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A. Draft resolution
(open)
Report | Doc. 16248 | 11 September 2025
Political parties and democracy
Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy
A. Draft resolution 
(open)1. Democracy in Europe is in danger.
Across the continent, democratic backsliding continues, marked by the
corrosion of institutional checks and balances, restrictions on
media freedom, disinformation, and foreign interference. It is manifested
in declining political participation, weakening public trust, and
rising polarisation, which together erode the resilience of democratic
systems. Political parties stand at the centre of this crisis. Strong,
responsive, and inclusive parties are not only vital for healthy
political representation, but indispensable for confronting these
threats and safeguarding democracy.
2. The Parliamentary Assembly believes that political parties
are the cornerstone of representative democracy. They are the key
element of electoral competition, articulate and aggregate citizens’
preferences, channel demands into political institutions, facilitate
democratic government formation, and enable peaceful alternation
of power. Without political parties, pluralism cannot be meaningfully
represented, and parliaments cannot function effectively.
3. The Assembly considers that political parties, when they respect
democratic norms, foster open competition and act transparently,
are not only guarantors of representation but also the most effective
agents of democratic renewal in Europe.
4. Political parties play a fundamental role beyond electoral
processes. They serve as permanent institutions of democratic education,
socialisation, and negotiation. By recruiting political leaders,
fostering civic skills, and transmitting democratic values across
generations, they build and sustain the trust and legitimacy on
which resilient democracies depend. They are uniquely positioned
to provide structured fora for dialogue and deliberation, to mediate
between diverse social groups, and to transform competing interests
into a coherent programme for government.
5. The Assembly observes, however, that political parties in
many Council of Europe member States face profound challenges. Long-term
decline in membership and active participation, combined with heightened electoral
volatility, indicate a weakening of traditional forms of political
attachment. Public opinion surveys consistently show that political
parties are among the least trusted institutions, with many citizens
associating them with elitism, self-interest, or corruption.
6. The erosion of trust has serious consequences. It fuels political
apathy, anti-party sentiment, and the rise of anti-establishment
movements. Polarisation and political gridlock often stem from parties’
inability or unwillingness to build consensus. When parties fail
to act as trusted bridges within society, or are perceived as unresponsive
to the concerns and needs of citizens, democracy risks becoming
dysfunctional.
7. These challenges are unfolding within the broader context
of democratic backsliding across Europe, geopolitical pressures,
and persistent attempts at foreign interference aimed at destabilising
democracies. At a time when public trust in institutions is fragile,
political parties bear a particular responsibility for safeguarding democratic
cohesion and stability. Their most basic commitment must be to uphold
the core principles of democracy including free and fair elections,
respect for pluralism, and the protection of fundamental freedoms.
8. The Assembly, in the fulfilment of its political mandate,
has consistently paid close attention to the state of democracy
and the institutions that sustain it. It welcomes the call of the
Secretary General of the Council of Europe for a New Democratic
Pact for Europe, and underlines that political parties are an essential
motor for democratic renewal.
9. The Council of Europe, particularly through the European Commission
for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission), has provided extensive
guidance on the regulation and functioning of political parties. Through
its “Code of Good Practice in the field of Political Parties” and
numerous Opinions, the Venice Commission has underlined foundational
principles of transparency, fairness, pluralism, and internal democracy.
These standards affirm that political parties must be able to operate
freely and independently, while at the same time remaining accountable
and respectful of democratic norms.
10. The Assembly considers that these principles remain indispensable
for restoring citizens’ trust in political parties across Europe,
and it is within this framework that it seeks to encourage further
modernisation, innovation, and citizen engagement in party life.
11. By enhancing inclusive membership, participatory decision
making, and ethical political communication, political parties can
reconnect citizens with political institutions and restore confidence
in representative democracy. Far from being obsolete, parties can
be the central actors in addressing democratic backsliding, rebuilding
trust and fostering a democratic culture adapted to contemporary
challenges.
12. In light of these considerations, the Assembly underlines
that trust must be a guiding principle of all party reform, and
calls on political parties across Council of Europe member States
to actively demonstrate their integrity, accountability, and responsiveness
to citizens’ expectations in order to reinforce their role as pillars of
both resilient democracies and democratic security in Europe.
13. In order to respond to citizens’ expectations, the Assembly
calls on political parties to reconnect with citizens by placing
social justice and equality at the core of their programmes, ensuring
that policies deliver measurable improvements in living standards,
access to quality health care, education, housing and decent work.
14. With regard to strengthening the representational link to
citizens, the Assembly encourages political parties to widen and
deepen opportunities for political participation by:
14.1. developing accessible and flexible
pathways for engagement;
14.2. adopting transparent and participatory mechanisms for
leadership and candidate selection;
14.3. strengthening intermediary structures, including local
branches, affiliated organisations, unions, and civil society platforms,
to ensure citizens’ perspectives can inform and shape party direction;
14.4. enhancing and sustaining internal forums for deliberation
to foster dialogue, reflection, and consensus building among members
and supporters.
15. To combat issues of under-representation, the Assembly urges
political parties to adopt concrete strategies for inclusion by:
15.1. integrating gender equality,
youth participation and diversity into party statutes, vision and strategic
plans;
15.2. establishing measurable objectives, targets, and accountability
mechanisms to enhance progress on gender balance, youth involvement,
and representation of minorities and disadvantaged groups;
15.3. exploring the application of inclusive procedures for
candidate selection and leadership recruitment, such as parity measures,
transparent quotas, or other measures designed to widen participation;
15.4. ensuring diversity in electoral lists and leadership positions
through fair and transparent selection processes.
16. The Assembly further invites political parties to promote
diversity and inclusion across their internal functioning by:
16.1. developing support and capacity-building
initiatives for under-represented groups;
16.2. endorsing the revised Charter of European political parties
for a non-racist and inclusive society;
16.3. establishing mechanisms to prevent and sanction hate speech,
incitement to hatred and discrimination by their members.
17. With regard to safeguarding integrity, the Assembly calls
on Council of Europe member States to:
17.1. fully implement recommendations by the Group of States
against Corruption (GRECO) on the funding of political parties and
electoral campaigns;
17.2. review and enhance national frameworks governing financial
contributions to political parties, advertising and electoral campaigns
to mitigate the risk of inappropriate or illicit foreign financial interference;
17.3. ensure effective monitoring and introduce clear sanctions
against illicit foreign funding.
18. The Assembly calls on political parties to strengthen internal
accountability by:
18.1. adopting
codes of conduct and conflict-of-interest rules for party officials;
18.2. establishing transparent disciplinary procedures to address
misconduct;
18.3. introducing clear rules on lobbying and relations with
donors to safeguard parties from undue influence.
19. In highlighting the role of political parties in sustaining
democratic culture, the Assembly:
19.1. calls
on political parties to re-centre their role as platforms for dialogue
across social divides, promoting compromise and cohesion;
19.2. encourages political parties to provide spaces for democratic
education, debate and civic engagement;
19.3. in line with its Resolution 2552 (2024) “Strengthening democracy through participatory and deliberative
processes”, calls on political parties to foster more robust civic
engagement with deliberative technologies and participatory processes.
20. The Assembly recommends that political parties harness digital
tools and innovations responsibly by:
20.1. using online consultations, deliberative forums, and transparent
digital primaries to widen citizen participation;
20.2. committing to ethical online campaigning, avoiding manipulative
micro-targeting, and ensuring disclosure of digital advertising;
20.3. supporting digital literacy initiatives to help citizens
navigate the information environment.
21. As regards its own work, the Assembly, including through its
General Rapporteur on democracy, resolves to:
21.1. continue actions to strengthen democracy, counter its
backsliding and promote innovative practices to enhance citizens’
trust in democratic institutions and their participation in political
decision making;
21.2. continue to review, in co-operation with the Venice Commission,
the Code of Good Practice in the field of Political Parties and
the issues raised in it, with a view to developing it further if
required.
B. Explanatory memorandum by Ms Ingjerd Schie Schou, rapporteur
(open)1. Introduction
1. Across Europe, political parties
face mounting challenges in fulfilling their democratic functions. Membership
has declined, anti-party sentiment is widespread, and many citizens
feel that parties have failed to provide convincing solutions to
pressing social and economic problems. As a result, support for representative
democracy has decreased, and criticisms about its functioning have
accelerated. 

