National Socialist Workers' Party (Sweden)

National Socialist Workers' Party
Swedish Socialist Union
Nationalsocialistiska Arbetarepartiet
Svensk socialistisk samling
AbbreviationNSAP
SSS
ChairmanSven Olov Lindholm
Founded15 January 1933 (1933-01-15)
DissolvedJune 1950
Preceded bySwedish National Socialist Party
Succeeded byNordic Realm Party
NewspaperDen Svenske Nationalsocialisten
Youth wingNordisk ungdom
Labour wingNational Socialist Industrial Workers' Union
IdeologyNazism (1933–1938)
  Swedish nationalism
  Fascism (After 1938)
Political positionFar-right
Party flag

The National Socialist Workers' Party (NSAP; Swedish: 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 (SSS, 'Swedish Socialist Gathering'), which was generally among the public called Lindholmarna (lit.'the Lindholm-ers', after their leader Sven Olov Lindholm).

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 Swedish king Gustav V had friendly ties to the SSS/NSAP during the war.