Finns Party

Finns Party
Perussuomalaiset (Finnish)
Sannfinländarna (Swedish)
AbbreviationPS
Sannf
ChairpersonRiikka Purra
SecretaryHarri Vuorenpää
Parliamentary group leaderJani Mäkelä
First deputy chairTeemu Keskisarja
FoundersTimo Soini
Raimo Vistbacka
Kari Bärlund
Urpo Leppänen
Founded11 May 1995
Preceded byFinnish Rural Party (de facto)
HeadquartersYrjönkatu 8–10B,
00120 Helsinki
NewspaperPerussuomalainen (magazine)
Suomen Uutiset
Think tankSuomen Perusta
Youth wingFinns Party Youth
(2006–2020)
The Finns Party Youth
(2020–)
Women's wingFinns Party Women
Worker's wingPeruspuurtajat
Membership (2021) 15,700
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing to far-right
European Parliament groupEFD (2009–2014)
ID (2019–2023)
ECR Group (2014–2019, since 2023)
Nordic affiliationNordic Freedom
Colours
  •   Gold
  •   Dark blue
  •   White
Eduskunta
46 / 200
European Parliament
1 / 15
Municipalities
651 / 8,586
County seats
105 / 1,379
Website
perussuomalaiset.fi

The Finns Party (Finnish: Perussuomalaiset [ˈperusˌsuo̯mɑlɑi̯set], PS; Swedish: Sannfinländarna, Sannf), formerly known as the True Finns, is a right-wing populist political party in Finland. It was founded in 1995 following the dissolution of the Finnish Rural Party.

The party achieved its electoral breakthrough in the 2011 Finnish parliamentary election, when it won 19.1% of votes, becoming the third largest party in the Parliament of Finland.

In the 2015 election the party got 17.7% of the votes, making it the parliament's second-largest political party. The party was in opposition for the first 20 years of its existence. In 2015, it joined the coalition government formed by Prime Minister Juha Sipilä.

Following a 2017 split, over half of the party's MPs left the parliamentary group and were subsequently expelled from their membership in the party. This defector group, Blue Reform, continued to support the government coalition, while the Finns Party went into opposition. The party, having been reduced to 17 seats after the split, increased its representation to 39 seats in the 2019 Finnish parliamentary election, while Blue Reform failed to win any seats.

During the 2023 Finnish parliamentary election, the Finns Party finished in second place with 46 seats, recording their strongest result since its founding. They then, out of Petteri Orpo's request, proceeded to form a coalition government with the winning National Coalition Party, the Christian Democrats and Swedish People's Party of Finland. The party currently holds seven of nineteen ministerial portfolios in the Orpo Cabinet.