2. This weakened anchoring role of political parties as vehicles
of democratic participation and representation has been reflected
in lower voter turnout across Europe, electoral volatility, low
public trust in parties, and growing youth disillusionment. An engagement
gap has emerged with the withdrawal by ordinary citizens from conventional
political involvement, creating an atmosphere conducive to anti-establishment mobilisation
and forces that seek to weaken democratic institutions.
3. Despite these difficulties, political parties remain fundamental
to the functioning of democracy. They continue to provide the organisational
framework for political debate, are the main vector for electoral competition,
and offer citizens a means of seeing preferences and interests enacted
by government.
At their best, parties help shape public opinion,
provide a space for the negotiation of policy differences, and channel the
aspirations of citizens into collective action. In this sense, political
parties remain the central institution to link citizens to the State
and ensuring the legitimacy of democratic governance.

4. This erosion of political parties’ representative function
has taken place against the broader trend of democratic backsliding
both in Europe and globally, manifested in the weakening of judicial
independence, constraints on media freedom, challenges to institutional
checks and balances, growing electoral irregularities, and the rise
of polarising political rhetoric that undermines social cohesion.
Such warning signs should serve as a reminder that democracy is
not guaranteed, and that in some member States of the Council of
Europe, it is visibly in danger. These challenges have been exacerbated
by global themes of conflict, the disruptive impact of new technologies,
widespread socio-economic inequalities, and the transnational spread
of disinformation.
5. The Council of Europe has responded to these developments
through an array of instruments and initiatives. These include work
on strengthening electoral processes, promoting transparency in
political financing, developing and piloting participatory tools
for local governance, as well as supporting inclusive processes
and civil society.
6. However, the scale of the threat to democratic values has
meant further action remains necessary. The Secretary General of
the Council of Europe has called for the revitalisation of democracies,
and a New Democratic Pact for Europe to address the erosion of the
values that the Council of Europe promotes and protects. 

7. Although political parties have a decisive influence on the
shape of a democracy and are a primary channel through which citizens’
preferences are translated into legislative and governmental action, comparatively
little attention has been placed on the potential role and contribution
of political parties themselves in addressing democratic backsliding
and in enhancing democratic
participation.

