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The Dollfuß Ministry: The Democratic Prelude

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 September 2015

Extract

The typical dictator of the interwar period was, like Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini, already a convinced fascist or authoritarian when he first came to power. This was not the case in Austria, where Engelbert Dollfuß, the semifascist dictator of 1934, was seemingly a genuine democrat when he was appointed chancellor in May 1932. Even his appointment was accidental. Had the Social Democrats accepted Ignaz Seipel's and Karl Buresch's overtures in 1931 to join the Christian Socials in a coalition government, Dollfuß might never have become chancellor. And had they not rejected a second effort by Buresch in April 1932 and demanded new elections, democratic government in Austria would have been strengthened rather than weakened.

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Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1998

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References

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81 Dollfuß to Starhemberg, Vienna, July 28, 1932, AVA, Präs., no. 5886-Pr./32. The minutes of the council of ministers housed in the Verwaltungsarchiv contain a resolution certifying that “the Heimwehr's wishes in the writing lying before us are in accord with the program of the government, which is resolved under all circumstances to carry it out. It empowers the federal chancellor to reply to the above letter in this sense.” Beschlussprotokoll of the 819th session of the Ministerrat on July 28, 1932, AVA, Carton 151, p. 2.

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91 Foppa's speech in the Nationalrat on July 29, 1932, ibid., 2462. For the entire speech, see 2449–62.

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112 In the new elections held in November 1932, the National Socialists, however, elected only 196 deputies, and their percentage of the popular vote fell to 33.1 percent.

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