Kyösti Kallio | |
Order: | 4th President of Finland |
Nationality: | Finnish |
Term Start: | 1 March 1937 |
Term End: | 19 December 1940 |
Primeminister: | Aimo Cajander Risto Ryti |
Predecessor: | Pehr Evind Svinhufvud |
Successor: | Risto Ryti |
Order2: | 9th, 13th, 17th and 22nd Prime Minister of Finland[1] |
Term Start2: | 7 October 1936 |
Term End2: | 15 February 1937 |
President2: | Pehr Evind Svinhufvud |
Predecessor2: | Toivo Mikael Kivimäki |
Successor2: | Aimo Cajander |
Term Start3: | 16 August 1929 |
Term End3: | 4 July 1930 |
President3: | Lauri Kristian Relander |
Predecessor3: | Oskari Mantere |
Successor3: | Pehr Evind Svinhufvud |
Term Start4: | 31 December 1925 |
Term End4: | 13 December 1926 |
President4: | Lauri Kristian Relander |
Predecessor4: | Antti Tulenheimo |
Successor4: | Väinö Tanner |
Term Start5: | 14 November 1922 |
Term End5: | 18 January 1924 |
President5: | Kaarlo Juho Ståhlberg |
Predecessor5: | Aimo Cajander |
Successor5: | Aimo Cajander |
Office6: | 11th, 13th, 16th, 19th, 21st and 24th Speaker of the Finnish Parliament |
Term Start6: | 21 October 1930 |
Term End6: | 8 October 1936 |
Predecessor6: | Juho Sunila |
Successor6: | Väinö Hakkila |
Term Start7: | 1 February 1929 |
Term End7: | 16 August 1929 |
Predecessor7: | Paavo Virkkunen |
Successor7: | Paavo Virkkunen |
Term Start8: | 3 September 1927 |
Term End8: | 31 January 1928 |
Predecessor8: | Paavo Virkkunen |
Successor8: | Paavo Virkkunen |
Term Start9: | 2 May 1924 |
Term End9: | 31 March 1925 |
Predecessor9: | Paavo Virkkunen |
Successor9: | Wäinö Wuolijoki |
Term Start10: | 6 September 1922 |
Term End10: | 14 November 1922 |
Predecessor10: | Wäinö Wuolijoki |
Successor10: | Wäinö Wuolijoki |
Term Start11: | 8 May 1920 |
Term End11: | 29 March 1921 |
Predecessor11: | Lauri Kristian Relander |
Successor11: | Wäinö Wuolijoki |
Birth Date: | 10 April 1873 |
Birth Place: | Ylivieska, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Helsinki, Finland |
Party: | Agrarian |
Signature: | Signature of Kyösti Kallio.svg |
Occupation: | Farmer Bank clerk |
Spouse: | Kaisa Nivala |
Children: | 6 |
Kyösti Kallio (in Finnish pronounced as /ˈkyø̯sti ˈkɑlːio/; 10 April 1873 - 19 December 1940) was a Finnish politician who served as the fourth president of Finland from 1937 to 1940. His presidency included leading the country through the Winter War; while he relinquished the post of commander-in-chief to Carl Gustaf Emil Mannerheim, he played a role as a spiritual leader. After the war, he became both the first President of Finland to resign and the only one to die in office, dying of a heart attack while returning home after submitting his resignation.
Kallio was the only president of Finland who did not have an academic or similar degree.[2] He was a prominent leader of the Agrarian League party, and served as Prime Minister four times and Speaker of the Parliament six times.[3] [4] During his political career, he also served as a five-time Minister of Agriculture for most of the period between 1917 and 1922, including in the Independence Senate and the Civil War-era White cabinet, led a 1922 land reform to aid tenant farmers in acquiring their own land, and was a candidate in the 1931 presidential election before defeating incumbent president Pehr Evind Svinhufvud in the subsequent elections of 1937.
Kyösti Kallio, originally Gustaf Kalliokangas (forename's in Swedish pronounced as /ˈɡɵ̂sːtav/, surname's in Finnish pronounced as /ˈkɑlːioˌkɑŋːɑs/), was born in Ylivieska, Grand Duchy of Finland, which was an autonomous region of the Russian Empire at the time. His father Mikko Kalliokangas was a farmer and prominent local politician. Young Kyösti's life also included his father's unmarried and childless cousin, Anttuuna Kangas, or aunt Anttuuna, who arranged for the boy to go to Raahe's junior high school in 1886.[5] After that, he was educated in Oulu where he became acquainted with Santeri Alkio, author and future ideologue of the Agrarian League.
Kallio entered politics during the first Russification campaign of Finland as a member of the Young Finnish Party. He served in the Diet of Finland from 1904 to 1906 as a member of the Estate of the Peasantry.[6] He joined the newly founded Agrarian League in 1906 and became one of its most prominent leaders.
After the February Revolution of 1917 dethroned Tsar Nicholas II, the Russian provisional government tasked Vice Admiral Adrian Nepenin with overseeing the change of government in Finland. Nepenin started by inviting a handful of Finnish politicians to discuss the situation on March 17. Kallio represented the Agrarian League; and when the Finnish politicians the next day sent a delegation to Saint Petersburg to negotiate a cessation to the Russification campaign, Kallio was again a member. The delegation was successful, and Finland was permitted to assemble a fully parliamentary Senate. Kallio came to serve as Agrarian minister in the Senate of Oskari Tokoi, which took office March 26. Most of his time was spent trying to mediate the agrarian strikes and finding foodstuffs for the country, while the First World War raised the prices in Europe.
