National Populist Party

The National Populist Party often known as the Napo Party (Nasjonte Populistische Partij, NPP) was a far-right fascist political party in Doggerland active between 1924 and 1945. The party drew most of its support from Doggish Catholics who believed that Doggerland needed a mass cleansing in order to bring it back to its Dogger ethnic roots. It was founded by Arjen van Frisk and 6 others in 1924.

The party slowly gained popularity over the next decade working closely with and later funded by the Nazi Party in Germany. By 1934 it had achieved mainstream success in parliament. In 1938 it narrowly lost the election by a margin of a single seat to the Labour Party. Following the election, the leader of the party Arjen van Frisk claimed the vote was stolen from the party by Communist sympathizers in the Labour Party. He led mass riots throughout the Doggerland situated mainly in the north but also in nearly every major city. The riots as well as the outbreak and events of World War 2 caused a decline in the party's support by the next election in 1942. In 1945 following the end of World War 2, the Napo Party was banned by a royal decree.

Later many of its members founded the National People's Party which later joined with the Independent Democracy Party.