Nicolaas Havenga Explained

Nicolaas Havenga
Office1:Minister of Finance
Term Start1:1948
Term End1:1954
Primeminister1:D. F. Malan
Predecessor1:Claud Sturrock
Successor1:Eric Louw
Term Start2:1929
Term End2:1934
Primeminister2:J. B. M. Hertzog
Predecessor2:Henry Burton
Successor2:Jan Hendrik Hofmeyr
Parliament3:South African
Constituency Mp3:Ladybrand
Term Start3:1948
Term End3:1954
Predecessor3:J. J. Fourie
Constituency Mp4:Fauresmith
Term Start4:1915
Term End4:1940
Predecessor4:S. J. van der Merwe
Successor4:F. W. Beyers
Birth Date:1 May 1882
Birth Place:Fauresmith, Orange Free State
Death Place:Cape Town, Union of South Africa
Nationality:South African
Party:National Party (until 1934, 1951–)
United Party (1934–1941)
Afrikaner Party (1941–1951)

Nicolaas Christiaan Havenga (1 May 1882  - 14 March 1957) better known as Klasie Havenga, was a South African politician who served as Finance Minister in the governments of J. B. M. Hertzog and D. F. Malan.

Relationship with Hertzog

Havenga's family suffered financial hardship in his youth and as a result he was unable to attend university despite strong performances at school. His relationship with Hertzog began during the Second Boer War, when Havenga served as his private secretary and in this role was wounded several times. Following his war service he returned to study and qualified as a lawyer, whilst also joining the South African Party and representing the group in the Orange Free State provincial council from 1910. He was elected to the national parliament in the 1915 election and, after a period as a defence spokesman, soon became recognised for his financial expertise.[1]

Havenga was a leading member of Hertzog's government and indeed with Oswald Pirow he formed the basis of Hertzog's 'inner cabinet' which controlled decision making.[2] As Finance Minister he was responsible for the decision to take South Africa off the gold standard, one that led to a significant economic upturn.[3] Havenga had formerly been a harsh critic of this move, reflecting populist opinions that gold-producing South Africa should refuse to follow the United Kingdom off the gold standard, supposedly as a piece of nationalist posturing against the British.[4] In 1932 however rumours had been circulating that Tielman Roos was intending to split from the government over the issue and form a new party that would go into coalition with Jan Smuts, forcing Havenga to abandon his earlier stance to save the government.[5]

Afrikaner Party leader

A loyal supporter of Hertzog, he defected from the United Party government following its formation and later led the pro-Hertzog Afrikaner Party.[6] Havenga led the party in the 1943 election but all of its candidates, including Havenga himself, were defeated.[7] He had initially suggested an alliance with Malan but his opponent reasoned, correctly as it proved, that he did not need Afrikaner Party support to win the election and so rejected the offer.[8] Havenga was not a member of the House of Assembly at the time of the election as, like Hertzog, he had resigned his seat in the body when Hertzog was rejected as leader.[9] Havenga's 1487 votes in the Frankfort constituency was the party's best result but it was not enough to see him elected.[10]

Before long however he was back working with Malan in an Afrikaner Party-Herenigde Nasionale Party (HNP) coalition, which succeeded in ousting Smuts in 1948, the two having formally agreed an electoral pact for their respective parties in March 1947.[11] Malan had feared the possibility of the Afrikaner Party picking up disaffected Afrikaans voters and as such had been making overtures to Havenga since 1946.[12] Havenga's party gained nine seats after the HNP gave them a free run in a handful of constituencies.[13] He was elected as member for Ladybrand with a comfortable majority.[14]

Back in government

Havenga was appointed Minister of Finance yet again, serving under Malan as Prime Minister. Havenga was however not comfortable working with the HNP, especially after Malan began to suggest changing elements of the non-white franchise.[15] As a result Havenga, through their mutual friend Dr. E.G. Malherbe, made contact with Jan Smuts, suggesting that he might be prepared to form a government with him instead. Smuts was reluctant to work with Havenga, accusing him of fascism (particularly as the Afrikaner Party had absorbed a number of former members of the pro-Nazi Ossewabrandwag) and the notion finally broke down when Malherbe suggested that the arrangement might involve Havenga as Prime Minister with Smuts playing more of a background role.[16] After this scheme fell apart Havenga continued as Finance Minister and in this role garnered a reputation for fostering close economic co-operation with the United Kingdom, despite his earlier associations with anti-British sentiments.[17]

Despite his earlier attempts to break the coalition, following Malan's retirement in 1954 he indicated that Havenga, whose Afrikaner Party had by then merged with the HNP, was his preferred choice of successor.[18] However in spite of this endorsement, the extremists in the party indicated that they intended to challenge the succession, feeling that Havenga had become too moderate.[17] Havenga lost out to Johannes Gerhardus Strijdom and spent his final years in retirement, although he did emerge to criticise Strijdom's reforms in 1955.[19]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Ian Loveland, By Due Process of Law?: Racial Discrimination and the Right to Vote in South Africa, 1855–1960, Hart Publishing, 1999, p. 158
  2. N.G. Garson, 'Oswald Pirow' entry in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  3. http://www.ourcivilisation.com/smartboard/shop/armstrng/chap60.htm Grey Steel; Part 7, 60: The Tour Of England And North America
  4. Ronald Hyam & Peter Henshaw, The Lion and the Springbok: Britain and South Africa since the Boer War, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 126
  5. Neil Roos, Ordinary Springboks: White Servicemen And Social Justice In South Africa, 1939–1961, Ashgate Publishing, 2005, p. 21
  6. http://africanhistory.about.com/library/biographies/blbio-dfmalan.htm Daniel Francois Malan
  7. Howard Brotz, The Politics of South Africa: Democracy and Racial Diversity, Oxford University Press, 1977, p. 14
  8. Newell Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, 1934–1948, University of California Press, 1974, p. 84
  9. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, p. 75
  10. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, p. 90
  11. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, p. 102
  12. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, pp. 103–105
  13. Brotz, The Politics of South Africa, p. 17
  14. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, p. 144
  15. Maynard Stultz, Afrikaner Politics in South Africa, p. 162
  16. Brotz, The Politics of South Africa, pp. 17–20
  17. Hyam & Henshaw, The Lion and the Springbok, p. 137
  18. https://web.archive.org/web/20121024114020/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,823581,00.html?iid=chix-sphere Exit the Boer Moses
  19. https://web.archive.org/web/20081215055347/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,866417,00.html The Union in Danger