Swedish electoral authorities have refused to register the Muslim-led “Jasin” party from taking part in next year’s Swedish election after radical Islamists had tried to take it over.

But let’s not be too quick to applaud. The party is already gearing up for another try, and may eventually succeed, given the Islamization of Sweden. Here’s a glimpse into the Islamic supremacist incursion into that country:

The Swedish municipality of Nacka was just accused of buying apartments for a Muslim migrant and his three wives.

Swedish no-go zones have been overtaken by jihadi thugs, such that over 80 percent of police want to quit their jobs.

Sweden is also trying to track down over 10,000 rejected refugees who are in hiding.

The decline of Sweden has even seen Church leaders abandoning an initiative “aimed at showing support for persecuted Christians…concerned that it might offend Muslims.” Recently, a young Christian convert faced possible death after Swedish authorities decided to deport her to Iran. Aideen Strandsson said thatshe was told, “it’s your problem you decided to become a Christian.” Hungary offered her sanctuary.

Already, the sharia police are in operation in Sweden and still, the predominant concern of authorities is about political correctness and “offending Muslims,” even as some Muslim communities in Sweden are calling for “separate Sharia laws”.

That Sweden has rejected a Muslim party as “Islamist” is not necessarily good news. However, the party’s spokesman, Mehdi Hosseini, is saying: “We have had some problems in our party. Radicals tried to take over…our goal is to make the situation of people in Sweden better, not to introduce Shariah law.”

Chances are that the naive in Sweden will take Hosseini at his word. Islamic supremacists have caught on to the fact that Westerners reject the Sharia, so they simply promise not to introduce it while working to advance it even further.

“Muslim Party ‘Taken over by Islamists’ Rejected by Swedish Election Agency”, by Chris Tomlinson, Breitbart, September 20, 2017: