Abstract :
Systematic empirical research has yet to explain how national parties join political groups in the
European Parliament. This article first demonstrates, using original empirical measures from expert
surveys of party positions, that EP party groups consist of national parties sharing similar policy
positions. Secondly, using Bayesian/MCMC methods, the paper estimates the policy determinants of
group affiliation using a (conditional) multinomial logit model to explain that ‘party group’ choice is
largely driven by policy congruence. Finally, predictions from the model identify national parties not
in their ‘ideally congruent’ EP groups. The findings suggest that the organization of and switching
between EP groups is driven mainly by a concern to minimize policy incongruence between national
and transnational levels.