Third Josef Hoop cabinet explained

Cabinet Name:Third Josef Hoop cabinet
Cabinet Type:Government
Jurisdiction:Liechtenstein
Flag:Flag of Liechtenstein.svg
Flag Border:true
Government Head:Josef Hoop
Deputy Government Head:Alois Vogt
State Head:Franz Joseph II
Total Number:5
Political Parties:FBP
VU
Legislature Status:Coalition
Opposition Parties:-->
Opposition Leaders:-->
Election:1939
Predecessor:Second Josef Hoop cabinet
Successor:Fourth Josef Hoop cabinet

The third Josef Hoop cabinet was the governing body of Liechtenstein from 30 March 1938 to 9 November 1944. It was appointed by Franz Joseph II and chaired by Josef Hoop. The cabinet was formed as a coalition government following the Anschluss of Austria in 1938, and it oversaw the majority of World War II before being succeeded in 1944.

History

See also: Ellhorn and 1939 Liechtenstein putsch.

Following the Anschluss of Austria in March 1938, Franz I named his grand-nephew Franz Joseph his regent.[1] The Progressive Citizens' Party and Patriotic Union formed a coalition government formed to prevent government deadlock and help retain Liechtenstein's neutrality, overseen by Franz Joseph II.[2] [3] [4] As a result, the Second Josef Hoop cabinet was succeeded with Josef Hoop continuing as Prime Minister of Liechtenstein.

Starting from 1938, the cabinet was faced with the challenge of pressure to transfer the Ellhorn mountain to Switzerland. Though Hoop was supportive of the transfer, he argued that the country should be fairly compensated for the loss of territory, such as the transfer of Swiss land elsewhere or greater banking cooperation between the two countries. The proposition faced resistance from the residents in Balzers, and was not approved by Franz Joseph II.[5] Also facing unofficial objections from Nazi Germany, Hoop was forced to end the negotiations with Switzerland.[6]

The 1939 Liechtenstein general election was not made public due to the country being under threat from Nazi Germany. It became known as the "silent election" as no voting actually took place; instead, the Progressive Citizen's Party and Patriotic Union used it to assign roughly an equal number of seats to each other in order to prevent the German National Movement in Liechtenstein (VBDL) from gaining any seats in the Landtag. As a result, the Hoop cabinet was now made out of several members of both parties. The government was placed under threat when the VBDL attempted a coup in March 1939, first trying to provoke a intervention from Nazi Germany by burning swastikas, followed by declaring Liechtenstein's annexation into Germany. The leaders were almost immediately arrested and the planned German invasion failed to materialise.[7] [8]

During World War II, Liechtenstein remained neutral.[9] Hoop's government considered non-binding, non-provocative diplomacy to be appropriate towards Nazi Germany, supplemented by courtesy gestures. In 1940, during a lecture in Stuttgart, Hoop showed respect for the German armies.[10] At the same time, the country tied itself as closely as possible to Switzerland during the war in hopes of retaining the country's neutrality.[11] It achieved the de-facto inclusion of Liechtenstein in the Swiss national supply.

At the request of Franz Joseph II on 9 November 1944, the cabinet was dissolved and succeeded by the Fourth Josef Hoop cabinet.

Members

PictureNameTermParty
Prime Minister
Josef Hoop30 March 1938 – 9 November 1944Progressive Citizens' Party
Deputy Prime Minister
Alois Vogt30 March 1938 – 9 November 1944Patriotic Union
Government councillors
Anton Frommelt30 March 1938 – 9 November 1944Progressive Citizens' Party
Arnold Hoop30 March 1938 – 27 December 1940Patriotic Union
Johann Georg Hasler13 August 1941 – 9 November 1944Patriotic Union

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: 1 April 1938 . Prince Franz to Return to Estate . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20200420235228/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/49180180/daily-news/ . 20 April 2020 . Daily News . 216 . Newspapers.com.
  2. News: 15 November 1989 . Liechtenstein's Prince Franz Josef II, 83 . 17 May 2023 . Los Angeles Times.
  3. Web site: 2007 . Parties in Liechtenstein 1921-1943 . 15 May 2023 . Prince and People: Liechtenstein Civics . de.
  4. Web site: Marxer . Wilfried . 31 December 2011 . Patriotic Union (VU) . 14 May 2023 . . de.
  5. News: Meier . Günther . 11 December 2023 . Die Angst vor feindlichen Truppen: Wie die «Loreley des Alpenrheins» den Besitzer wechselte . 30 March 2024 . . de.
  6. Web site: Büchel . Donat . 31 December 2011 . Ellhorn . 19 March 2024 . . de.
  7. Web site: Büchel . Donat . 31 December 2011 . Anschlussputsch . 14 November 2023 . . de.
  8. News: 27 April 1939 . Liechtenstein Jails Nazi For Attempt at Uprising . 18 May 2023 . The New York Times.
  9. Web site: Marxer . Roland . 31 December 2011 . Neutralität . 28 September 2023 . . de.
  10. Web site: Geiger . Peter . Peter Geiger . 31 December 2011 . Hoop,_Josef_(1895–1959) . 26 October 2022 . . de.
  11. News: Streitwireless . Clarence . 10 April 1938 . GUARANTEE SOUGHT BY LIECHTENSTEIN; Principality Wants to Join Switzerland if Powers Fail to Back Independencece GERMAN INVASION FEARED . 16 May 2023 . The New York Times.