibilities.[8] By 2020, the APF's network emphasized sovereignty-oriented cooperation among roughly a dozen parties across Western and Eastern Europe, without achieving broader electoral breakthroughs or significant increases in national-level representation.[9]Recent developments (2021–present)
In June 2022, the Alliance for Peace and Freedom positioned itself as a "revolutionary party of Europe," emphasizing its commitment to nationalism amid challenges, including the imprisonment of three key leaders associated with member parties.[10] Around the same period, the Serbian Right movement, known for its ultranationalist stance, joined the APF, expanding its network into the Western Balkans.[9] The organization maintained low visibility in the 2024 European Parliament elections, with affiliated parties achieving marginal results, such as 0.02% of the vote in France under The Nationalists list. APF continued internal coordination through board meetings, including a recent gathering in Brussels where members reiterated the necessity of sovereign nationalist parties to counter globalist influences in Europe.[11] In early 2025, deputy chairman Nick Griffin publicly critiqued groups like Generation Identity as potentially manipulated operations targeting middle-class activists rather than genuine grassroots movements.[12] On March 23, 2025, the APF orchestrated coordinated protests across multiple European countries opposing mass immigration and ongoing involvement in foreign wars, framing these as threats to national sovereignty.[13] Following the death of Udo Voigt, a former German far-right politician associated with APF-aligned circles, a memorial service was held on August 16, 2025, at the HEIMAT party headquarters in Berlin.[14] In September 2025, Forza Nuova representatives and other APF delegates attended the Forum of the International Anti-Globalist League in St. Petersburg, Russia, aligning with platforms critical of Western interventionism.[15] These activities underscored the APF's persistent focus on anti-globalist networking despite its non-registration as a formal European political party.[16]Ideology and policy positions
Core principles of nationalism and sovereignty
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) defines nationalism primarily through the lens of tradition-based patriotism, positioning it as a foundational value to preserve national identities and cultural heritage across Europe.[17] This approach emphasizes the organic ties of each nation as an "extended family," where governments bear the primary duty to safeguard citizens' common wealth, heritage, and way of life against external pressures and internal corruption.[17] The APF frames such patriotism as a counter to both unchecked globalism and erosion of distinct peoples' cultures, advocating for education and leadership to instill respect for national traditions among youth.[17] Central to the APF's sovereignty principle is the advocacy for a "Europe of sovereign nations," rejecting supranational structures that subordinate independent states to centralized authority.[17] Instead, it promotes intergovernmental cooperation on a confederated model, where nations collaborate voluntarily to tackle shared challenges like economic disparities or security threats while retaining full control over domestic affairs.[17] This vision explicitly critiques the European Union's democratic deficits and corporate influences, calling for reforms to restore popular sovereignty through direct citizen involvement and elimination of elite-driven decision-making.[17] In practice, these principles manifest in the APF's statutes, which outline the party's commitment to defending national sovereignty against "supranational overreach" that threatens political and cultural independence.[18] National governments are seen as paternal protectors, prioritizing the defense of indigenous populations and heritage over market-driven exploitation or mass demographic shifts.[17] This stance aligns with the APF's broader objective of fostering a pan-European network of patriotic movements that respect diversity among nations while upholding shared Christian-European roots as a civilizational bulwark.[17]Foreign policy and views on international conflicts
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom advocates a foreign policy centered on national sovereignty and non-interventionism, promoting a confederation of independent European states to address global challenges rather than supranational structures like the European Union's common foreign and security policy.[17] It emphasizes resolving disputes through negotiation and opposes actions that foster unnecessary hostility, particularly toward Eastern Europe, framing peace as essential to preserving European civilization.[17] Regarding the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the APF attributes its origins to U.S. and NATO exploitation of Ukraine's 2014 Maidan Revolution, portraying it as a regime change orchestrated by Western interests to install a pro-NATO government and weaken Russia through proxy warfare.[19] The alliance criticizes NATO's eastward expansion and U.S. support for Ukrainian far-right elements, such as the Azov Battalion, as provocative encroachments, while viewing Russia's military response as defensive against geopolitical encirclement.[19] It condemns EU and U.S.-imposed sanctions on Russia as economically self-destructive for Europe and calls for a peace movement to end NATO influence, foster direct European-Russian ties, and prevent broader globalist agendas like the "Great Reset."[19] In Middle Eastern conflicts, APF leaders like Roberto Fiore, head of member party Forza Nuova, have expressed opposition to Western interventions, including support for Syria's government against U.S.-backed opposition forces and condemnation of Israeli military actions in Palestine as a "Zionist genocide."[20] Fiore has cited multiple visits to Syria to underscore alignment against perceived U.S. and Israeli dominance in the region, consistent with the alliance's broader anti-interventionist stance and critique of global power imbalances favoring Atlanticist alliances.[20]Positions on immigration, culture, and social issues
