UAPism

represents the ideology of the former  (German: Unabhängige Arbeiter-Partei (Deutsche Sozialisten)). The party existed from 1969 until 2014 and originally split from  Otto Starsser's  German Social Union.

Belifs
The party saw itself as " Nationalist and  Socialist Workers' Party" and based its program primarily on the brothers   Gregor and Otto Strasser. They saw themselves in the tradition of Ferdinand Lassalle and Kurt Schumacher. They criticized right-wing parties as "National-Capitalist", and saw the SPD as a copy of the  CDU; they saw  this view validated with the introduction of the 2002  HARTZ-program.

History
The party was founded on the 21st of Janurary 1962 as a splinter from  Otto Starsser's  German Social Union in Essen. The early party took a clear stance and distance from the far-right, after seeing this strategy fail however, they decided to try on multiple times to ally with far-right parties in order to receive more votes and a mandate. This strategy incided trying to split off the left-wing off the National-democratic Party in the 1970, which failed. The party was only able to achieve 108 votes in 2010, the last election it participated in. As the older members started to die off the party slowly faded into complete irrelevancy and finally lost it's status as a political party and became a 'registered association' until it's official dissolution on the 1st November 2014. Ulrich Villmow is still alive and gave an interview to parteienlexikon.de about his work in the party on the 3rd October 2017.

Organisation
The party was lead by the "Zentralbüro" (Central bureau), a collective of 6 people, one of which being the chairman of the bureau and party. The party had it's own provident fund called "UAP-Unterstützungskasse" which helped provide for it's members' pension. The party started issuing a newspaper called "Ruhr-Arbeiter-Zeitung" (RAZ) in 1961; said newspaper was renamed to the "Reichs-Arbeiter-Zeitung" in 1966. The youth organisation "Blaue Adler-Jugend" (Blue Eagle-Youth) was founded on the 10th December 1997; while theoretically independent, it acted as the defacto youth-wing of the party. The Blue Eagle-Youth claimed a membership of 2 400 in 1971, observers however estimated the membership of the organisation below 100. The BAJ issued it's own newspaper named "barricade" until 1971. The party was mainly active in North-Rhine-Westphalia as it was unable to gain much traction outside of the state.