1941 verfassen die auf der italienischen Insel Ventotene festgehaltenen antifaschistischen Aktivisten Ernesto Rossi und Altiero Spinelli ein Manifest für ein freies und vereinigtes Europa.
In December 1942, Altiero Spinelli and Ernesto Rossi address a secret letter to Count Sforza, then in exile in the United States, on behalf of the Italian federalists kept under house arrest on the island of Ventotene, enjoining him to support the post-war realisation of the United States of Europe.
Le 29 janvier 1943, l'écrivain allemand Thomas Mann prononce à New York un discours radiodiffusé dans lequel il dénonce le nouvel ordre européen prôné par les nazis et défend l'idée d'une Europe fédérale libre.
On 21 March 1943, Winston Churchill, British Prime Minister, reveals to his compatriots his vision of the post-war period, and emphasises the importance of European unification.
From 27 to 28 August 1943, at its constituent meeting in Milan, members of the European Federalist Movement (EFM) adopt a motion which lays down its future prerogatives.
In November 1943, the Italian Movement for European Federation calls upon all francophone anti-Fascists to work together for the creation of a United States of Europe, freed from the yoke of totalitarian regimes.
On 25 March 1944, the Legal Affairs Committee of the Pan-European Movement and the Research Seminar for Post-War European Federation adopt in New York a draft federal-type constitution for a United Europe.
Le 3 mars 1944, Sir Walter Layton, économiste anglais, tient une conférence à l'université d'Oxford dans laquelle il souligne les fondements d'une future unité européenne.
On 31 March, 29 April, 20 May and 6 and 7 July 1944, militants from resistance movements of several European countries meet secretly in Geneva to discuss the problems related to the reconstruction of a democratic, federally-based Europe after the war.
In May 1944, the Italian underground periodical L’Unità europea, organ of the European Federalist Movement, highlights the efforts undertaken by European Federalists against Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy to achieve European unity.
In June 1944, members of the French Resistance, meeting as the French Committee for European Federation, deliver a statement in which they show their support for European federalism and define the shape of a united post-war Europe.
Head of the French Section of the Workers’ International (SFIO), Léon Blum led the Government of the Popular Front from 1936 to 1937. Imprisoned by the Vichy authorities, he was later deported to Germany where he pursued his internationalist ideal.
Im Jahre 1945 empfängt Frédéric-Joseph Vandemeulebroek, Bürgermeister der Stadt Brüssel, den ehemaligen britischen Premierminister Winston Churchill, um ihm die Ehrenbürgerwürde der Stadt für seine heldenhaften Taten im Zweiten Weltkrieg zu verleihen.