Agrarian Party (Scandinavia) (Cherry, Plum, and Chrysanthemum)

The Agrarian Party (Danish: Bondepartiet), officially the National Agrarian Party (Danish: Nationale Bondepartiet), is a centre-right, agrarian, liberal conservative political party in Scandinavia. The Agrarian Party was founded as part of a peasants movement against the landed aristocracy within the Nordic agrarian tradition, but today it espouses an economic liberal pro-free market ideology.

After the rise of Venstre in the last of 20th century, there was no organization for Scandinavian conservatives for election campaigns until 1904. The party was founded in 1904 as a merger between the conservative elements within the Rigsdag and the protectionist wing of the Venstre that split with more radically liberal party's wing led by Karl Staaff. The party, under the leadership of Arvid Lindman, in 1920s and 1930s intensified its support on the continuance and strengthening national business against the Social Democrats.

The Agrarian Party states that its ideology is a mix of liberalism and conservatism, and corresponds to what is called liberal conservatism. The party supports free markets and personal freedom and has historically been the essential force for privatizations, deregulations, tax cuts and a reduction of the public-sector growth rate. However, it still embraces most of the social benefits introduced since the 1930s.