Background
Nils Flyg was born and raised in Södermalm, a working-class area of Stockholm.
politician Member of the Riksdag
Nils Flyg was born and raised in Södermalm, a working-class area of Stockholm.
Early on he joined the Swedish Social Democratic Party"s youth organization, the Swedish Social Democratic Youth League. In 1917, Flyg took part in the founding of a new leftist party, a group headed by Zeth Höglund and Karl Kilbom, which would soon become the Communist Party of Sweden. The same year Flyg and Kilbom founded a new, parallel Communist Party, which claimed to be the real Communist Party of Sweden.
Initially Flyg and Kilbom attempted to reconcile with the Communist International, something that soon proved fruitless.
By 1934 the party had changed name to the Socialist Party (Socialistiska partiet). At first, the Socialist Party still supported the Soviet Union but condemned the Stalinist leadership.
But by the end of the 1930s, the party had changed its view and criticized the whole of the Soviet Union, a stance that gradually developed to a foreign policy embracing Nazi Germany. In 1937 Kilbom was expelled from the party, after a few years of disputes and personal struggle between the two leaders.
The Socialist Party shrank dramatically and Flyg became more and more politically isolated.
Financial constraints led him to approach the German High Commission in Stockholm. Initially, the Germans turned down his request for funding, but in the final stages of the war (when the Germans felt a more urgent need for allies in the Swedish politics) funding was granted. Gradually, Flyg and his party developed a pro-Nazi position.
Flyg became an important leader of the Communist Party, wrote books and went on political trips to the Soviet Union. In 1929 Flyg, along with the majority of the party"s membership, was accused of insufficient loyalty to the Soviet-dominated Communist International and expelled from the party. They gradually developed an animosity towards Stalinism.
At the beginning of World World War II, Flyg came out in opposition to fascism, and the Nazi-Soviet pact in his eyes proved that Stalinism was just as bad as fascism. But when Hitler broke the pact with Stalin, and Germany launched the invasion against the Soviet Union, Flyg decided that he had to support the Nazis against Stalin, hoping it would lead to the end of Stalinism. He was neither an adherent of core fascist or racist policies, and considered himself a socialist until his death.
In one speech to a group of Swedish Nazis, he caused confusion when he declared: "Death to communism! Long live communism!".
He was against capitalism and imperialism and openly supported the basic ideas of Marx and Lenin.
After the expulsion of Kilbom a majority of the members of the party left.