8. This report builds on the Assembly’s Resolution 2552 (2024) “Strengthening democracy through participatory and deliberative
processes”, Resolution
2615 (2025) “Promoting inclusive participation in parliamentary
life: gender equality, accessibility and inclusive policies”, and Resolution 2610 (2025) “Social mobilisation, social unrest and police reaction
in Council of Europe member States: is there a need for a new social
contract?” by seeking to explore how strong and robust political
parties can act as bulwarks against democratic backsliding, safeguard
institutional pluralism, and adapt to contemporary challenges while remaining
open and responsive to citizens.
2. Scope of the report
9. The report draws on examples
from across Council of Europe member States with the primary objective of
identifying best practices that can strengthen democratic governance.
On this basis it develops practical recommendations for modernisation
and improved citizen engagement while also providing a foundation
for steps to enhance party responsiveness, accountability, and public
trust.
10. To do so, the report examines the internal structures, functions,
and broader societal roles of political parties to assess their
effectiveness in supporting democratic governance. The evaluation
is structured around key themes, focusing on representation, responsiveness,
integration, integrity, and digital transformation and communication.
11. In preparing the report, the Committee on Political Affairs
and Democracy is grateful for the participation of Professor Thomas
Poguntke at a hearing held in 2025, and his valuable insights into
the evolving role of political parties in contemporary democracies,
the structural challenges they face, and the opportunities for renewal
through institutional reform and citizen engagement.
12. The Council of Europe has long provided guidance on the legal
and institutional frameworks within which political parties operate,
notably through the work of the European Commission for Democracy
through Law (Venice Commission). The guidance and Opinions of the
Venice Commission have been instrumental in setting normative standards
to guarantee pluralism, transparency, and fairness that ensure that
political parties can exist and function free from undue State interference.
The emphasis of these standards has been on compliance with the
rule of law and the protection of the rights of association and
political participation.
13. To compliment these standards, the Venice Commission produced
upon the request of the Assembly a “Code of Good Practice in the
field of Political Parties” in 2008.
This
report takes the Council of Europe acquis as
a point of departure. It focuses on how political parties, as central
institutions of democratic life, can themselves contribute to democratic
renewal in Europe.

14. As much as political parties can be sites of democratic renewal,
they can also be vectors for democratic backsliding. The Venice
Commission notes that as major actors in a democratic society, political
parties enjoy the benefits of the guarantees of the rule of law,
democracy and human rights by the State and accordingly, must respect
and promote these same principles.
The
recommendations of this report are intended to reinforce these shared
commitments.

3. The role and functions of political parties
15. A political party is a “free
association of individuals, one of the aims of which is to express
the political will of the people by seeking to participate in and
influence the governing of the public life of a country, inter alia, through the presentation
of candidates in elections”. 

16. Historically, the development of political parties has gone
hand in hand with the evolution of democracy in Europe. Emerging
first as small parliamentary factions, parties gradually expanded
into mass membership organisations and later professionalised electoral
machines.
In
each stage, they adapted to wider social changes, serving as vehicles
of political participation, channels of mobilisation, and shapers
of public debate. Their institutionalisation represents one of the
key milestones of modern representative democracy.

17. Parties are a collective platform for the expression of individual’s
fundamental rights to association and expression and the most widely
utilised means for political participation and exercise of related
rights. They are foundational to a pluralist political society and
the European Court of Human Rights has underlined in its case law
the primordial role played in a democratic regime by political parties. 

18. The proper functioning of representative democracy ensures
that political parties can operate in a free and safe environment,
guarantees parliamentary immunity, and provides conditions whereby
politicians are able to express themselves and exercise their political
mandates.
19. According to the Venice Commission, political parties contribute
to the performance of at least three vital functions in a democracy.
First, facilitating the co-operation
and co-ordination of individuals in the exercise of their fundamental
rights of association and expression. Second, furthering co-operation
and co-ordination among the holders of public office, both within
parliaments and across levels and institutions of government, thereby
facilitating the coherence and effective making and implementation
of policy. Third, providing a means to connect citizens to officeholders
through the formulation of political programmes between which voters
can choose, the nomination and support of candidates in elections,
and by taking collective responsibility for government in a way
that would be impossible for officeholders individually. 


20. These functions can be understood as parties’ representative
and integrative roles, each of which emphasises their essential
task of linking citizens to democratic institutions.
In
their representative role, they translate societal demands into
concrete policies and governing agendas, adapting programmes and
decisions to reflect public priorities and evolving needs. They
articulate and aggregate social interests, acting on behalf of communities
and constituencies in the political process. The integrative functions
socialise citizens into political life, creating spaces for engagement
and education that equip people to participate in public affairs, including
via electoral competition, candidate selection, and policy platforms.
In fulfilling these roles, parties act as a “transmission belt”
between society and the State,
and
a key forum for democratic deliberation.


21. The Assembly has recognised that, in fulfilling these roles,
political parties serve as crucial actors in promoting social inclusion
and democratic culture. They are well placed to combat racism, intolerance,
and hate speech, while fostering diversity and inclusion within
European societies. Through their communication and activities,
parties shape political discourse and can promote the political
representation of all social groups. Their internal autonomy, balanced
with democratic accountability, positions them uniquely as gatekeepers
of elected bodies and promoters of political pluralism. 

22. The effectiveness with which parties carry out these functions
depends on their capacity to adapt to changing social, technological,
and political conditions. While their foundational role remains
constant, the environment in which they operate has evolved dramatically,
bringing new opportunities and challenges for their functioning
in contemporary democracies. 

