Economy & Policy

EU Parliament votes to review far-right group over ‘Send Them Back’ chant while Le Pen’s guilty verdict upheld

The EU Parliament voted almost two-to-one to scrutinise the hard-right Europe of Sovereign Nations group for its use of discriminatory language, possibly leading to a loss of EU funds. In a bad day for the far-right, Marine Le Pen lost her appeal in Paris.

  • Gaia Neiman
  • July 7, 2026
  • 0 Comments

The European Parliament massively voted to initiate a review against the far-right Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN) political group on Tuesday (7 July), while separately France’s nationalist leader Marine Le Pen was found guilty misappropriation of EU funds.

During the plenary in Strasbourg, MEPs passed the request to assess ESN’s compliance with core European values by 414 votes to 224 with 18 abstentions, in light of discriminatory statements made against minorities.

The ESN group, whose MEPs include members of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), began chanting “send them back” following last month’s vote on the deportation regulation – a move that prompted the Greens/EFA Group to table a motion accusing it of violating European values.

The motion required 180 signatures to proceed, and over 200 MEPs from left-leaning groups in the EU parliament signed. A simple majority is needed for the vote to pass. 

“We only had one and a half weeks to collect signatures, we are facing a very broad majority,” German co-president of the Greens Terry Reintke told reporters on Tuesday. 

Signatures spanned MEPs from the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) all the way to the Left, signalling widespread support for the democratic measure. 

The vote is intended to decide whether the ESN can be reviewed by the independent Authority for European Political Parties for compliance with democratic values — which could potentially strip the party of its funding — which German Greens/EFA MEP Daniel Freund set at around €2m for 2026. 

“Those who incite hatred and violate European core values should not be rewarded with millions from taxpayers’ money,” Freund told EUobserver. “This vote is about accountability.”

Nine representatives of ESN member parties are accused of making racist, homophobic, and antisemitic public statements on 26 cumulative occasions. 

This post was originally published on this site.