New Conservative group united
Mr Edward McMillan-Scott (Conservative), a Vice-President in the outgoing parliament who was re-elected top of the list in Yorkshire denied rumours that he would stay in the majority EPP group.
At the inaugural meeting of the European Conservative and Reformist group in Brussels (June 24) McMillan-Scott, who re-negotiated the association with the EPP in 1999 while leader of the Conservative MEPs, said he would have preferred an even more detached relationship with the EPP, especially after Italy's right-wing Alleanza Nazionale joined it.
Describing the new Conservative group as a "political adventure" he said he was "uncomfortable" and was checking the backgrounds of some of its MEPs:"Before 1989, when I worked with reformists in the Soviet bloc, politics were different. Since then, politicians are answerable for their actions. I hope no MEP in the new group has had links with extremist movements like Poland's National Revival."
McMillan-Scott said he is an "internationalist, pro-European Catholic" but worried that if the only coherence of the group was opposition to federalism - over which MEPs had no powers - it would divide on moral questions where they did, like genetics, embryology and sexual politics.