4. Challenges
23. Parties face mounting challenges
in fulfilling their essential functions. Without effective and responsive political
parties, democracy risks gridlock, polarisation, apathy, distrust,
and extremism. Without genuine political pluralism, the effectiveness
and sustainability of democracy are eroded. 

24. As observed across multiple Council of Europe member States,
declining party membership, trust and participation are long-term
societal trends. In all established European democracies, the average
number of members of political parties has almost halved since 1980.
A global survey
of public attitudes towards democracy found in 2021 that political
parties were the least trusted institutions in the democratic world,
with only 27% overall trust, while more than four in ten people
do not feel represented by any political party.
These findings have
been replicated across Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) member countries, where in 2024 only 24% of populations
surveyed reported high or moderately high trust in political parties.
This steady erosion of confidence
threatens the integrative role of parties in connecting citizens
to democratic life.



25. The drivers of low trust levels include individuals’ perception
of whether they have a meaningful voice in political decision making.
OECD research showed that people who feel they have a say in what
government does are, on average, more than three times as likely
to express trust compared to those who feel excluded. This trend
related to representative functions, when applied to political parties,
underlines that efforts to promote political inclusivity and engagement
can help raise trust levels. 

26. The decline of membership further exacerbates these trends
by reshaping the relationship between parties and citizens. It undermines
the ability of parties to renew their leadership, integrate young
people into political life, and sustain grassroot links to communities
through volunteering, policy debates and local activism. The consequent
reductions to parties’ local presence and youth wings may reduce
opportunities for citizens to acquire democratic skills and participate
in shaping policy. 

27. Further, with fewer members providing financial and organisational
support, many parties have become more dependent on private donations
or State subsidies. Where reliance on private funding is significant, concerns
arise over equity and independence, with major donors often unrepresentative
of the broader population, and corporations, wealthy individuals,
and organised interest groups exercising disproportionate influence.
In certain cases, the role
of foreign donations or State-affiliated actors has raised additional questions
about the integrity of political processes.
Public
opinion surveys consistently show that perceptions of undue donor
influence are among the strongest drivers of distrust in political
parties.


28. Conversely, systems where parties are primarily funded through
public resources avoid some of these distortions but are not without
challenges. Reliance on State funding can risk widening the perceived
distance between parties and citizens, particularly if subsidies
appear to shield parties from the need to engage with grassroots
supporters or adapt to societal change.
In such contexts,
parties may be viewed less as civic organisations rooted in society
and more as State-centred bureaucracies, undermining their representative legitimacy.
Balancing the need for financial sustainability with safeguards
for transparency, accountability, and citizen participation is therefore
essential to maintaining parties’ representative legitimacy and
democratic credibility.

29. The erosion of trust contributes to continued trends of political
disengagement, with a key indicator for this being voter turnouts
at elections. The declining public confidence in political processes
was highlighted by the Council of Europe in 2023, which showed that
by the end of 2020, 13 member States elected their parliament with
a turnout lower than 50%.
This forms part of a global
trend of voter turnout decline that has been recorded from the beginning
of the 1990s, with a near 10% fall in participation in elections
in European Union member States between 1991 and 2022. 


30. Rising disillusionment with democracy has been prominent among
young people surveyed across Europe. Polls have indicated that while
individual rights and freedoms remain valued, a growing share of younger
generations have expressed frustration with the perceived inefficiency,
polarisation, and short-termism of electoral politics. Some favour
alternative forms of governance, such as technocracy or rule by experts,
while significant minorities have expressed openness to non-democratic
arrangements if these are believed to deliver stability or address
urgent issues. 

31. These challenges are compounded by the transformation of political
communication and organisation. The role of political parties as
intermediaries between citizens and officeholders has evolved significantly
from the days of mass-party models in part due to the professionalisation
of party structures, changes in campaign strategies, and the rise
of digital media. Traditional mechanisms of sustained political
engagement, such as local party branches and grassroots mobilisation,
have been partially supplanted by targeted online outreach and data-driven
campaigning.
32. While these developments have allowed parties to reach broader
audiences, they have also raised concerns about the centralisation
of decision making, reduced direct citizen participation for consensus-driven policy
formulation, and the growing influence of external actors, including
interest groups and corporate donors.
33. At the same time, comparative research has shown that polarisation
has increased as a result of changes to media habits, targeted online
campaigning, and algorithm-driven content that rewards divisive messaging.
Polarisation can weaken
the capacity of parties to act as mediators between different societal interests,
reducing the scope for compromise in parliamentary work.

