Volt Germany

Volt Germany
Volt Deutschland
AbbreviationVolt
LeadersLuca Loreen Kraft, Alast Mojtahed Najafi
ChairpersonsVictoria Fridau, Loreen Reemen, Kai Stricker, Jan Langbehn and Frank Oldenburg (Treasurer)
Founded3 March 2018 (2018-03-03)
HeadquartersBerlin
Membership (December 2024)8,572
Ideology
Political positionCentre to centre-left
European affiliationVolt Europa
European Parliament groupGreens/EFA (since 2019)
Colours  Purple
Bundestag
0 / 630
European Parliament
3 / 96
Website
voltdeutschland.org

Volt Germany (German: Volt Deutschland, mostly known by the abbreviated name Volt) is a social-liberal pro-European, eurofederalist political party in Germany. It is the German branch of Volt Europa, a political movement that operates on a European level.

Italian Andrea Venzon, French Colombe Cahen-Salvador and German Damian Boeselager founded Volt Europa in 2017 as a counterpart to the rising nationalism and right-wing populism in Europe.

The party has been classified as socially liberal and pro-European. The key topics are: reform of the European Union, tackling the climate crisis, a fair and sustainable economy, and digitalization. Volt claims to have an evidence-based, scientific approach and is highly interested in introducing best practices.

As there is no legal possibility to found a pan-European party, after the founding of the parent organisation Volt Europa A.I.S.B.L., national parties had to be founded to be able to participate in elections. On 3 March 2018, Volt Germany was founded as a party in Hamburg. Volt Germany's first elections were the 2019 European elections and they were able to win one mandate, which Damian Boeselager holds in the European Parliament. At the municipal level, Volt Germany is part of the city governments of Munich, Cologne, Frankfurt am Main, Münster and Wiesbaden among others.

The party's name is derived from the international electrical unit Volt in order to have a uniform name that is understandable throughout Europe, symbolizing "new energy" for Europe.