Parliament of the Klaipėda Region explained

The Parliament of the Klaipėda Region (Chamber of Representatives of the Memel Territory, Lithuanian: Seimelis) was the parliament of the Klaipėda Region (Memel Territory), an autonomous region of Lithuania. The parliament was established by the Klaipėda Convention of 1924 and the first elections took place in October 1925.

History

According to the Treaty of Versailles of 1919, the Klaipėda Region (Memel Territory) was detached from East Prussia, German Empire, and placed under temporary administration of the League of Nations. After the Klaipėda Revolt in January 1923, the region was transferred to Lithuania on condition that it would abide by the Klaipėda Convention, signed in May 1924 and fully effective in August 1925. The Convention included the Statute of the Klaipėda Region, which described region's legislative, judicial, administrative, and financial autonomy. The Convention also established the framework of the autonomous institutions – the local parliament and the Klaipėda Directorate (executive branch). The parliament was to be democratically elected for three-year terms by the local inhabitants in the proportion of one representative per 5,000 residents. The parliament confirmed and dismissed the Directorate, appointed by the Governor. The Directorate and the Lithuanian-appointed Governor could dismiss the parliament; in such a case, the new elections had to be called within six weeks. The Governor could veto laws passed by the parliament, but only if they violated the Convention, Constitution of Lithuania, or other international agreements. Of the 165 laws passed between 1925 and 1938, 62 were vetoed. The parliament was in charge of region's education, religious affairs, public health and welfare, local infrastructure, civil, criminal, and economic legislature, finances, court organization, etc.

In all elections 29 representatives were elected, and pro-German parties won a clear supermajority. The pro-German parliament often clashed with the more pro-Lithuanian Directorate. The first three parliaments were dismissed by the Directorate and the Governor. In the 1932 case, the Permanent Court of International Justice ruled that the Lithuanians erred in dismissing the third parliament. After the crisis surrounding the trial of the Nazi activists, the 1935 election was postponed by the Lithuanians beyond the six-week period allowed by the Convention in hopes to build a pro-Lithuanian momentum. The election law was also changed – the voters now had to submit 29 separate ballots for each individual they preferred, rather than a single ballot for a party. The German parties submitted a single unified list, while Lithuanian parties presented six. The parliament was disbanded after the ultimatum of March 1939 and subsequent Nazi German takeover of the region.

Speakers of the Parliament

Speakers
NamePeriodParty
1925–1927 Memel People's Party
1927–1935Memel Agricultural Party
1935Unified German list
Christoph Dietschmons(1936–1938)[1] [2] Unified German list

Election results

Election dateTotalLithuanian PartiesMemel Agricultural PartyMemel People's PartySocial Democratic Party
of the Memel Territory
Memel Workers PartyOther
Votes Turnout Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats Votes % Seats
1925-10-19 62,517 83.5% 3,761 6.0% 2 23,824 38.1% 11 23,082 36.9% 11 10,010 16.0% 5 1,564 2.5% 276 0.4%
1927-08-30 54,746 7,311 13.4% 4 18,776 34.3% 10 17,636 32.2% 10 5,712 10.4% 3 3,844 7.0% 2 1,467 2.7%
1930-10-10 49,630 8,817 17.8% 5 15,810 31.8% 10 13,709 27.6% 8 6,780 13.7% 4 2,062 4.2% 2 2,452 4.9%
1932-05-04 65,767 11,968 18.2% 5 24,468 37.2% 11 17,930 27.3% 8 5,104 7.7% 2 5,401 8.2% 3 896 1.4%
   Lithuanian listsUnified German list[3] Part of the German listNone
1935-09-29 1,962,061 91.3% 369,457 18.3% 5 1,592,604 81.7% 24
1938-12-11 2,095,206 96% 268,585 12.8% 4 1,826,621 87.2% 25 

Main source: Book: Žostautaitė, Petronėlė . Klaipėdos kraštas: 1923-1939 . Mokslas . 1992 . 70–71 . 978-5-420-00724-2. lt.

Notes and References

  1. http://memel.klavb.lt/MD/1937/19370127.pdf Memeler Dampfboot from 29.01.1936 Page 2
  2. http://memel.klavb.lt/MD/1937/19370127.pdf Memeler Dampfboot from 27.01.1937 Page 5
  3. Memelländische Einheitsliste in 1935, Memeldeutsche Einheitsliste in 1938