34. The increasingly fragmented information ecosystem has proven
vulnerable to disinformation campaigns and the influence of foreign
actors. Hostile and malicious interference can include co-ordinated
inauthentic behaviour on social media, the amplification of polarising
narratives, or covert financial and organisational support. It aims
to distort electoral competition and undermine public confidence
in democratic institutions. Political parties therefore face a dual
challenge of adapting their communication strategies to the realities
of the digital age, while safeguarding democratic debate against
manipulation and external influence.
35. These developments underline the need to re-examine how political
parties operate in contemporary conditions. The Reykjavik Principles
for Democracy, endorsed by the Heads of State and Government of
the Council of Europe in 2023, underscore that political pluralism
and citizen participation remain essential to resilient democracies.
Political parties can be active agents of this democratic renewal.
5. Responses
36. The challenges outlined above
underline the need for political parties to adapt in ways that preserve
and enhance their democratic functions. Parties across Council of
Europe member States have introduced a range of innovations that
both reconnect them with citizens and strengthen trust in the political
system as a whole.
5.1. Strengthening representation
37. Restoring public trust and
ensuring effective democratic functioning can be enhanced via the representational
link to citizens. This comprises widening membership, reforms to
internal democracy, and improved inclusivity as central strategies
to reconnect parties with their constituencies, and ensure that leadership
and policy platforms reflect voters and their preferences.
38. Underpinning all measures to enhance representation is the
principle of political pluralism. Ensuring that citizens can choose
from a wide range of competing visions, policies, and leadership
is crucial to the health of democratic systems. The presence of
political parties from across the political spectrum can encourage
debate, foster compromise, and strengthen the legitimacy of democratic
institutions by making them more representative of society’s full
diversity.
5.1.1. Membership
39. Parties have sought to reimagine
membership in a range of ways to redefine and regain a role as transmission
belts between the State and society.
Key elements for strengthening
this role include seeking ways to widen the membership, and finding
ways to address issues caused by under-representation among groups
such as women and youth.

40. One approach is to encourage participation via multilevel
membership to decrease barriers to party involvement.
41. Multilevel membership has become an increasingly adopted innovation
in contemporary party organisation. It offers differentiated pathways
for engagement to respond to citizen’s preferences and capacity for
involvement. In many cases, this involves distinguishing between
full members who pay a fee and enjoy formal voting rights within
the party’s internal structures, and supporters or sympathisers
who may contribute ideas, attend events, or participate in campaign
activities without assuming the full obligations of membership. This
approach allows parties to widen their social base, reduce barriers
to party involvement, and reach citizens who may be reluctant to
commit to traditional membership but still wish to be politically
active.
42. Research in the last decade showed that only 14 of 109 parties
studied offered multilevel membership options.
Examples of this multilevel
membership are found across Europe, such as with the Liberal Democrats
in the United Kingdom, the Partido Popular in Spain, and the Livre
party in Portugal.
While the long-term effects
on participation and trust remain mixed, they illustrate how organisational
innovation can help reconnect parties with citizens who may otherwise
remain outside traditional structures.


43. Political parties have also sought to widen access to membership
by offering differentiated membership fees based on age, income
or employment status. In Norway, most parties, including the Conservative
Party, have discounted membership rates for certain groups.
44. As well as efforts to raise membership, political parties
have taken measures to try and improve how representative the membership
is of society. Where available, country-level data has shown that
party membership remains older and male,
even though comprehensive,
disaggregated statistics on political party membership across Europe
remain scarce.

45. Lower levels of female membership in political parties pose
challenges not only for equality, but also for the quality and legitimacy
of democratic governance, with the Assembly acknowledging that the
equal participation of women and men in political life is a precondition
for genuinely pluralist and representative democracy.
46. Fostering participation at the membership stage is a vital
component to candidate and leadership selection reforms, helping
to build a more inclusive and representative base. Women’s organisations
within parties such as within the German SPD (Social Democratic
Party), the Frauen Union of the CDU (Christian Democrat Union),
or women’s sections of Austria’s ÖVP (People's Party) and SPÖ (Socialist
Party) actively engage in outreach and campaigns to encourage women
to join. In the United Kingdom, initiatives such as the Labour Party’s
Women’s Network and the Conservative Women’s Organisation combine
recruitment with mentoring to expand the pool of active female members.
In my party, the Norwegian Conservative Party, our women’s organisation
has contributed significantly to the high level of women’s participation
in the party and political life in Norway.
47. Organisations such as the Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE/ODIHR) have provided tools to allow political parties
to conduct their own gender audits. Audits can improve understanding
of current imbalances, help identify barriers to participation,
and create an evidence base for reforms that can make parties more
inclusive and representative.
48. Beyond gender, age is another critical fault line in political
party membership. Data from several European countries suggest that
the typical member is disproportionately older, with younger citizens
far less represented despite often being engaged in informal political
activity. This imbalance risks narrowing the horizons of party debate
and limiting intergenerational renewal.
49. Youth organisations affiliated with parties play an important
role in countering this tendency. While many political parties have
some form of youth organisation, previous research has shown that
one in four parties do not have an active youth branch. 

50. By offering leadership opportunities, political education,
and pathways into decision-making, youth organisations can provide
young people with a voice inside party structures. In Germany, the
Jusos of the SPD and the Junge Union of the CDU/CSU (Christian Democrat
Union/Christian Social Union) actively shape debates on climate,
social justice, and digitalisation, ensuring that youth concerns
influence party platforms. In Austria, the Junge ÖVP and the Socialist
Youth (SJÖ) have long functioned as schools of political leadership, preparing
future generations of national and local representatives. In the
Nordic countries, youth wings are not only training grounds but
are formally integrated into parties’ policy-making processes, allowing
young members to propose and vote on programme priorities. All the
major political parties in Norway have youth wings that are integrated
in the parties. From my party’s experience, the Norwegian Young
Conservatives contribute greatly to the political discourse and
have several candidates standing for election in both local government
and parliamentary elections.
51. Representation also requires attention to other forms of exclusion
that can affect party membership and participation, including socio-economic
barriers, ethnic and linguistic diversity, and the participation
of citizens with a migrant background.
52. Parties that succeed in engaging underrepresented groups broaden
not only their electoral base but also the legitimacy of democratic
institutions. Initiatives such as targeted outreach campaigns, partnerships
with civil society organisations, and mechanisms to lower material
barriers to membership fees or participation can help create a more
socially diverse party base. Efforts of this kind contribute to
a pluralist and inclusive political culture, ensuring that parties
more accurately reflect the societies they aspire to govern.
5.1.2. Internal democracy
53. Strengthening representation
also requires reforms to internal party democracy. The Assembly
has stated that participatory and deliberative democracy processes
can contribute to revitalising and strengthening democracy by increasing
citizen’s capacity to directly influence decisions that affect their
lives.
Political parties
are uniquely positioned to channel these processes into their functioning.

