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      • Document remediation – setting up your workflow
      • Understanding Non-Digital Information under the European Accessibility Act
      • Deliver UX and design to developers
      • Formatting for accessibility – and how to make it easier
      • ALT-text – how am I supposed to write it?
      • Brain-friendly web design for a stress-free online experience
      • Five easy steps to improve document accessibility!
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      • Digital Christmas stress is not inevitable
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  • Swedish
  • Search
  • We offer
    • Training
      • Self-paced training
      • EAA-specific training offer
      • The customer is always right – what on earth do we do now …?
      • IAAP Professional Certification Preparation Training
        • CPACC certification preparation training
        • WAWeb Accessibility Specialist
        • ADS certification preparation training
    • Document remediation
    • The missing link – the user perspective on accessibility
    • Action-based accessibility audit
    • Use up your budget!
  • Research projects
    • Accessible crisis information
    • Accessible support to victims of crime
    • Training on website feedback strengthens the voice of users
    • Accessibility makes new cybersecurity requirements more robust
    • Framework contract with the whole Stockholm Region
    • Increase cognitive accessibility in digital interfaces
    • AI-based and inclusive recruitment
      • Do you have experience with AI in recruitment?
    • Consumer rights for everyone
    • Completed projects
      • Involving users
      • Integration of web accessibility in university education in the EU
      • Nordic knowledge on web accessibility
      • Digital skills
        • Digital skills for inclusive employment – report published
      • Accessibility – an important part of sports
      • Funka Foundation provides expert support to EU project
      • Stuttering: in focus at last
      • Bridging the gap: Empowering UX-students to address all users’ needs
      • Accessibility of cookie notifications
        • New research shows how cookie notifications can be more accessible
      • Accessibility in surveys
        • Make your surveys easier to manage for users
      • Expertise based on personal experience
        • Webinar: Expertise based on personal experience
      • Digital currency dialogue forum
      • European Political Party websites
  • Assignments
    • European policy, legislation and standards
      • What companies need to comply with EAA
      • EAA – insufficient information to consumers
      • Accessible support – new requirements under the Accessibility Act
      • Public Procurement Guidance for Accessibility
      • Research informs new European standards on accessibility
      • Canada adopts the EN301549 – and makes it accessible!
      • European Accessibility Act: implementation regarding e-books
      • The value of a life must be equal
    • Access Denied – a democratic issue
    • EU-funded study on Multimodality
    • PDF/UA-2 – the updated PDF accessibility standard
    • Study on AI to support accessibility
    • EU platform publishes our paper on user involvement
    • IAAP Nordic
  • What’s up
    • IAAP EU & Vially Accessibility Event 4–5 February 2026
    • Newsletter
    • Free Friday Webinars
      • Cognitive accessibility in digital interfaces – insights from users
      • Captions, subtitles or transcripts
      • Getting tables right: Clear, accessible, and effective
      • Accessible input fields: From code to user experience
      • Cybersecurity + Accessibility = True
      • EAA Three months on
      • Accessible e-learning
      • Serving all customers: Accessible support services and the European Accessibility Act
      • No barriers, just bar charts: Chart accessibility made easy
      • European standards to support EAA – update
      • Accessible surveys: insights and best practices
      • Best things in life are free – Part 2: Free tools for mobile app accessibility testing
      • Accessible cookie banners: research insights and best practices
      • User involvement: research, best practices and standards
      • The best things in life are free – Free tools for accessibility testing
      • Document remediation – setting up your workflow
      • Understanding Non-Digital Information under the European Accessibility Act
      • Deliver UX and design to developers
      • Formatting for accessibility – and how to make it easier
      • ALT-text – how am I supposed to write it?
      • Brain-friendly web design for a stress-free online experience
      • Five easy steps to improve document accessibility!
      • European Accessibility Act – these are the requirements
      • Accessibility in social media
      • The untapped resource of accessibility features
        • Challenges in accessibility supported
  • About us
    • Join our network of testers
    • Columns
      • Digital Christmas stress is not inevitable
      • The curse of the custom cursor
      • The good, the bad and the unreadable
      • Start where you are
      • Why are we not getting across?
      • It should be the other way around
      • To think and talk like your customers
      • The never-ending hype of AI
      • “No gritting or snow clearance”
      • An adapted car makes travelling easier and more independent
      • Adolf Ratzka has left us
      • I don’t want to work on creating accessible documents
      • High time to reconsider the use of timers
      • The user at the centre – or possibly in the back seat?
    • Accessibility statement
    • Privacy policy
    • Our team is growing!
    • Board of Directors
  • Accessible crisis information
  • Accessible support to victims of crime
  • Training on website feedback strengthens the voice of users
  • Accessibility makes new cybersecurity requirements more robust
  • Framework contract with the whole Stockholm Region
  • Increase cognitive accessibility in digital interfaces
  • AI-based and inclusive recruitment
    • Do you have experience with AI in recruitment?
  • Consumer rights for everyone
  • Completed projects
    • Involving users
    • Integration of web accessibility in university education in the EU
    • Nordic knowledge on web accessibility
    • Digital skills
      • Digital skills for inclusive employment – report published
    • Accessibility – an important part of sports
    • Funka Foundation provides expert support to EU project
    • Stuttering: in focus at last
    • Bridging the gap: Empowering UX-students to address all users’ needs
    • Accessibility of cookie notifications
      • New research shows how cookie notifications can be more accessible
    • Accessibility in surveys
      • Make your surveys easier to manage for users
    • Expertise based on personal experience
      • Webinar: Expertise based on personal experience
    • Digital currency dialogue forum
    • European Political Party websites
EU flags. Photo.

