Sweden Party

It was founded in late 1986 through the merger of Bevara Sverige Svenskt and the Stockholm branch of the Progress Party.

Its founders included Stefan Hermann, Leif Zeilon and Sven Davidson (politician) [sv] who were active in the Bevara Sverige Svenskt organization.

The party was formally dissolved in 1988, with some of its members playing a role in the founding of the Sweden Democrats which emerged as a successor.

[3] In its policies, the Sweden Party was critical of immigration into Sweden and argued that a market economy was superior to a planned economy, but also advocated for certain protectionist measures such as limiting the power of foreign companies in Sweden and breaking up what it called the "power of big finance.

"[4] Swedish historian Heléne Lööw has argued that the Sweden Party did not hold a coherent ideology and was internally polarized between two groups; those sympathetic to national socialist and neo-Nazi ideas and a more conventional right-wing populist and national conservative faction.