After the Tsar had been dethroned, the Finnish Parliament had to decide whether the highest authority in the country had passed on to the Russian Provisional Government, the Finnish Parliament, or the Finnish Senate. The question led to serious strife between the right-wing and left-wing elements of the Parliament. Kallio initially supported the socialists in demanding that power transfer to the Parliament, but disapproved of their cooperation with Russian Bolsheviks and Mensheviks; and Kallio ultimately voted against the bill they had drafted. Nonetheless, the socialist proposal passed, which the Russian Provisional Government saw as an affront to their power; and Alexander Kerensky consequently dissolved the Finnish Parliament on September 8. Kallio and the Socialist senators resigned from the senate, which continued to operate under the leadership of E. N. Setälä.
After the October Revolution, the Finnish bourgeoisie were willing to compromise and give parliament the highest authority fearing Bolshevik rule would spread to Finland. Setälä's Senate resigned immediately after the question was settled. Kallio was again named Agrarian Minister in the Senate of P. E. Svinhufvud whose first priority was to declare Finland independent. On December 4 the Senate introduced a declaration of independence to the Parliament; and the next day Kallio wrote a resolution, which the Parliament passed with votes 100–88.
During the Civil War in Finland, Kallio hid in red-dominated Helsinki, because he was at least nominally on the white side and therefore a "class enemy"; he formed a new senate (government) in Helsinki after German troops had defeated the reds in the city. Afterwards he became a moderate peace-maker and disapproved of retaliation against the reds. In his reconciliation speech in Nivala, Kallio said the following:
During the debates over the form of the new state in 1918, Kallio resigned from the senate because he supported a republic instead of constitutional monarchy. Eventually, the monarchist stand lost, and he returned to the Cabinet to become prime minister. He was a reformist who emphasized education, settlement, and land reform. His greatest achievement was "Lex Kallio" in 1922, legislation allowing the state to buy land to encourage new settlements, and to let the former tenant farmers and other landless rural people buy small farms (see, for example, Seppo Zetterberg et al., ed., "Suomen historian pikkujättiläinen").
He supported prohibition in Finland, and was dismayed when it was repealed in 1932.
Kallio was an anti-communist, suppressing the Communist Party of Finland (SKP) in 1923. However, he resorted to legislative methods. When the violent right-wing Lapua Movement asked him to become their leader, he refused and was then instead subjected to their death threats.
Kallio was elected president with the votes of a centrist (Agrarian and Progressive) and social democratic coalition, which wanted to ensure that President Svinhufvud would not be re-elected. Kallio took the role of a parliamentarian president and avoided use of his personal power.
On the eve of the Winter War, when Marshal Mannerheim once again threatened to resign from his post as chairman of Finland's Defence Council due to a schism with the cabinet, Kallio convinced him to stay. During the war Kallio resisted the idea of giving up any territory to the Soviet Union, but was forced to agree to sign the Moscow Peace Treaty in 1940. His health began to fail - and his right arm was paralyzed - He was not active in the dealings with Germany leading to the Continuation War. On 27 August Kallio suffered a serious stroke.[7] Prime Minister Risto Ryti took over his duties. Kallio's heart became weak while he knowingly took risks by agreeing to the formal farewell ceremonies.[8] [9]
Kallio left a notice of resignation on 27 November 1940. He was planning to leave the capital and retire to his farm at Nivala after the farewell ceremonies on the evening of 19 December 1940; but he collapsed and died that night at the Helsinki Central Railway Station in the arms of his adjutant before a guard of honour while a band played the patriotic Finnish march Porilaisten marssi.[10] [11] [12] One story tells that Kallio died in the arms of Marshal Mannerheim,[13] but this is most likely part of the construction of Mannerheim's personal cult. In reality, Kallio died in the arms of his adjutant Aladár Paasonen[14] and colonel A. F. Airo.
A significant part of Kallio's personality and a motive for the social reforms which he supported and promoted was his deep Christian faith, which he had adopted already at home, and which was deepened during his marriage to Kaisa Nivala, who was also a devout Christian. Although Kallio was often too busy to go to church, he prayed often when encountering difficulties in making political decisions, and some of these prayers he recorded in his diary. He also read Christian books with his wife and often discussed them by exchanging letters. He often referred to God in his speeches, and during the Winter War he asked the Finns who were serving their country to read the Bible. When he was forced to sign the harsh Moscow Peace Treaty in March 1940, Kallio quoted freely from the Book of Zechariah, saying: His right arm was paralysed the following summer, and he was forced to switch his writing hand. In the Presidential Palace, shortly before leaving for Helsinki Central Railway Station for the last time, Kallio sang a hymn with his family.[8] [15] [16]
Kallio was played by Ossi Ahlapuro in the 2001 television film Valtapeliä elokuussa 1940, directed by Veli-Matti Saikkonen.[17]
Kyösti Kallio | |
Middle Width: | 90 |
Lesser Width: | 45 |
Lesser Caption: | Coat of arms |
Armiger: | Kyösti Kallio |