The Life Logic Party was founded by former
Mayor of Vilnius in 1996 and participated in the
1996 Lithuanian parliamentary election, in which it received 3,361 votes, or 0.26% of the total vote. Afterwards, it became absent from the political scene. The party's chairman, Bernatonis, ran as a candidate for the , a heterodox alliance of
socialist,
far-right,
Christian democratic and
populist parties with a common platform of opposition to influence of Western
intelligence services and
business oligarchs, in the
2000 Lithuanian parliamentary election. In 2000, followers of
Mindaugas Murza, leader of the
neo-nazi movement in Lithuania who was seeking to legalize his activities after the
Ministry of Justice refused their registration, chose the Life Logic Party for
entryism due to its small size and inactivity. On 10 December 2000, 400 neo-Nazis, including Murza himself, joined the party and immediately formed a majority of the party's members. The Nazi eagle and the "cross of crosses" became official symbols of the party and Murza's followers began organizing protests. However, in April 2001, Murza was expelled from the party by Bernatonis and his followers soon defected to the
National Democratic Party of Lithuania. Bernatonis suspended his membership in the party in 2002 and ran as an independent candidate in the
2002–03 Lithuanian presidential election. He campaigned on expanding the powers of the
President of Lithuania and delaying Lithuania's accession to the
European Union and
NATO. He received 3,121 votes, or 0.25% of the vote. The party merged into the
New Union in 2009. By then, the Supreme Electoral Commission had not received any reports from the party on its activities and membership for several years. ==Political program==