Marcel Pilet-Golaz
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Marcel Pilet-Golaz (31 December 1889 – 11 April 1958) was a Swiss politician. He was elected to the Swiss Federal Council on 13 December 1928 and handed over office on 31 December 1944. He was affiliated to the Free Democratic Party.
During his time in office he held the following departments:
- Department of Home Affairs (1929)
- Department of Posts and Railways (1930–1939)
- Political Department<ref name = FDFA>In current language the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.</ref> (1940)
- Department of Posts and Railways (1940)
- Political Department<ref name = FDFA/> (1941–1944)
He was President of the Confederation twice in 1934 and 1940.
Pilet-Golaz was said to be a pragmatic politician who tried to negotiate with German nazism and Italian fascism. He, therefore, had to face the reproach that he sympathized with fascism.
As the head of the foreign affairs, he had to find a balance between the German requirements, the objections of the Allies and the will of Switzerland to stay independent. His choice to build a relatively good rapport with Nazi Germany was very disputed, during as well as after the war. On 25 June 1940, Pilet-Golaz gave a speech containing numerous references to the coming of an authoritarian regime in Switzerland and to a "new order" in Europe.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In September, he met with three representatives of the National Movement of Switzerland (Nationale Bewegung der Schweiz/Mouvement national suisse), the Swiss pro-Nazi party (the MNS was disbanded by the Federal government two months later).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 1944, when Pilet-Golaz tried to take up relations with the Soviet Union, the latter refused roughly. So he lost all support and had to resign.
Notes and references
[edit]- Werner Rings, Die Schweiz im Krieg.
External links
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- 1889 births
- 1958 deaths
- People from Morges District
- Swiss Calvinist and Reformed Christians
- Free Democratic Party of Switzerland politicians
- Members of the Federal Council (Switzerland)
- Presidents of the Swiss Confederation
- Interior ministers of Switzerland
- Ministers of Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications of Switzerland
- Members of the National Council (Switzerland)
- World War II political leaders
- University of Lausanne alumni
- Foreign ministers of Switzerland