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom opposes mass immigration, contending that it frequently produces discrimination and inequality impacting both immigrants and indigenous populations in receiving nations. This stance aligns with the group's broader commitment to national sovereignty, viewing unchecked inflows as disruptive to social cohesion and economic stability within host societies.[17] Regarding culture, the alliance promotes the preservation and celebration of Europe's shared Christian heritage and traditional values as foundational to national identities. It positions itself against forces perceived to erode these elements, such as rootless consumerism and multiculturalism, advocating instead for education and leadership to safeguard distinct peoples and cultures across sovereign European states. The group frames cultural diversity not as a product of global mixing but as an intrinsic quality of homogeneous national traditions that merit protection from external dilution.[17][1] On social issues, the alliance emphasizes support for families, law-abiding citizens, and youth, portraying each nation as an extended family with governments duty-bound to act protectively, akin to a parental authority. It prioritizes tradition-based patriotism, resisting the undermining of conventional social structures through initiatives that assert rights for vulnerable groups against progressive impositions. While not detailing specific policies on matters like family law or reproduction, the alliance's principles underscore a defense of hierarchical, heritage-grounded social orders over egalitarian or individualized alternatives.[17]Organizational structure
Executive Board and leadership
The Executive Board of the Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) is elected at the organization's annual congress and consists of a president, vice-president, secretary-general, treasurer, and delegates from member parties across Europe. This structure ensures representation from nationalist movements in various countries while centralizing decision-making authority. The board oversees strategic direction, including policy coordination and electoral support for affiliated parties.[21][22] Roberto Fiore, leader of the Italian party Forza Nuova, has served as president and chairman since the APF's founding on 4 February 2015. Fiore, a long-standing figure in European nationalist politics, was reaffirmed in this role following the board's election on 18 May 2018. Nick Griffin, former chairman of the British National Party, holds the position of vice-president, contributing to the board's composition alongside national representatives.[21] The secretary-general role, responsible for administrative operations, has been associated with figures such as Stefan Jacobsson from Sweden in past capacities, though specific current holders reflect ongoing rotations among member delegations. Board members typically include individuals like Udo Voigt from Germany, emphasizing the APF's emphasis on sovereignty-focused parties. The board's multinational makeup underscores the alliance's pan-European yet nation-state-centric orientation, with no public disclosures of major leadership changes as of 2024.[21]Membership criteria and internal governance
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) primarily admits political parties and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) as affiliate members, extending invitations to entities both inside and outside the European Union that align with its principles of tradition-based patriotism, national sovereignty, and opposition to supranational federalism. Admission requires applicants to endorse the APF's Statement of Principles, which emphasizes cooperation among sovereign states on a confederated basis to address global challenges while preserving cultural identities, and to commit to active participation in advancing these goals.[23][17] No publicly specified numerical thresholds, such as minimum electoral performance or geographic distribution, are enforced beyond this ideological compatibility, though historical EU registration attempts referenced representation in at least one-quarter of member states via member parties.[24] Supporting membership is available to individuals demonstrating goodwill toward the APF's objectives, providing a mechanism for broader engagement without conferring formal decision-making authority.[23] This tier enables personal contributions to campaigns or events but excludes voting privileges reserved for party delegates. Internal governance centers on an annual congress as the supreme authority, where representatives from member parties gather to deliberate policy, approve initiatives, and elect the Executive Board.[21] The Board, comprising delegates nominated by affiliates and directly elected figures, oversees operational execution, strategic coordination, and inter-party liaison; a reconfiguration occurred on May 18, 2018, reflecting periodic realignments to maintain cohesion among nationalist factions.[21] Decision-making at the congress operates on a consensual basis among members adhering to the statutes' general principles, with the APF structured as a non-profit association under Belgian law to facilitate cross-border activities while prioritizing sovereignty over centralized control.[18] Specific procedural rules, such as voting majorities or expulsion mechanisms for non-compliant members, remain detailed in internal statutes but emphasize ideological fidelity over bureaucratic enforcement.[18]Member parties
Current member parties
The Alliance for Peace and Freedom (APF) comprises a small number of nationalist parties primarily from EU member states, with membership centered on organizations advocating sovereignty, anti-globalism, and traditionalist policies. As of 2025, confirmed current members include Forza Nuova from Italy, which has been a core affiliate since the APF's founding in 2015 and is led by Roberto Fiore, the alliance's longstanding chairman.[1][25]| Party | Country | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Forza Nuova | Italy | Founding member; represented by chairman Roberto Fiore on APF executive board; active in recent APF events including international forums in 2023–2025.[26][25] |
| Die Heimat (formerly NPD) | Germany | Continuation of the National Democratic Party's affiliation; maintains ties through leadership participation and shared ideological platforms as documented in APF-related audits and reports up to 2024.[27][28] |
| Nation | Belgium | Represented by Hervé Van Laethem, APF treasurer; involved in alliance governance and funding applications as of European Parliament records through 2018, with no reported dissociation.[24][22] |
| Democracia Nacional | Spain | Longstanding member per EU registration documents and ongoing far-right network analyses; participates in APF coordination meetings.[22][29] |
| Les Nationalistes | France | Affiliated via leader Yvan Benedetti; featured in APF congresses and statements, including 2023 commentary on African geopolitics aligned with alliance positions.[26][30] |

