Authentic Croatian Party of RightsW
Authentic Croatian Party of Rights

The Authentic Croatian Party of Rights is a far right, and social conservative political party founded in Koprivnica, in 2005, after the merging of Croatian Rightists and Croatian Right Movement. The goal of the Movement is to unite all rightist parties in Croatia such as the HSP, the HSP 1861, the HČSP and others. It was very critical of the HSP's political positions until 2009.

List of British far-right groups since 1945W
List of British far-right groups since 1945

The far-right, extreme right, hard right, radical right, fascist-right and ultra-right are terms used to discuss the position a group or person occupies within right-wing politics. The terms are often used to imply that someone is an extremist. The terms have been used by different scholars in somewhat conflicting ways.

British MovementW
British Movement

The British Movement (BM), later called the British National Socialist Movement (BNSM), is a British Neo-Nazi organisation founded by Colin Jordan in 1968. It grew out of the National Socialist Movement (NSM), which was founded in 1962. Frequently on the margins of the British far-right, the BM has had a long and chequered history for its association with violence and extremism. It was founded as a political party but manifested itself more as a pressure and activist group. It has had spells of dormancy.

British People's Party (2005)W
British People's Party (2005)

The British People's Party was a neo-Nazi political party in the United Kingdom, launched in 2005 by Kevin Watmough, Eddy Morrison, John G. Wood and Sid Williamson, former members of Combat 18, British National Party (BNP), National Front (NF) and the White Nationalist Party, as a splinter group from the Nationalist Alliance. Its founding member Eddy Morrison left the BPP and joined the NF in 2009. The party dissolved in 2013.

Bulgarian National Union – New DemocracyW
Bulgarian National Union – New Democracy

Bulgarian National Union – New Democracy (BNU-ND) is an ultranationalist political party based in Sofia, Bulgaria. The party claims to be patriotic and purports to protect Bulgarian values. Its leader is Boyan Rasate.

Dutch People's UnionW
Dutch People's Union

The Dutch People's Union is a Dutch Neo-Nazi political party. The party supports a merger between the Netherlands and Flanders.

England First PartyW
England First Party

The England First Party (EFP) was an English nationalist and far-right political party. It had two councillors on Blackburn with Darwen council between 2006 and 2007.

Far-right politics in AustraliaW
Far-right politics in Australia

Far-right politics in Australia, that is Australian political movements and individuals aligning to the far right, also referred to as right-wing extremism, is largely a phenomenon of the 20th and 21st centuries. Many of the groups included in this article are hate groups rather than registered political parties, some of the groups have had links to far-right terrorism in Australia, and some individuals have criminal convictions.

Fédération d'action nationale et européenneW
Fédération d'action nationale et européenne

The Fédération d'action nationale et européenne (FANE) was a small French far-right neo-Nazi organisation founded in April 1966. It was led by Mark Fredriksen, a bank employee who became involved in activism for French Algeria after serving in the paras (paratroopers) there. FANE brought together three movements: Action-Occident, the Cercle Charlemagne and the Comité de soutien à l'Europe réelle.

French and European Nationalist PartyW
French and European Nationalist Party

The French and European Nationalist Party was a French far-right neo-Nazi militant organization active between 1987 and 1999. Led by Claude Cornilleau until 1996, its slogan was "France first, white always". It had around a thousand sympathizers at its height.

Golden Dawn (Greece)W
Golden Dawn (Greece)

The Popular Association – Golden Dawn, usually shortened to Golden Dawn, is a far-right ultranationalist political party in Greece.

The III. PathW
The III. Path

The III. Path or The Third Path is a far-right and neo-Nazi political party in Germany.

National Alliance (Spain)W
National Alliance (Spain)

National Alliance (AN) is a Neo-Nazi political party in Spain. The party was founded in 2005 after the formation of Alliance for National Unity and Cultural Association Sisebuto King. Its first congress was held on April 30, 2006 in Valencia, although they had held public appearances since the previous year.

