In the old writing, the party claimed that children have the right to both a man and a woman as compensation for the father and mother they have lost. Therefore, the party has been against same-sex adoptions. It now disappears from the program and instead writes "that all children should have the right to both a mother and a father figure in their lives".

The proposal to accept the current abortion law's 18-week limit for voluntary abortion did not meet any major opposition.

Minimized asylum reception

Another decision was to push the proposal to remove the upper age limits for free mammography screening and cervical cancer screening.

The party management decided against the party leadership that the party board should investigate the legal and ethical boundaries on euthanasia for the next days.

The national days also stated that the party should not propose voluntary income sharing or joint taxation between spouses.

In the area of ​​migration, the country days decided, among other things, that asylum reception should be minimized in combination with increased return and enforced expulsions generate a net minus linked to asylum migration.

Tightened citizenship requirements

The requirements for citizenship must be sharply tightened and more clearly linked to adaptation to and participation in Swedish society.

Citizenship granted on erroneous grounds as well as citizenship belonging to persons affiliated with terrorist organizations must be revoked.

The national days also decided to pursue the proposal on paid police training, visitation zones, increased opportunities for secret coercive means and criminalization of participation in criminal organizations.

Retiring

The party's outgoing group leader Mattias Karlsson (SD) gave a fire talk about the party's role in saving the country.

- We carry the destiny of a millennial nation's culture on our shoulders. We carry the security and welfare of Swedish citizens on our shoulders. Well heavy but also an honorable burden, and I think we can and must carry our home and people safely in port, says Mattias Karlsson.