Swiss Nationalist Party | |
---|---|
Founded | 10 September 2000 |
Dissolved | February 2022 |
Ideology | Völkisch movement Neo-Nazism Neue Rechte Swiss nationalism |
Political position | Far-right |
Website | |
www www | |
The Swiss Nationalist Party (German: Partei National Orientierter Schweizer, lit. 'Party of Nationally Oriented Swiss', abbreviated to PNOS; French: Parti nationaliste suisse, abbreviated to PNS; Italian: Partito nazionalista svizzero) was a Neo-Nazi völkisch political party in Switzerland founded in 2000. It was classified as "extremist" by the Swiss federal police in 2001.
The party's course was initially imitating that of the 1930s National Front with a clearly National Socialist ideology (dubbed "eidgenössisch-sozialistisch" by the PNOS) but has since been "modernized" in accordance with the vocabulary of Germany's Neue Rechte.
The party was not represented in any cantonal parliament. Its activities were mostly confined to the Swiss German-speaking parts of the western Swiss plateau. It had one representative in the municipal parliament of Langenthal, canton of Bern (population 14,300), elected in 2004. In 2005, another member was elected to the municipal executive council of Günsberg, canton of Solothurn (population 1,100).
They participated in the federal elections of 2011 in the canton of Bern, gathering 0.3% of the popular vote (1,066 votes), less than a tenth of the votes required to win a seat in parliament. They also participated in Vaud, gathering a total of 132 votes (less than the 0.2% of the votes required to win a seat).
In February 2017, the party invited Russian neo-nazi Denis Nikitin, to lead a martial arts education in Bettwiesen (Thurgau). PNO boss Lüthard said that he "knew nothing about the role of Nikitin as the alleged leader of the Russian thugs in Marseille".
In February 2022, the party dissolved.
Federal elections
Election | # of total votes | % of popular vote | # of seats won |
---|---|---|---|
2015 | 792 | 0.03% | 0 |
2019 | 582 | 0.02% | 0 |
References
- ^ "«Die Pnos war schon sehr lange dysfunktional»" (in German).
- "Domestic Security Report of Switzerland by the Federal Office of Police, 2008" (PDF).
- "Die Pnos und die rechten Schläger von Marseille" (in German). 2017-04-22. Retrieved 2024-03-13.
External links
Political parties in Switzerland | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
National Council (200 seats) |
| ||||
Council of States (46 seats) |
| ||||
Other parties | |||||
Far-right politics in Switzerland | |
---|---|
Defunct far right organizations | |
Active far right organizations | |
Historical far right people |
|
Living far right people | |
Related topics |
- 2000 establishments in Switzerland
- 2022 disestablishments in Switzerland
- Nationalist parties in Switzerland
- Neo-Nazi political parties in Europe
- Neo-Nazism in Switzerland
- New Right (Europe)
- Political parties established in 2000
- Political parties disestablished in 2022
- Defunct political parties in Switzerland
- Right-wing parties in Switzerland
- Swiss nationalism