National Democratic Party of GermanyW
National Democratic Party of Germany

The National Democratic Party of Germany is a far-right and Neo-Nazi political party in Germany.

National Socialist FrontW
National Socialist Front

The National Socialist Front was at the time of its dissolution the largest Neo-Nazi political party in Sweden. The organization was founded in Karlskrona on 8 August 1994. It became a political party on 20 April 1999, the 110th birthday of Adolf Hitler. The party's official newspaper—now defunct—was named Den Svenske Nationalsocialisten, also known as Den Svenske.

National Socialist Japanese Workers' PartyW
National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party

National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party is a small neo-Nazi party in Japan. It is headed by Kazunari Yamada, who maintains a website and blog which includes praise for Adolf Hitler and the September 11 attacks. Pictures of Yamada, a Holocaust-denier, posing with Cabinet minister Sanae Takaichi and LDP policy research chief Tomomi Inada were discovered on the website and became a source of controversy; both have denied support for the party.

National Socialist Russian Workers' PartyW
National Socialist Russian Workers' Party

The National Socialist Russian Workers' Party was an ultranationalist social and political organization operating in the city of Kazan in 1994–1997.

National States' Rights PartyW
National States' Rights Party

The National States' Rights Party was a white supremacist political party that briefly played a minor role in the politics of the United States.

Nationalist Party of CanadaW
Nationalist Party of Canada

The Nationalist Party of Canada is an unregistered far-right political party in Canada that was founded in 1977 by white supremacist Don Andrews. The party describes itself as white nationalist, and is known for its antisemitic and racist publications.

New Triumph PartyW
New Triumph Party

Partido Nuevo Triunfo was a small far-right political party in Argentina banned on 17 March 2009 through a ruling by the Argentine Supreme Court of Justice.

The Nordic Realm PartyW
The Nordic Realm Party

The Nordic Realm Party was a Neo-Nazi political party in Sweden, founded in 1956 as the National Socialist Combat League of Sweden by Göran Assar Oredsson. Oredsson was also the party leader except for a few years during the 1970s while he wrote his autobiography Prisat vare allt som gjort mig hårdare. During that time, his wife Vera Oredsson took on the role as party leader and became Sweden's first female party leader.

Nordic Resistance MovementW
Nordic Resistance Movement

The Nordic Resistance Movement is a Pan-Nordic neo-Nazi movement and in Sweden a political party. It is established in Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Denmark, and also has members in Iceland. It has been banned in Finland since 2019. The NRM has been described as a terrorist organization due to their aim of abolishing democracy along with their paramilitary activities, weapons caches and connections to proscribed terrorist organizations such as the Russian Imperial Movement and National Action.

Northern BrotherhoodW
Northern Brotherhood

The Northern Brotherhood was a Russian nationalist movement. The ideological basis of the movement is the books of the "Svarogov square" series," Technotronnaya Avesta", the "NORNA" program and a number of other materials of a nationalist nature.

November 9th SocietyW
November 9th Society

The November 9th Society is a British neo-Nazi group, formed in 1977 by Terry Flynn. The 9th of November has been a pivotal date in German history on several occasions: the execution of the liberal leader Robert Blum which effectively ended the German revolutions in 1848; the abdication of Wilhelm II, German Emperor and the end of the German Empire in 1918; the failed Nazi Beer Hall Putsch in 1923; and the beginning of Kristallnacht in 1938.

Party of the SwedesW
Party of the Swedes

Party of the Swedes was a neo-Nazi political party in Sweden. The party described itself as nationalist and sought to limit Swedish citizenship only to individuals who belong to the "Western genetic and cultural legacy". From 2013 to 2015 the party leader was Stefan Jacobsson. The party dissolved on 10 May 2015 due to lack of members.

