Vince Nagy Explained

Vince Nagy
Order:Minister of the Interior of Hungary
Term Start:12 December 1918
Term End:21 March 1919
Predecessor:Tivadar Batthyány
Successor:Jenő Landler and Béla Vágó
Birth Date:4 March 1886
Birth Place:Szatmárnémeti, Austria-Hungary (today Satu Mare, Romania)
Death Place:New York City, United States
Profession:politician
Party:Independence Party, FKGP, Hungarian Freedom Party, Hungarian Independence Party

Vince Nagy de Losonc (4 March 1886 – 1 June 1964) was a Hungarian politician, who served as Interior Minister between 1918 and 1919 during the Hungarian Democratic Republic. After the establishment of the Hungarian Soviet Republic, he returned to Szatmárnémeti, where the occupying Romanian Army imprisoned him for 9 months. From 1922, he was a lawyer. From 1928, he was the chairman of the Independence Party. After the German occupation (March 21, 1944) Nagy had to escape because of his anti-Nazi views. After the Second World War, he rejected the cooperation with the Hungarian Communist Party (as a Smallholders Party member) and so he was excluded, along with 18 other members from the party.

From 1948, he lived in the United States. He took part in Hungarian emigrant politics. Among other positions, he was an advisor at the Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

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