Pro-Euro Conservative Party

Pro-Euro Conservative Party
Founded10 March 1999
Dissolved10 December 2001
Split fromConservative Party
Merged intoLiberal Democrats
IdeologyOne-nation conservatism
Liberal conservatism
Pro-Europeanism
Political positionCentre-right
ColoursBlue, Yellow

The Pro-Euro Conservative Party was a minor, Pro-European British political party, announced by John Stevens and Brendan Donnelly in February 1999, formed to contest the 1999 European Parliament election. The founders were Members of the European Parliament who had resigned from the UK Conservative Party in protest at its anti-euro stance. Their reported aim was to replace Eurosceptic William Hague as Conservative leader with Europhile Kenneth Clarke. Stevens later said that they had intended to push Ken Clarke, Michael Heseltine, Chris Patten and other pro-Europeans in the Conservative Party into "an SDP-style breakaway, in combination with the Liberal Democrats". The Pro-Euro Conservative Party disbanded in 2001.