This chapter summarises the findings of the book. The populist radical right (PRR) parties in the Nordic region share fundamental ideological characteristics with the European radical right. Migration and EU-scepticism are the most salient issues for the parties and their voters. However, while the combination of nativism and authoritarianism with liberal economic positions initially was hypothetized as the winning formula, the present PRR parties in the Nordic region have held and continue to hold centrist socio-economist positions, with some exceptions. By staking out unique policy positions in their opposition to immigration and the European Union in the Nordic political systems, these parties have carved out and met a voter demand. They have accepted the so-called Nordic welfare model, as well as parts of the gender equality model, and gradually come to defend some of the liberal values related to gender equality and LGBTQ-rights. The voters of the Nordic PRR parties are similar to radical right voters elsewhere in Europe: The majority are men; they are lower educated than and less satisfied with the way democracy works. Centre-right parties have included the PRR parties as full members in, or support parties to, government.