On 12 February 1947, Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, the then President of the Committee for the Congress of Europe, issues a memorandum in New York in which he calls on Members of European national parliaments to agree to the establishment of a European Parliament.
On 4 July 1947, Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, founder and President of the Paneuropean Movement, gives an address at the opening of the constituent session of the European Parliamentary Union (UEP) in Gstaad.
On 4 July 1947, addressing the constituent session in Gstaad, Léon Maccas — MP for Athens, former Greek Minister and President of the Greek Parliamentary Committee for the European Federation — sets out the tasks to be accomplished by the European Parliamentary Union (EPU).
On 5 July 1947, at the end of the constituent Conference in Gstaad, the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) draws up a report on its work and sets its objectives regarding the establishment of a European federation.
On 8 September 1947, Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi addresses the inaugural Congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) in Gstaad and calls on the Western nations to commit themselves fully to the path towards European federalism.
On 8 September 1947, Leon Maccas, a Greek MP from Athens and a former Minister in the Greek Government, gives the inaugural address at the constituent meeting of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) in Gstaad and outlines the implications of European unity.
In his address to the inaugural Congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), Ronald W. G. Mackay, a British MP and Vice-President of the EPU, outlines the unsuccessful attempts made hitherto to achieve European unity and calls on MPs in Europe to work towards a federation of the countries of Western Europe.
On 9 September 1947, at the end of its inaugural Congress in Gstaad, the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) adopts a Declaration of European Solidarity in which it affirms its determination to build a federal Europe.
Meeting at the first conference of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) held in Gstaad from 8 to 10 September 1947, 114 members of Europe’s national parliaments adopt a resolution setting out the arrangements that need to be put in place for the creation of a European federation.
In September 1947, as the first congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) is held in Gstaad, Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, founder of the Pan-European Union in Vienna in 1923, drafts a report concerning a plan for a European Assembly.
List of the Members of the Provisional Council of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) present at the inaugural Congress in Gstaad from 8 to 10 September 1947.
Am 14. September 1947 berichtet der französische Abgeordnete Édouard Bonnefous in der französischen Tageszeitung Le Monde über die Debatten auf dem ersten Kongress der Europäischen Parlamentarier-Union vom 8. bis 10. September 1947 in Gstaad.
On 19 December 1947, Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, Secretary-General of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), informs the former British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill, of the choice of the flag that is to symbolise the United States of Europe.
Portrait of Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, founder in 1923 of the Pan-European Movement and Secretary-General, in 1947, of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU).
On 23 August 1948, the Belgian daily newspaper La Dernière Heure reports on the Congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) to be held in Interlaken under the chairmanship of Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi. In giving itself the status of preliminary parliament for the United States of Europe, the Congress seeks to lay the foundations for a European Constituent Assembly elected by national parliaments.
In September 1948, during its second Congress in Interlaken, the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) adopts a detailed programme for the establishment of the United States of Europe and of a European Parliament, a federal executive body and a European supreme court.
On 6 September 1948, in an article published in the American journal Common Cause, the Italian Socialist MP Piero Calamandrei describes the issues surrounding the second Congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) that has just come to a close in Interlaken.
On 7 September 1948, the French daily newspaper Le Monde discusses the impact of the debates which took place during the second European Parliamentary Union (EPU) Congress held in Interlaken from 1 to 5 September 1948.
In October 1948, Henri Brugmans, Dutch President of the Union of European Federalists (UEF) and Vice-President of the European Movement, gives an account of the debates and issues involved in the second Congress of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), held from 1 to 5 September 1948 in Interlaken.
On 17 October 1949, Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, Secretary-General of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), presents a memorandum to the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe in which he defines his ambitions for a new political and economic structure for Europe.
On 20 September 1949, the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), meeting for the third time in Venice, adopts a resolution calling for political integration in Europe and for the powers of the Consultative Assembly of the Council of Europe to be extended.
On 20 September 1949, at the end of its third Congress in Venice, the European Parliamentary Union (EPU) adopts a resolution calling for the revival of trade and for the establishment of a coordinated monetary system in Europe.
On 8 November 1950, Count Richard Coudenhove-Kalergi, President of the Pan-European Movement and founder of the European Parliamentary Union (EPU), sends to the Governments of Germany, Belgium, France, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and the Saar a memorandum in which he calls for the rapid establishment of a European Federation.