Conservative Authoritarianism in Inter
Transcription
Conservative Authoritarianism in Inter
Conservative Authoritarianism in Inter-war Eastern Europe Conservative Authoritarian EE • Useful to start with ‘German fallacy’ • Functioning democracies were established in the countries after WW1 • These democracies could not survive the impact of the Great Depression • Democracies were replaced in the 1930s by fascist regimes In fact • With one clear exception (Czechoslovakia) and three partial exceptions (Yugoslavia, Latvia and Estonia) the countries of the region ceased to be democratic long before the recession • On the other hand, none of them were governed by fascist regimes for any significant period – most coups were to prevent fascist take-over, although some adopted some fascist trappings • Economic and especially ethnic crisis in Czechoslovakia resulted in not fascism but the destruction of the country Partial exceptions because • Yugoslavia, Latvia and Estonia were never challenged from the Left in the 1920s • The coup in Lithuania was in response to a socialist coalition government • Only Czechoslovakia had a legal Communist Party and allowed social democrats to participate fully in political life Nature of Regimes • Balkan Royal Dictatorships – Albania, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria • Baltic Presidential Dictatorships – Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia • Authoritarian democracies of the ‘historic nations’ of Central Europe – Hungary and Poland • Democratic Czechoslovakia Graphic Representation • In the following pictures notice the prominence of the army and the church in relationship to the high offices of state • Both Church and Army are classically conservative institutions • And the regimes created no new institutions for government • Nevertheless, there were fascist parties in all countries • But they nowhere held power for significant periods, and only approached mass support in Romania and Hungary Hugh Seton-Watson • ‘These dictatorships were not Fascist regimes in the proper sense … [they] never succeeded in raising the minimum of popular enthusiasm necessary for Fascism … [they] relied not even on artificially stimulated popular enthusiasm, but on police pressure … [they] were able to survive because they had a firm grasp on the bureaucratic and military machines, because the people were backward and apathetic, and because the bourgeoisie would always support them in case of need’ Political violence - Bulgaria • 9 June 1923: coup d’état against Alexanander Stamboliiski’s peasant government organised by Professor Tsankov, Colonel Velchev and IMRO. • Thousands of peasants killed. • Stamboliiski handed over to IMRO, tortured, made to dig his own grave and executed. • His hands were cut off for having signed the Nis convention establishing better relations with Yugoslavia and his severed head was sent in a biscuit tin to Sofia Political Violence Yugoslavia • Stalemate over Croat reluctance to participate in the state reached a nadir on 20 June 1928 • Montenegrin radical produced a revolver and killed two deputies and mortally wounding the Croat Radić , who died some seven weeks later • 9 October 1934 Croatian Ustase assassinate King Alexander as he visits Marseilles Ethnic violence - Romania • 28 Dec 1937, following elections which produced no overall winner, King Carol, afraid of the Iron Guard and not wanting to call on Maniu, appoints a fascist Goga-Cuza government, even though he had only 9% of the vote (compared with Iron Guards 16%, NPP’s 22% and Government Party’s 38%) • interpreted by Right as approval of fascist violence. Romania descends into chaos gang warfare, Jew-baiting, fighting between rival Iron Guard units, shops close, Stock Exchange collapses, Western Powers protest • 10 Feb 1938, Carol dismisses Goga, suspends constitution, introduces royal dictatorship Political Corruption - Romania • King Carol took a cut out of every stated contract and owned stock in all major companies, every casino and night club in Bucharest paid him extortion fees • Between 1930-40 he deposited $3040m abroad • After the loss of Bessarabia and Transylvania he fled the country in dead of night in a nine-carriage railway train filled with gold and art treasures