[3] The party began when a group of Helsinki residents who were dissatisfied with the Free Workers' Union left the organization and decided to form a competing association.
The first vice-chairman, Yrjö Säde, resigned from the organization as early as November 1932 and joined the Finnish People's Organisation (SKJ).
The magazine, which was published from the beginning of September 1932, promoted, among other things, the Greater Finland idea and protectionist economics.
The party was sympathetic to Nazism and Rauvala cooperated with the nazi Finnish People's Organisation.
[5][1] Their newspaper however attacked Yrjö Ruutu's National Socialist Union of Finland, accusing the party of cryptomarxism due to their Strasserist leanings.