EXIT, FAR RIGHT: DERADICALIZING SWEDEN'S NEO NAZIS
Sweden's normally sedate political system was thrown into turmoil this month when the Sweden Democrats - a populist party with a stridently anti-immigration agenda - brought down the minority coalition after it had been in power for just two-and-a-half months, by refusing to support its budget plans.
Now the third largest party in Sweden's parliament, it has moved away from its roots in the extreme-right scene to become a more mainstream, though highly controversial, political force. New elections are due in March.
But Sweden is still home to an active and at times violent neo-Nazi movement, and there are fears that rising popularity of the Sweden Democrats will also benefit the extremists.
Stuart Hughes reports from Stockholm.
BROADCAST ON BBC RADIO 4 "THE WORLD TONIGHT", THURSDAY 18th DECEMBER 2014