European Political Party websites

Our democratic systems and political processes rely on citizens being able to cast an informed vote. However, as seen in a report, co-authored by the European Disability Forum and the Funka Foundation, the over 100 million persons with disabilities living in Europe are largely failed by political parties in their duty to provide accessible, reliable political information.

Accessibility spot-checks have been carried out on 7 main European political parties’ websites: European People’s Party, Party of European Socialists, ALDE Party, ECR Party, European Greens, European Left and Identity and Democracy. The report reveals that these websites are vastly inaccessible to users with disabilities, with some components even reversing default accessibility measures.

The results are a symptom of the problem of widespread inaccessibility of political information – which hinders persons with disabilities from casting an informed vote.

European political parties seem to be neglecting their obligation to provide information to all voters, whether they have specific access needs or not. In doing so, they are creating a barrier not only for persons with disabilities but for the democratic process itself.

While we recognise that the majority of voters will rely on information given by national political parties – and provided through a variety of means – we consider these disappointing results to provide an accurate snapshot of the inaccessibility of the political process, especially election campaigns, when it comes to the needs of persons with disabilities.

The disappointing results show that:

  • All political parties’ websites have severe accessibility issues, excluding groups of users from content while making it difficult for others to access information.
  • Some instances of insufficient colour contrast were the worst that any of the involved experts had ever measured before. A depressing record.
  • Some website owners had actively removed code that benefits users, thereby deliberately making the interface less accessible.

This report analyses accessibility through the angle of persons with disabilities. This means that technical and practical arrangements are in place to ensure persons with disabilities can access and interact with society and enjoy their rights on an equal basis with others. This is far from the reality displayed in our study.

We call on EU political parties and all political actors to:

  • Train web authors and other relevant staff in basic accessible publishing.
  • Use the European standard for accessible ICT (EN301549) when procuring, designing and developing digital interfaces. The standard is free of charge.
  • Involve end users with disabilities in designing, developing and testing digital interfaces, to make sure they work for everyone.

Finally, we encourage all political actors to meaningfully involve organisations of persons with disabilities in accordance with the disability movement’s updated motto: “Nothing without us.”

Report “Access Denied: The (in)accessibility of European Political Party websites” (short version – 27 pages, 860 kb) PDF, opens in new window

Report “Access Denied: The (in)accessibility of European Political Party websites” (full report – 92 pages, 7,7 MB) PDF, opens in new window

Report “Access Denied: The (in)accessibility of European Political Party websites” – detailed results per tested criteria (73 pages, 7,44 MB) PDF, opens in new window

Report “Access Denied: The (in)accessibility of European Political Party websites” – scope (8 pages, 307 kb) PDF, opens in new window

Report “Access Denied: The (in)accessibility of European Political Party websites” (short version – 27 pages, 6,18 MB) Word, opens in new window

Report “Access Denied: The (in)acessibility of European Political Party websites” (full report – 96 pages, 63,8 MB) Word, opens in new window

The European Disability Forum, opens in new window

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