54. Efforts to introduce open and participatory mechanisms to
give members influence over leadership choices, candidate selection
and policy formulation can strengthen trust, improve legitimacy,
and create a stronger link between citizens and political institutions.
Having a genuine say in the direction of the party also strengthens
incentives for joining a party, and remaining active in party life.
55. Among the mechanisms to deepen internal democracy are the
use of open primaries for party leaders and presidential candidates.
Examples from Italy and France have seen experimentation with offering
rights to participants from outside the formal membership, whereas
in the United Kingdom there have been examples of allowing registered
supporters without full membership status to vote in leadership
contests. 

56. At the same time, for effective party renewal, it has been
argued that intra-party democracy must go beyond plebiscitary devices
such as leadership primaries or membership ballots as these risk
bypassing intermediary structures. While these tools offer participation,
they can concentrate power in the leadership by reducing choice
to yes/no endorsement. 

57. Ideas such as participatory democracy within parties was popularised
by movements favouring collective decision making and bottom-up
structures, such as the Green and Alternative parties in the 1980s,
and in the last decade
emergent political formations such as the German Pirates Party,
and the Italian Five Star Movement used mass participation internet-based
policy formulation as a central feature of their political credentials. 


58. Proposals to improve intra-party democratisation have included
introducing models that give members and local branches greater
influence over party direction. Members and activists would shape
competing visions, which the leadership is then tasked with representing
and negotiating. In this model, the “middle layer” of parties (branch
officials, activists, and affiliated organisations) serves as the
link between the rank and file and the leadership, transforming
diffuse preferences into policy. 

59. Examples of this include in Germany, the SPD’s Landesverbände
(regional organisations) which retain significant influence over
leadership choices and policy direction, acting as intermediaries
between the base and the national leadership. In the UK, Labour’s
historic links with trade unions illustrate how organised interests
can serve as a structured channel between members and leaders. Each
model demonstrates how strengthening intermediary structures can
seek to anchor parties more firmly in society, while keeping leaders accountable.
60. These approaches can also comprise recognising the role of
civil society organisations as partners in shaping party debate.
With the weakening of historic ties to unions religious organisations,
and civic associations, rebuilding transparent and accountable links
with civil society can help revitalise parties’ intermediary functions,
ensuring that voices from diverse communities, professions and movements
are included in deliberation.
61. Further approaches have seen the implementation of deliberative
processes within parties to widen participation and that aimed to
improve the quality of the debate and the decision making by fostering
dialogue, reflections and consensus building among members. Examples
include the use by the Danish party Alternativet of “political laboratories”
where members and citizens jointly deliberated on policy ideas before
their integration into the party’s programme. In Belgium, Les Engagés
undertook two years of deliberative meetings, assemblies, and online
workshops to conclude a new party manifesto. 

62. Improved intra-party democracy allows diverse social groups
to see their views debated and mediated within the party, and it
produces real alternatives between which citizens can choose. By
strengthening these functions, parties not only renew their own
vitality but also reinforce pluralism in the wider democratic system.
5.1.3. Inclusivity
63. In strengthening representativeness,
a wide membership and robust forums for deliberation both depend on
and are enhanced by inclusivity. The Assembly has stressed the importance
of ensuring gender equality, accessibility and inclusive policies
within political life to foster well-functioning democracies.
64. Following the trends of membership, there is under-representation
of women, young people, minorities and socio-economically disadvantaged
groups of people in leadership and decision making roles in political parties,
with consequential impact on their overall under-representation
in parliament.
65. Political parties therefore have a significant role in improving
inclusivity and ensuring balanced representation within democratic
institutions. At present, limited information is available about
political parties’ diversity and inclusion strategies. Systematic
publication of such strategies could improve transparency, allow monitoring
of progress, and signal to citizens a genuine commitment to addressing
barriers to participation.
66. Internal democracy in political parties can have a decisive
impact on inclusivity, shaping who has access to power and decision
making. Practical measures include the adoption of gender-responsive
rules for candidate selection, transparent quotas for leadership
positions, and procedures to ensure meaningful participation of
under-represented groups. 

67. As noted by the Venice Commission, various OSCE and Council
of Europe documents have called upon States to counteract the continued
under-representation of women in decision-making structures by supporting programmes
aimed at enhancing gender balance in relevant bodies and enabling
or adopting positive action or special measures for this purpose.
Voluntary party quotas have
been widely adopted in the Nordic States since the 1980s, which
have led to consistently high levels of women’s representation in
parliaments.

68. Youth quotas also provide examples of inclusive innovation.
Examples of political party youth quotas have been reported in Bosnia
and Herzegovina, Croatia, Cyprus, Germany and Sweden. These quotas
commit the parties in question to putting a certain number of youth
candidates on their party lists or making them compete in constituencies.
Innovations such as “newcomer
quotas” to limit incumbency advantages have also been trialled by
parties in Germany to encourage young people’s participation. 


