Union of the Fighters for Lithuania

[1] According to Brazauskienė, the party was intended to defend the interests of common people, and she demanded to abolish severance pay for Members of the Seimas.

[3] After Brazauskienė's resignation, Šustauskas was elected as the new chairman and the party was renamed to the Union of the Fighters for Lithuania.

Šustauskas, a former Member of the Seimas and mayor of Kaunas, was a controversial personality known for numerous protest actions, such as the "March of the Poor" in Vilnius in 1997, and self-styled himself as "King of the Beggars".

Šustauskas ran in the by-elections held after the death of Julius Veselka [lt] on 3 March 2013, but was defeated again.

It compared Lithuania's political situation to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, as well as the Russian sale of Alaska.

In 2016, during a protest in Vilnius against corruption and NATO membership organized by the party, Subotin physically attacked Šustauskas.

[12] It struggled with activity, and Šustauskas offered the position of chairman to Signatory of the Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania and right-wing politician Zigmas Vaišvila in 2016.

[14] In January 2019, it was announced that fraudster and self-proclaimed attorney Stanislovas Tomas was elected chairman of the Conservative Party, which was a planned reorganization of the Union of the Fighters for Lithuania.

[20] During the campaign, on 8 April 2019, Tomas smashed the commemorative plaque dedicated to Nazi collaborator Jonas Noreika in Vilnius after a months-long national debate over its removal.

Several politicians, including Šustauskas, pro-Russian former member of Klaipėda city council Vyacheslav Titov and convicted fraudster and anti-LGBT activist Antanas Kandrotas, attempted to run in constituencies in the 2020 parliamentary election.

[30] In 2020, the party chairman released a proclamation in which he called for a "constitutional revolution" and the lynching of all members of the "Seimas of pederasts".