National Socialist Workers' Party (Sweden)


Nationalsocialistiska Arbetarepartiet was a Swedish political party that initially espoused Nazism before adopting a more indigenous form of fascism. It was also widely infamous under the name Svensk socialistisk samling, which was generally among the public called "Lindholmarna".
The party was revealed after WWII to have had well-organized plans, containing death lists of local Jews to be rounded up and deported and also plans for the construction of two Swedish concentration camps, in case of a Nazi German invasion of Sweden. Lindholm himself had planned to take the role as a "Swedish Quisling" if such an invasion had happened.
The Nazi-friendly Swedish king Gustav V had friendly ties to the SSS/NSAP during the war.

History

The party was formed in 1933 by Sven Olov Lindholm after he left the Swedish National Socialist Party, following a series of clashes over policy and personality. The NSAP initially acted as a simple mirror of the National Socialist German Workers Party, with the party newspaper Den Svenske Nationalsocialisten repeating what was being said in Nazi Germany and the Nordisk ungdom group serving as a replica of the Hitler Youth. The swastika was also initially used as the party emblem.
The party continued to move away from the Hitler model, and largely abandoned its ties to Germany in favour of a more Swedish model. In 1938, it ceased to use the swastika and replaced it with the cogwheel and hammer symbol. By the end of the year the party had changed its name to Svensk Socialistisk Samling and had largely dropped all but passing reference to the Nazis. Nonetheless, the party declined dramatically during the Second World War and was formally dissolved in 1950, 5 years after WWII. Some members of NSAP/SSS joined the Waffen-SS during the war as part of the few hundred Swedish SS volunteers. Those who returned home afterwards rarely mentioned the war in public out of fear of being investigated or accused of war crimes.
In 1943, the party's national congress in Uppsala caused the Easter Riots to break out.
The party was one of the earliest to claim that no Holocaust happened, in May 1945 in Den Svenske Folksocialisten.

Swedish Holocaust plans

It was discovered some years after WWII, when incomplete lists from the SSS/NSAP containing the names of nearly one thousand Jews was found, that the party had hoped for, and planned well for, a Nazi German invasion of Sweden.
Local party branches had helped gather well-documented information about hundreds of local Jews' businesses, names, families, their childrens' schools, workplaces, etc, and collected these documents to the party's main branch. These lists are today often referred to as death lists by historians and experts, since the movement was known for their fanatic hatred of Jews.
The party would, in case of such an invasion, first have strived to set up a "Swedish Quisling puppet regime" with Lindholm as leader. It has been revealed their plans involved the construction of at least two Swedish concentration camps for Jews; they had the locations and maps for these ready, and then would have rounded up the thousands of Jews in Sweden along with political opponents and so on, for deportations to the camps and/or to Nazi German death camps.

Electoral results

[Riksdag]

Election year# of overall votes% of overall vote# of overall seats won+/-Notes
193617,4830.6
19444,2040.1

Gallery