69. These measures, while varying in form, demonstrate how structural
reforms can ensure that parties more fully reflect the societies
they seek to represent.
5.2. Safeguarding integrity and independence
70. The resilience of democratic
systems depends on the integrity and independence of political parties.
As this report has highlighted, declining trust levels in political
parties across Europe are often driven by concerns over corruption,
donor influence, and external manipulation. Where parties are perceived
to be captured by private interests or susceptible to foreign interference,
citizen’s confidence in the overall democratic system is eroded.
71. Over-reliance on large-scale private donations raises concerns
of undue influence and carries risks of skewing policy agendas towards
narrow interests. Transparency International and the Council of
Europe’s Group of States against Corruption (GRECO) have highlighted
recurring gaps in the disclosure of donations, reporting of campaign
expenditures, and the monitoring of links between money and political
decision making. Addressing these gaps is central to strengthening
trust in politics.
72. While there are major differences across political financing
rules across member States, the Venice Commission has underscored
that frameworks for party financing must ensure transparency and accountability,
with effective enforcement by State authorities, as prerequisites
to prevent corruption and undue influence.
Several countries have introduced strong
practices. France, for example, bans corporate and trade union donations
altogether,
while Germany requires the disclosure
of all donations above €10 000, with immediate reporting for sums
exceeding €35 000.
In Sweden, Finland
and Norway, robust public subsidies combined with detailed transparency
obligations seek to reduce the risks of capture by private wealth.
In Norway, for instance, all donations
are published on a government-managed website, though debate continues
as to whether the system is sufficiently transparent.




73. The OECD Trust Survey showed that many citizens held concerns
about the integrity of decision making, believing that private interests
exert an oversized influence on decisions. The perception that public
decisions over policies may be repeatedly diverted from the public
interest towards special interests continues to be a large driver
for distrust and weakened democratic participation. 

74. Citizen trust levels have been further hampered by concerns
about foreign interference and the receipt of funds from foreign
actors in national democratic institutions. As addressed by the
Assembly in Resolution 2593
(2025) “Foreign Interference: a threat to democratic security
in Europe”, the use of covert donations and foreign-controlled foundations,
and disinformation campaigns co-ordinated and funded by hostile
actors have revealed how external actors may seek to distort democratic
debate and electoral competition and ultimately diminish the effectiveness
and legitimacy of institutions.
75. Member States have taken a wide range of actions to restore
trust in democracies by strengthening rules around political donations,
including reforms to electoral law frameworks, due diligence on
the origin of donations and controls on company contributions to
guard against foreign influence. 

76. Efforts have also been made at the European Union level, with
revisions to the regulation on the statute and funding of European
political parties and European political foundations aiming to enhance
transparency and counter the risk of foreign interference and manipulation. 

77. Safeguarding integrity also requires strong internal accountability.
Parties can demonstrate to their members and voters how funds are
raised and spent, ensuring that leadership is subject to effective
oversight. This can include independent audits, annual public financial
reporting, and clear internal rules on spending.
78. Beyond financial regulation, safeguarding integrity also requires
political parties to uphold clear public standards of conduct. Citizens’
confidence is not only shaped by how parties raise and spend money,
but also by how their representatives behave while in office and
in public life. Codes of conduct, conflict-of-interest rules, and
transparent disciplinary procedures for party officials can help
ensure accountability and ethical behaviour. GRECO has underlined
that ethical standards and integrity mechanisms are essential to
preventing corruption,
while
the Assembly has stressed that political parties bear particular
responsibility for promoting a culture of honesty, responsibility,
and respect for democratic norms.
Embedding such standards
within party statutes and practices can strengthen the credibility
of political institutions and signal that parties place the public
interest above partisan advantage.


79. Parties that are transparent in their financing, accountable
in their operations, and protected from undue influence are better
positioned to fulfil their democratic functions of representation,
competition, and policy making. Restoring public trust requires
that citizens see parties as autonomous actors working in the public interest.
5.3. Promoting democratic integration
80. Political parties are not only
instruments for electoral competition. They are also central actors
in fostering democratic culture, helping induct and integrate the
people at large into the democratic political system.
In shaping political debate,
selecting leaders, and structuring participation, parties play a
vital role in transmitting democratic values and practices to citizens.
Research has shown that party affiliation plays a critical role
in building long-term attachments to politics and, more broadly
to democracy itself. 


81. This integrative role lies in providing a common democratic
space where competing interests, identities and perspectives can
be debated and mediated.
82. In times of heightened political polarisation, this role becomes
even more crucial. By promoting democratic culture, encouraging
dialogue across divides and avoiding zero-sum approaches, parties
can help reduce tensions, foster compromise, and sustain pluralist
democracies. Where parties instead adopt divisive or exclusionary
rhetoric, they risk deepening fragmentation and weakening the legitimacy
of democratic institutions.
83. Political parties also serve as engines of civic education.
Through youth wings, training schools, and public debate initiatives,
they equip citizens with democratic skills and foster habits of
participation. In several member States, political foundations affiliated
with parties play an important role in sustaining this connection. In
Germany, the party-affiliated foundations such as the Friedrich
Ebert Stiftung (SPD), the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (CDU), and the
Heinrich Böll Stiftung (Greens) organise political education, foster
dialogue across social groups, and provide forums where citizens,
academics, NGOs, and policy makers can engage. In Norway, though
not formally affiliated with parties, political think tanks perform
a similar role. Civita, with a liberal agenda, and Agenda, with
sympathies to the left are think tanks that run training schools
for youth and young professionals, and are active contributors to
the public debate.
84. Other models have seen parties build their own civic platforms.
Austria’s NEOS created the “NEOS Lab” to connect party debates with
wider society, and to provide services such as political education
and training. 

