{{infobox president|name | Urho Kekkonen |
---|---|
Order | 8th President of Finland |
Nationality | Finnish |
Term start | 1 March 1956 |
Term end | 27 January 1982 |
Predecessor | Juho Kusti Paasikivi |
Successor | Mauno Koivisto |
Order2 | Prime Minister of Finland |
Term start2 | 20 October 1954 |
Term end2 | 3 March 1956 |
Predecessor2 | Ralf Törngren |
Successor2 | Karl-August Fagerholm |
Term start3 | 17 March 1950 |
Term end3 | 17 November 1953 |
Predecessor3 | Karl-August Fagerholm |
Successor3 | Sakari Tuomioja |
Order2 | Prime Minister of Finland |
Term start2 | 20 October 1954 |
Term end2 | 3 March 1956 |
Predecessor2 | Ralf Törngren |
Successor2 | Karl-August Fagerholm |
Order4 | Minister of the Interior |
Term start4 | 12 March 1937 |
Term end4 | 1 December 1939 |
Predecessor4 | Yrjö Puhakka |
Successor4 | Ernst von Born |
Term start5 | 17 March 1950 |
Term end5 | 17 January 1951 |
Predecessor5 | Aarre Simonen |
Successor5 | V. J. Sukselainen |
Order6 | Minister of Justice |
Term start6 | 7 October 1936 |
Term end6 | 12 March 1937 |
Predecessor6 | Emil Jatkola |
Successor6 | Arvi Ahmavaara |
Term start7 | 17 November 1944 |
Term end7 | 26 March 1946 |
Predecessor7 | Ernst von Born |
Successor7 | Teuvo Aura |
Term start8 | 20 September 1951 |
Term end8 | 22 September 1951 |
Predecessor8 | Teuvo Aura |
Successor8 | Sven Högström |
Order9 | Minister of Foreign Affairs |
Term start9 | 26 November 1952 |
Term end9 | 9 July 1953 |
Predecessor9 | Sakari Tuomioja |
Successor9 | Ralf Törngren |
Term start10 | 5 May 1954 |
Term end10 | 20 October 1954 |
Predecessor10 | Ralf Törngren |
Successor10 | Johannes Virolainen |
Birth date | September 03, 1900 |
Birth place | Pielavesi, Finland |
Death date | August 31, 1986 |
Death place | Helsinki, Finland |
Spouse | Sylvi Salome Uino |
Children | Matti, Taneli |
Party | Agrarian League 1956–1965: Centre Party 1965–1982 |
Religion | Lutheran |
Residence | Tamminiemi |
Alma mater | University of Helsinki |
Profession | Lawyer, police officer, journalist |
Signature | KekkonenUrhoSignature.png }} |
Urho Kaleva Kekkonen (; 3 September 1900–31 August 1986), was a Finnish politician who served as Prime Minister of Finland (1950–1953, 1954–1956) and later as the eighth President of Finland (1956–1982). Kekkonen continued the “active neutrality” policy of his predecessor President Juho Kusti Paasikivi, a doctrine which came to be known as the “Paasikivi–Kekkonen line”. Under it, Finland retained its independence while being able to trade with both NATO members and those of the Warsaw Pact. Kekkonen was the longest-serving President of Finland.
In independent Finland, Kekkonen first worked as a journalist in Kajaani then moved to Helsinki in 1921 to study law. While studying he worked for the security police EK between 1921 and 1927, where he became acquainted with anti-Communist policing. During this time he also met his future wife, Sylvi Salome Uino (1900–1974), a typist at the police station. They had two sons, Matti (born 1928) and Taneli (1928–1985). Matti Kekkonen served as a Centre Party member of Parliament from 1958 to 1969.
In 1927, Kekkonen became a lawyer and worked for the Association of Rural Municipalities but was forced to resign in 1932 after making abrasive comments. Kekkonen took a Doctor of Laws degree in 1936 at the University of Helsinki where he was active in the Northern Ostrobothnian student nation and editor-in-chief of the student newspaper Ylioppilaslehti in the period 1927–1928. He was also an athlete whose greatest achievement was to become Finnish high jump champion in 1924 with a jump of . He was best at the standing jump.
Kekkonen successfully stood for parliament a second time in 1936 whereupon he became Justice Minister, serving from 1936 to 1937. During his term, he enacted the "Tricks of Kekkonen" (''Kekkosen konstit''), an attempt to ban the right-wing extremist Patriotic People's Movement (''Isänmaallinen Kansanliike'', IKL). This was not entirely legal and was halted by the Supreme Court. Kekkonen was also Minister of Home Affairs from 1937 to 1939.