People's National Party (Russia)W
People's National Party (Russia)

The People's National Party is a minor far-right political party in Russia. Its leader is Aleksandr Ivanov-Sukharevsky, who founded the party in 1994 with, it has been alleged, the aid of two veterans of the Black Hundreds Vladimir Osipov and Vyacheslav Demin.

Republic (Slovakia)W
Republic (Slovakia)

The Republic is a far-right political party in Slovakia, led by Milan Uhrík.

Russian National Socialist PartyW
Russian National Socialist Party

The Russian National Socialist Party is a neo-Nazi and clerical fascist party based in Russia.

Russian National UnionW
Russian National Union

The Russian National Union was a Neo-Nazi party in Russia. The party should not be confused with Russian National Unity, a larger group with similar roots, although with no direct connection.

Russian National UnityW
Russian National Unity

Russian National Unity (RNU) or All-Russian civic patriotic movement "Russian National Unity", is a neo-Nazi political party and paramilitary organization based in Russia and formerly operating in states with Russian-speaking populations. It was founded by the ultra-nationalist Alexander Barkashov. The movement advocates the expulsion of non-Russians and an increased role for traditional Russian institutions such as the Russian Orthodox Church. The organization is currently unregistered federally in Russia.

Russian National Unity (2000)W
Russian National Unity (2000)

The All-Russian Public Patriotic Movement «Russian National Unity» was a Russian unregistered nationalist paramilitary organization that existed in 2000-2013 as a result of the split of the previously united organization Russian National Unity (1990). It was managed by a council of regional commanders. The organization was a member of the World Union of National Socialists.

Slavic UnionW
Slavic Union

National Socialist Movement "Slavic Union", or simply Slavic Union, was a Russian neo-Nazi organization founded in 1999 by Dmitry Demushkin. In 2010, it was banned by the Moscow City Court.

Social-National Party of UkraineW
Social-National Party of Ukraine

The Social-National Party of Ukraine (SNPU) was a far-right party in Ukraine that would later become Svoboda. The party combined radical nationalism and anti-communist positions.

Socialist Reich PartyW
Socialist Reich Party

The Socialist Reich Party was a West German political party founded in the aftermath of World War II in 1949 as an openly neo-Nazi-oriented split-off from the national conservative German Right Party (DKP-DRP). The party achieved some electoral success in northwestern Germany.

SUMKAW
SUMKA

The National Socialist Workers Party of Iran, better known by its abbreviation SUMKA, was a neo-Nazi party in Iran.

Swiss Nationalist PartyW
Swiss Nationalist Party

The Swiss Nationalist Party is a far-right völkisch political party in Switzerland founded in 2000. It was classified as "extremist" by the Swiss federal police in 2001.

White Defence LeagueW
White Defence League

The White Defence League was a British far-right political group. Using the provocative marching techniques popularised by Oswald Mosley, its members included a young John Tyndall.

Workers' Party of Social JusticeW
Workers' Party of Social Justice

Workers' Party of Social Justice is a Czech political party, often described as the major far-right extremist party in the Czech Republic. The party is not represented in any legislative body in the Czech Republic and its biggest electoral success so far has been a gain of 1,14% in the Czech legislative election in 2010. Some of the high-ranking party officials, including a Prague party leader, have been associated with neo-Nazi groups such as Národní odpor, the Czech subsidiary of an international militant neo-Nazi group. In spring 2009 the petition for the ban on the party was dismissed by the Czech Supreme Administrative Court, because, as the presiding judge stated, the applicant didn't manage to provide sufficient evidence in what was seen as a botched application. Following violent attacks against Czech minorities by far-right extremists, the government filed a more detailed petition for the ban, which was discussed by the Czech Supreme Court in January and February 2010. The party was banned, making it the first instance of banning a party for its ideology in the modern history of the Czech Republic. The party was transformed into a "Party of Citizens of the Czech Republic" and the party was renamed to Workers' Party of Social Justice. The party's program was kept the same with small adjustments.