Anton Reinthaller

Anton Reinthaller
Born Anton Reinthaller
April 14, 1895(1895-04-14)
Mettmach
Died March 6, 1959(1959-03-06) (aged 63)
Innviertel
Citizenship Austrian
Occupation Forestry engineer
Known for Politician
Title FPÖ Party Chairman
Term 1956-1958
Predecessor first office holder
Successor Friedrich Peter
Political party Landbund, Nazi Party, Federation of Independents, Freedom Party of Austria

Anton Reinthaller (April 14, 1895 – March 6, 1959) was an Austrian right wing politician active before and after the Second World War. He was the inaugural leader of the Freedom Party of Austria (FPÖ).

Contents

Early life

Born in Mettmach, he served in World War I where he was taken prisoner by Russia in 1916 before being exchanged in June 1918.[1] Returning to Austria he studied at the Agricultural College and became a forestry engineer in Lilienfeld, Attersee and Haus im Ennstal.[1]

Pre-war political activity

Politically, Reinthaller initially belonged to the Landbund before switching to support the Nazis in 1928. He rose through the ranks of Austria's Nazi set-up, becoming state peasant leader in 1934, although his moderate stance, particularly with regards to the use of violence, meant that he was often in conflict with Theodor Habicht who feared that Reinthaller was preparing to break away and form a specifically Austrian Nazi movement that would reject union with Germany.[1] However Habicht did not move against Reinthaller, who enjoyed good personal relations with Rudolf Hess and Richard Walther Darré, although ultimately he was removed after he spearheaded his own negotiations with Engelbert Dollfuß.[1]

Although he had no real involvement in the failed Nazi putsch of July 1934 Reinthaller was nonetheless held for a while in Kaisersteinbruck concentration camp where he met and befriended Ernst Kaltenbrunner who, despite his own more radical views, became a supporter of Reinthaller.[1] Reinthaller attempted to negotitate an agreement with Kurt Schuschnigg with a view to the Nazis entering the Vaterländische Front although when this failed he stepped aside from his role as the effective leader of Austria's Nazis in favour of Hermann Neubacher.[1] Reinthaller stepped away from active politics after this, although he remained a voice of dissent on the sidelines, attacking nazi anti-Semitism on the basis of its negative impact on international opinion of the Nazis, whilst also resisting any move to complete Anschluss.[1]

He would re-emerge in 1935, with the backing of Kaltenbrunner and Franz Langoth, to form a National Front that sought to unite Austria's Sturmabteilung and Schutzstaffel with other rightist groups in the service of the Vaterländische Front. However the radical Nazi leader Josef Leopold stepped in as he felt Reinthaller was diluting the impact of Austria's Nazis too much and had him deprived of his party positions in 1937.[1]

Under Nazism

Although Reinthaller had lost his positions in the Austrian Nazi Party and had earlier opposed Anschluss, he made something of a political comeback following the Nazi takeover. Becoming a member of the Reichstag he served as Minister for Agriculture in the cabinet of Arthur Seyss-Inquart from March 12 1938 to April 30 1939.[1] Following this he was appointed Undersecretary of State to the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture under his old friend Darré and went on to fill a number of positions for the Nazi government, including Gauamtsleiter of the Lower Danube Landvolk, head of the Landesernährungsamt Donauland (regional Food Office) and a Brigadeführer (Major General) in the SS.[1]

Post-war activism

After the war, Reinthaller became an advocate of the 'Third force' in Austrian politics.[1]. On this basis he was chosen to lead the FPÖ when it replaced the Federation of Independents in 1956.[2] Before long Reinthaller once again became an important figure in Austrian politics as, despite his Nazi origins, Julius Raab made a deal with Reinthaller in 1957 that he would ensure that the FPÖ did not nominate a candidate for the Presidency. As a result Raab was thus nominated as a joint Austrian People's Party-FPÖ candidate.[2] In September 1958, he lost the leadership of the FPÖ to Friedrich Peter and died in Innviertel the following year.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Philip Rees, Biographical Dictionary of the Extreme Right Since 1890, p. 317
  2. ^ a b Anton Pelinka, 'The Great Austrian Taboo: The Repression of the Civil War', New German Critique, No. 43, Special Issue on Austria (Winter, 1988), p. 77
Preceded by
---
FPÖ Party Chairman
1956–1958
Succeeded by
Friedrich Peter