85. The messages that parties convey in public debate help to
shape the broader democratic climate. The Assembly has emphasised
the responsibility of parties to counter hate speech, racism, and
intolerance, particularly during electoral campaigns when rhetoric
has the greatest reach. The Council of Europe has called on political
parties to put in place specific policies to address and combat
hate speech including the adoption of codes of conduct, as well
as to avoid expressions that are likely to foster intolerance and
to openly condemn hate speech. 

86. In Ireland, civil society group INAR (the Irish Network Against
Racism) introduced an Anti-Racism Election Protocol, developed and
endorsed by multiple political parties. It recommits signatories
at each election to running campaigns free from racist language,
fear-based scapegoating, and divisive tactics, demonstrating how
voluntary pledges can help retain civility and safeguard democratic
norms.
87. Codes of conduct for campaign behaviour or cross-party pledges
against hate illustrate how parties can actively safeguard democratic
discourse and promote a culture of civility in campaigning.
5.4. Digital transformation and communication
88. The digital transformation
of politics has re-shaped how parties interact with citizens, organise
internally, and compete in elections. Cross-cutting across themes
of participation, deliberation and engagement, online platforms
have disrupted traditional forms of political organising, enabling
political parties to connect with broader audiences at lower cost.
When effectively harnessed,
digital tools can strengthen democratic engagement by giving citizens
more direct avenues to participate in decision making and shaping
party programmes.

89. Parties across Europe have utilised digital innovations on
a broad basis to widen participation, such as the use of online
primaries or member ballots, or online consultations, crowdsourced
manifestos, and digital forums for policy debate. These approaches
can enhance transparency, reduce barriers to engagement, and appeal
to citizens accustomed to digital forms of interaction.
90. There are internal power consequences of digital tools, with
research suggesting that intermediary political party agencies are
sometimes more frequently bypassed in digital-era party governance
that has been characterised by enhanced leader autonomy and direct
communication channels with supporters. 

91. Digitalisation has presented a range of further risks. Algorithm-driven
content and micro-targeted campaigning can exacerbate polarisation
by amplifying divisive messages and fragmenting the information environment.
Foreign interference via the proliferation of disinformation threatens
to distort debate and reduce trust.
92. Digital campaigning also raises questions about fairness and
accountability. The use of personal data for micro-targeting, opaque
funding of online advertising, and the role of large technology
platforms in shaping political debate all risk undermining transparency.
Citizens’ concerns that political communication is manipulative
or unaccountable further weaken trust in parties and democratic
processes.
93. Best practices to mitigate these risks are emerging across
Europe including digital literacy programmes, and reforms in campaign
finance regulation have extended disclosure requirements to online
advertising to ensure transparency in spending and message origin.
94. Political parties themselves have adopted voluntary codes
of conduct for ethical online campaigning, committing to avoid manipulative
techniques and respect citizens’ data privacy. In the Netherlands,
a Dutch Code of Conduct on the Transparency of Online Political
Advertising was signed ahead of parliamentary elections in 2021
by 11 political parties and major global online platforms to address
manipulative campaigning and increase transparency on the purchasers
of advertisements.
On the basis of this
practice, the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral
Assistance (International IDEA) in collaboration with the European
political parties and the European Commission developed a code of
conduct for the 2024 European Parliament elections. 


95. In a digital-first political era, parties must strike a balance
in harnessing technology for participation and inclusion, while
upholding democratic values and public trust. Ethical digital tools,
coupled with clear regulation and public norms, can empower parties
to enrich engagement rather than dilute democratic integrity.
6. Conclusion
96. The promotion and consolidation
of pluralist democracy are among the main objectives of the Council
of Europe and its Assembly. Political parties are fundamental to
this as they provide a connective tissue between the democratic
institutions of a State and its citizens. Yet they face mounting
pressures that threaten their effectiveness and legitimacy.
97. Declining membership and engagement reflect broader trends
of political disengagement and low trust, weakening parties' capacity
to channel citizen interests into policy making. Increasing centralisation
within parties, growing influence of money in politics, and the
impact of digital disinformation have strained their representative
function. The erosion of party legitimacy not only fosters voter
apathy but also creates openings for populist and extremist movements
that exploit discontent with traditional democratic structures
98. Strengthening internal democracy, improving accountability
mechanisms, and fostering meaningful citizen engagement are crucial
to reversing these negative trends
99. Enhancing trust in political parties requires proactive efforts
to strengthen party structures, improve political financing transparency,
and develop strategies to counteract polarisation and disinformation.
Ensuring that parties remain open, participatory, and adaptable
will help revitalise democratic engagement and reinforce their role
as mediators between the electorate and government institutions.
100. Above all, parties retain a special capacity to reinforce
social cohesion and promote democratic culture. They are spaces
where differences can be debated, compromises forged, and collective
visions for the future shaped. By investing in these integrative
functions, political parties can ensure resilient, pluralist, and representative
democracy in Europe.