Karl Wiik | |
Office: | Member of the Parliament of Finland |
Termstart: | 1911 |
Termend: | 1918 |
Termend1: | 1929 |
Termend2: | 1941 |
Termend3: | 26 June 1946 |
Termstart1: | 1922 |
Termstart2: | 1933 |
Termstart3: | 1944 |
Caption: | Wiik circa 1910 |
Birth Date: | 13 April 1883 |
Birth Place: | Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire |
Birth Name: | Karl Harald Wiik |
Death Place: | Helsinki, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire |
Party: | Social Democratic |
Otherparty: | Finnish People's Democratic League |
Karl Harald Wiik (13 April 1883 – 26 June 1946) was a Swedish-speaking Finnish Social Democratic (SDP) leader. Elected to parliament numerous times between 1911 and the time of his death and Secretary of the SDP for more than a decade, Wiik is remembered as one of six radical SDP members of parliament expelled from the SDP in the aftermath of the Winter War with the Soviet Union.
Imprisoned during the years of World War II, Wiik was released in 1944, becoming a leader of the Finnish People's Democratic League (SKDL), a left wing political organization dominated by the newly legalized Communist Party of Finland (SKP).
Karl Harald Wiik was born 13 April 1883 in Helsinki, the capital of the Grand Duchy of Finland.
Wiik was a Member of the Finnish Parliament representing the Social Democratic Party of Finland (SDP) from 1911 to 1918, from 1922 to 1929, from 1933 to 1941 and from 1944 to his death.
An influential member of the Party's left wing, he was imprisoned for a time after the Finnish Civil War for having participated in the revolutionary government.
During the years after the fall of the 1918 Finnish Socialist Workers' Republic, Wiik emerged as a leader of the left wing of the SDP, taking an uneasy view of the successful effort of the influential SDP centrist Väinö Tanner to cobble together a coalition government late in 1926.[1] Wiik and others on the SDP left felt that an overly reformist orientation and efforts to build alliances with non-socialist moderates would have the effect of driving radical Finnish workers away from SDP and into the arms of Otto Kuusinen and the underground Finnish Communist Party (SKP).
Wiik was elected Secretary of the SDP in 1926 and served in that capacity until 1936, working during that time to maintain the organization's commitment to establishment of an explicitly socialist government elected by mobilization of the working class and radicalized farmers.[2] Wiik was unsuccessful in building a radical mass political organization, however, with SDP membership falling from a peak of just over 67,000 in 1919 to about 25,000 during the last half of the 1920s and early 1930s, with three of the party's main constituencies — workers, small farmers, and young people — each largely unenthusiastic about the party, its program, and its prospects.
In 1940 he and five other Social Democratic MPs were expelled from the Social Democratic Party because of their leftist orientation. The six expelled MPs formed the short-lived Socialist Parliamentary Group, all of whose members spent the years 1941 to 1944 in prison because of their unrelenting opposition to the Continuation War.
Upon their release from prison in September 1944 after the armistice with the Soviet Union, Wiik and the other formerly jailed members of the Socialist Parliamentary Group were among the founders of the Finnish People's Democratic League (SKDL), a united front organization of the Finnish radical left dominated in practice by the SKP. Shortly after joining the SKDL, Wiik came into conflict with the SKP over his open advocacy of socialism, as the SKP feared that mentioning socialism in the programme could drive away voters. Wiik, in contrast, wrote that "For me, Socialism is the most important thing; one must not sell it in order to win a few bourgeois votes."[3]
Karl Wiik died on 26 June 1946 in Helsinki. He was 63 years old at the time of his death.
Wiik's papers, including an extensive diary, are housed by the National Archive of Finland.