European People's Party

European People's Party
AbbreviationEPP
PresidentManfred Weber (DE)
Secretary-GeneralDolors Montserrat (ES)
Founded8 July 1976 (1976-07-08)
HeadquartersRue du Commerce—Handelsstraat (Q69872011) 10,
1000 Brussels,
European Quarter, Belgium
Think tankWilfried Martens Centre
Student wingEuropean Democrat Students
Youth wingYouth of the
European People's Party
Women's wingWomen of the
European People's Party
Membership (26 January 2025)25
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right
European Parliament groupEuropean People's Party Group
Renew Europe (PMP)
International affiliation
Colours
  •   Dark blue
  •   Selective yellow
  •   Sky blue (customary)
European Parliament
182 / 720
European Commission
11 / 27
European Council
11 / 27
European
Lower Houses
1,538 / 6,229
European
Upper Houses
457 / 1,459
Website
epp.eu

The European People's Party (EPP) is a European political party with Christian democratic, liberal-conservative, and conservative member parties. A transnational organisation, it is composed of other political parties. Founded by primarily Christian-democratic parties in 1976, it has since broadened its membership to include liberal-conservative parties and parties with other centre-right political perspectives. On 31 May 2022, the party elected as its President Manfred Weber, who was also EPP's Spitzenkandidat in 2019.

The EPP has been the largest party in the European Parliament since 1999 and in the European Council since 2002. It is also the largest party in the current European Commission. The President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and the President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola are from the EPP. Many of the founding fathers of the European Union were also from parties that later formed the EPP.

The EPP includes major centre-right parties such as the CDU/CSU of Germany, the Nationalist Party of Malta, the People's Party (PP) of Spain, Forza Italia of Italy, ÖVP of Austria, HDZ of Croatia, PNL of Romania, Fine Gael of Ireland, National Coalition Party of Finland, New Democracy of Greece, the Moderates of Sweden, the Civic Platform of Poland, the Social Democratic Party of Portugal, the Citizens for European Development of Bulgaria and the TISZA party of Hungary.