Norway’s ruling coalition disintegrated on Monday when a right-wing party pulled out over a decision to allow an alleged ISIS bride back into the country.

Siv Jensen, Norway’s finance minister and the Progress Party’s leader, announced the government resignations in a press briefing.

“I’m doing it because it’s the only right thing to do,” said Jensen, according to CNN. “I brought us into government, and I’m now bringing the party out.”

Jensen said the party was quitting due to a decision by the coalition’s three other parties to allow a Norwegian woman accused of aiding ISIS in Syria to return to Norway to seek urgent medical care for one of her kids.

“We could welcome the children, but we do not compromise with people who have voluntarily joined terrorist organizations and who are working to tear down all the values Norway is built on,” said Jensen.

“Many believe she used her child as a shield to come back to Norway. There are many in Norway who are displeased by this, not just in the Progress Party.”

The 29-year-old woman, whose name has not been made public, was born in the capital city of Oslo to a Norwegian-Pakistani family and has been living in ISIS territory in Syria since 2013.

While there, officials say she married two separate Islamic State fighters and had two children.

The woman, who had been holed up in a Kurdish-run detention camp in Syria, was arrested upon her return to Norway Saturday, but maintains her innocence.

Her 5-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter were both hospitalized.

The abrupt departure of Jensen and her party — which included six other cabinet ministers — means Prime Minister Erna Solberg no longer has a majority.

Solberg plans to continue ruling with a minority government — and stands by the decision to allow the accused jihadi to return.

“Our dilemma was therefore whether to bring home a child with his mother, or risk a sick 5-year-old dying,” Solberg said.

“To me, it was important the boy came home to Norway.”

With Wires