Fidél Pálffy
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Count Fidel Palffy (6 May 1895-2 March 1946) was a Hungarian nobleman who emerged as a leading supporter of Nazism in Hungary.
After service in the First World War he lived on an estate in Czechoslovakia before returning to Hungary, where he was left bankrupt by the Great Depression of 1929.
He founded a group called the Hungarian National Socialist Party in 1933 and later merged it with two similar groups under Sándor Graf Festetics and Zoltán Meskó. By 1935 Palffy had assumed sole control of this group, although it failed to prosper as support drifted to Gyula Gömbös. Devoid of influence, Palffy turned to Germany and became an agent of the RSHA. Seeking to regain the initiative he worked variously with László Baky and Ferenc Szálasi in an attempt to launch a pro-German party. He finally achieved this goal in 1941 by relaunching the Hungarian National Socialist Party with Baky, although the party was considered conservative when compared to the Arrow Cross Party.
Palffy was considered to be a suitable candidate to lead Hungary by the SS, although ultimately the choice was not approved. Nevertheless, as Minister of Agriculture during the period of Nazi dominance, Palffy was held to be guilty of collaboration and was hanged for treason in March 1946.