NOP publishes the magazine Szczerbiec (the name of the Polish royal coronation sword), which lists neofascists Derek Holland and Roberto Fiore among the members of its editorial board, Młodzież Narodowa (National Youth), Myśl (The Thought), and Biuletyn NOP. The publishing house was closed after 1989 and the collapse of the Communist regime. In the 2005 Polish parliamentary elections, the NOP received 0.06% of the vote. In the 2006 self-government regional elections, it received 0.64%.
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rdfs:label
| - National Revival of Poland
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rdfs:comment
| - NOP publishes the magazine Szczerbiec (the name of the Polish royal coronation sword), which lists neofascists Derek Holland and Roberto Fiore among the members of its editorial board, Młodzież Narodowa (National Youth), Myśl (The Thought), and Biuletyn NOP. The publishing house was closed after 1989 and the collapse of the Communist regime. In the 2005 Polish parliamentary elections, the NOP received 0.06% of the vote. In the 2006 self-government regional elections, it received 0.64%.
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Leader
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dcterms:subject
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foaf:homepage
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dbkwik:religion/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
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Country
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International
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ideology
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Foundation
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Headquarters
| - ul. Kredytowa 6/22 00-062 Warsaw
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party logo
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party name
| - National Rebirth of Poland
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Website
| - www.nop.org.plwww.nop.org.en
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Position
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European
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abstract
| - NOP publishes the magazine Szczerbiec (the name of the Polish royal coronation sword), which lists neofascists Derek Holland and Roberto Fiore among the members of its editorial board, Młodzież Narodowa (National Youth), Myśl (The Thought), and Biuletyn NOP. The publishing house was closed after 1989 and the collapse of the Communist regime. In 2001, NOP membership in Poland was estimated at 500, consisting mainly of neo-Nazi skinheads. NOP also has supporters outside Poland, notably among the United States Polish community, including Polish Patriots’ Association, residing in New York City and the revisionist Polish Historical Institute in Chicago . In 2001, the NOP tried to enter parliamentary politics for the first time. The newly created NOP front organization, the New Forces Alliance (Sojusz Nowych Sil), joined the nationalist electoral bloc, Alternative Social Movement (Ruch Spoleczny Alternatywa, RSA). Among the NOP candidates were Marcin Radzewicz, the leader of the openly neo-Nazi National Socialist Front (Front Narodowo-Socjalistyczny). RSA gained just below 0.5% of the votes, and the alliance was dissolved. In the 2005 Polish parliamentary elections, the NOP received 0.06% of the vote. In the 2006 self-government regional elections, it received 0.64%. The NOP is known for trying to get media attention with its shock value campaigns. During the 2007 parliamentary and Senate elections, the NOP distributed election campaign posters with the slogan "Fascism? We are worse." Another, openly homophobic shock value campaign conducted by the NOP was called Zakaz Pedałowania (Forbid Homosexuality). On 17 May 2006 in Toruń, the NOP organized a counter-demonstration against a public LGBT rights supporters' meeting. NOP members chanted slogans, including "gas the queers" (pedały do gazu) and "there will be a baton for each queer face" (znajdzie się kij na pedalski ryj).
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