He was not a member of the cabinets during the Winter War or the Continuation War and was the sole member of parliament to vote against the Moscow peace treaty in March 1940. During the Continuation War, Kekkonen served as director of the Karelian Evacuees' Welfare Centre from 1940 to 1943 and as the Ministry of Finance's commissioner for coordination from 1943 to 1945, tasked with rationalising public administration. By that time, he had become one of the leading politicians within the so-called Peace opposition. In 1944, he again became Minister of Justice, serving until 1946, and had to deal with the war-responsibility trials. Kekkonen was a Deputy Speaker of the Parliament 1946–1947, and was Speaker of the house from 1948 to 1950.
In the 1950 Presidential election, Kekkonen was the candidate of the Agrarian Party. He conducted a vigorous campaign against incumbent President Juho Kusti Paasikivi to finish third in the first and only ballot, receiving 62 votes in the electoral college, while Paasikivi was re-elected with 171. After the election, Paasikivi appointed Kekkonen Prime Minister where in all his five cabinets, he emphasized the need to maintain friendly relations with the Soviet Union. Known for his authoritarian personality, he was ousted in 1953 but returned as Prime Minister from 1954 to 1956. Kekkonen also served as Minister of Foreign Affairs for periods in 1952–1953 and 1954 concurrent with his prime ministership.
Throughout his time as president, Kekkonen did his best to keep political adversaries in check. The Centre Party's rival National Coalition Party was remained in opposition for 20 years despite good election performances. On a few occasions, parliament was dissolved if its political composition did not please Kekkonen. Despite his career in the Centre Party, his relation to the party was often difficult. Too prominent Centre Party members often found themselves sidelined, as Kekkonen negotiated directly with the lower lever. Chairman of the Centre Party, Johannes Virolainen, was threatened by Kekkonen with dissolution of parliament when Kekkonen wanted to nominate SDP's Sorsa instead of Virolainen as Prime Minister. The so called "Mill Letters" of Kekkonen were a continuous stream of directives to high officials, politicians, journalists and others. Nevertheless, Kekkonen did not use coercive measures while some leading politicians, most notably Tuure Junnila and Veikko Vennamo, "branded" themselves "anti-Kekkonen".
In August 1958, Karl-August Fagerholm's third cabinet, a coalition government led by the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and including Kekkonen's party Agrarian League, was formed. The Communist front SKDL was left out. This irritated the Soviet Union because of the inclusion of ministers from SDP's anti-Communist wing, namely Väinö Leskinen and Olavi Lindblom. Kekkonen had warned against this, but was ignored by SDP. The crisis, called "night frost" by Nikita Khrushchev, led to Soviet pressure against Finland in economic matters. Kekkonen sided with the Soviet Union, working behind the scenes against the cabinet, and indeed, Fagerholm's cabinet resigned in December 1958. The Finnish Foreign Ministry ignored United States offers for help as promised by Ambassador Hubert Humphrey in November 1958. The crisis was resolved by Kekkonen in January 1959, when he privately travelled to Moscow to negotiate with Khrushchev and Andrei Gromyko. The crisis hurt the freedom of the parties to compose coalition governments, so that after the crisis, Kekkonen was seen as the only authority for deciding which parties can participate in cabinets.
The second time the Soviets helped Kekkonen came in the Note Crisis in 1961. The most widely held view of the Note Crisis is that the Soviet Union's motivation was to ensure Kekkonen's re-election. Kekkonen had planned to prevent the parties from forming an anti-Kekkonen alliance to promote Olavi Honka in the 1962 presidential elections by dissolving parliament. However, in October 1961, the Soviet Union sent a diplomatic note demanding common "military exercises" against the West in reference to the FCMA treaty, in effect a threat to occupy the country. As a result, Honka dropped his candidacy, leaving Kekkonen with a clear majority (199 / 300 electors) in the 1962 elections. In addition to support from his own party, Kekkonen received the backing of the Swedish People's Party and the Finnish People's Party, a small classical liberal party. Furthermore, the Conservative National Coalition Party quietly supported Kekkonen, although they had no official presidential candidate after Honka's withdrawal. Following the Note Crisis, genuine opposition to Kekkonen disappeared, and he acquired an exceptionally strong—later even autocratic—status as the political leader of Finland.
