The leader of ANFB was Jan Baars, a merchant from Amsterdam.
ANFB won 17,157 votes in the general elections of 1933, 0.46% of the total.
ANFB then entered into a 'corporative concentration' with the followers of Alfred Haighton and the National Union.
Jan Baars did not get on with Carel Gerretson (the leader of National Union), therefore Baars quit ANFB.
[1] The party sought to create a volksfascisme, although they failed to fully define this aim; despite their rhetoric, the party was considered closer to Benito Mussolini than Adolf Hitler.