Kekkonen's policies, especially towards the USSR, were criticised within his own party by Veikko Vennamo, who broke off his Centre Party affiliation when Kekkonen was elected president in 1956. In 1959, Vennamo established the Finnish Rural Party, the forerunner of the nationalistic True Finns.
Initially Kekkonen had intended to retire at the end of this term, and the Centre Party already began to prepare his succession by Ahti Karjalainen. However, Kekkonen began to see Karjalainen as a rival instead, and eventually rejected the idea.
According to Finnish historians and political journalists, there were at least three reasons that Kekkonen clung on to the Presidency. Firstly, he did not believe that any of his successor candidates would manage Finland's Soviet foreign policy well enough. Secondly, until at least the summer of 1978, he considered there was room for improvement in Finnish-Soviet relations and that his experience was vital to the process. This is exemplified by the use of his diplomatic skills to reject the Soviet Defence Minister Dmitriy Ustinov's offer of closer military co-operation. Thirdly, he maintained that by working for as long as possible he would remain healthy and live longer. Kekkonen's most severe critics, such as Veikko Vennamo, claimed that he remained President so long mainly because he and his closest associates were power-hungry. In 1979 Urho Kekkonen was awarded the Lenin Peace Prize.
According to biographer Juhani Suomi, Kekkonen gave no thought to resigning until his physical condition began to decline in July 1981. The 80-year-old President then began to seriously consider resigning, most likely in early 1982. Prime Minister Mauno Koivisto finally defeated Kekkonen in 1981. In April, Koivisto had done what no one else had dared to during Kekkonen's presidency by stating that under the constitution, the prime minister and cabinet were responsible to Parliament not to the President. He then refused to resign at Kekkonen's request. Historians and journalists debate the precise meaning of this dispute.
According to Seppo Zetterberg, Allan Tiitta and Pekka Hyvärinen, Kekkonen wanted to force Koivisto to resign to decrease his chances of succeeding him as President. In contrast, Juhani Suomi, believed the dispute was about the scheming between prospective presidential candidates, such as Koivisto. Kekkonen at times criticized Koivisto for making political decisions too slowly and for his vacillation, especially for speaking too unclearly and philosophically. This is generally seen as the death-knell of the Kekkonen era.
Kekkonen became ill in August during a fishing trip to Iceland. He went on medical leave on 10 September, before finally resigning due to ill health on 26 October 1981, aged 81. There is no report available about his illness, as the papers have been moved to an unknown location, but it is commonly believed that he suffered from vascular dementia, probably due to atherosclerosis.
Kekkonen died at Tamminiemi in 1986, three days short of his 86th birthday, and was buried with full honors. His heirs restricted access to his diaries and later an "authorized" biography by Juhani Suomi was commissioned, the author subsequently defending the interpretation of the history therein and denigrating most other interpretations.
Kekkonen was largely responsible for Finlandization, a policy that allowed the Soviet Union to exert power over the country. The policy spanned his whole presidency with human rights violations associated with Finlandization carried out on the orders of Kekkonen. For example, he insisted that all Soviet defectors who managed to escape across the border to Finland were to br be forcibly repatriated.
Although controversial, his policy of neutrality allowed trade with both the Communist and Western blocs. The bilateral trade policy with the Soviet Union was lucrative for many Finnish businesses. His term saw a period of extremely high sustained economic growth and increasing integration with the West (such as EFTA). He remained highly popular during his term, even though such a profile approached that of a personality cult towards the end of his term. He is still popular among many of his contemporaries, particularly in his own Centre Party. Much controversy surrounds the interpretation of his policy.
Such was his impact on the Finnish political scene that Kekkonen's face appeared on the 500 Markka banknote during his term as President. The series of Finnish Markka banknotes used at this time was the second-to-last design series in the entire history of the currency. Very few Finns have ever got their face on a Markka note during their lifetime, and Kekkonen the last to do so. This banknote was declared Finland's most beautiful note according to voting organised by the commemorative coins and medal marketer Suomen Moneta on 1 April 2011.
Category:1900 births Category:1986 deaths Category:People from Pielavesi Category:Finnish Lutherans Category:Centre Party (Finland) politicians Category:People of the Finnish Civil War (White side) Category:Presidents of Finland Category:Prime Ministers of Finland Category:Members of the Parliament of Finland Category:Ministers for Foreign Affairs of Finland Category:Ministers of Justice of Finland Category:Speakers of the Parliament of Finland Category:Finnish people of German descent Category:Lenin Peace Prize recipients Category:University of Helsinki alumni Category:Cold War leaders Category:Finnish jurists Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of St. Olav
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