Hjalmar Branting
Template:Short description Template:Infobox Prime Minister Karl Hjalmar Branting (Template:IPA; 23 November 1860 – 24 February 1925) was a Swedish statesman and diplomat who served as Prime Minister of Sweden on three occasions from 1920 to 1925. From 1907 until his death in 1925, Branting led the Social Democratic Party (SAP), playing a major role in advocating universal suffrage, an eight-hour workday, and other labor rights. He was also instrumental in foreign policy, including his support for the League of Nations.
In 1921, Branting shared the Nobel Peace Prize with the Norwegian secretary-general of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Christian Lous Lange.
Branting was supporter of the campaign of E. D. Morel claiming that French colonial troops were committing mass rapes during the occupation of the Rhineland. On 10 May 1920, Branting, declared that he believed Morel, saying that as a white man he was outraged that the French would deploy Senegalese troops in the Rhineland.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
Biography
Born to the professor Lars Gabriel Branting and the noblewoman and pianist Emma af Georgii, Branting was educated in Stockholm and at Uppsala University. He developed a scientific background in mathematical astronomy and was an assistant at the Stockholm Observatory, but gave up his devotion to scientific work to become a journalist in 1884 and began editing the newspapers Tiden and Social-Demokraten. The latter was official media outlet of the Swedish Social Democratic Party.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> His decision to publish an article by the more radical socialist Axel Danielsson, a piece denounced by opponents as insulting to religious sensitivities, resulted in political convictions for blasphemy and imprisonment for both men.<ref name="Enander 2009">Enander, Crister (14 December 2009). "I krigarens lofliga uppsåt att såra och döda" Template:Webarchive Template:In lang. Tidningen Kulturen. Retrieved 21 May 2010.</ref> Branting was imprisoned for three months in 1888.<ref name = "Robertson 487">Template:Cite book</ref>
Together with August Palm, Branting was one of the main organizers of the Swedish Social Democratic Party in 1889. He was its first Member of Parliament from 1896 and for six years the only one.
In the early years of the 20th century, Branting led the Social Democrats in opposing a war to force Norway to remain in a personal union with Sweden. When the crisis came in 1905, he coined the slogan "Hands off Norway, King!" The Social Democrats organized resistance to a call-up of reserves and made preparations for a general strike against a war; historians now acclaim this as a major factor in Norway's peaceful independence. In 1908 Branting established a monthly theoretical political journal entitled Tiden which is still in publication.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Branting accepted Eduard Bernstein's revision of Marxism and became a reformist socialist, advocating a peaceful transition from capitalism towards socialism. He believed that if workers were given the vote through universal suffrage, socialist legislation could be brought through the Riksdag. Branting supported the February Revolution in Russia in 1917. He supported the moderate Mensheviks against Lenin's more extreme Bolsheviks and defended the government of Alexander Kerensky, whom he even personally visited in Petrograd. When the October Revolution broke out in the winter of that year, Branting condemned the Bolshevik seizure of power. 1917 saw a split in the Swedish Social Democratic Party on this question, and the youth league and the revolutionary sections of the party broke away and formed the Social Democratic Left Party of Sweden, initially headed by Zeth Höglund, which soon reorganized as the Swedish Communist Party. Höglund later returned to the Social Democratic Party after Branting's death, and wrote a two-volume biography of Branting.
As prime minister, Branting brought Sweden into the League of Nations and was personally active as a delegate within it. When the question of whether Åland should be handed over to Sweden after the independence of Finland from Russia was brought up, he let the League decide upon the issue; the islands became an autonomous region of Finland. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1921 for his work in the League of Nations, sharing the prize with the Norwegian Christian Lous Lange.
Branting died in Stockholm at the age of 64 on 24 February 1925, four months after being sworn in for a third term as prime minister following the SAP's victory in the 1924 general election. He was succeeded as prime minister by Rickard Sandler; Per Albin Hansson became party chairman, later serving as prime minister from 1932 to 1946.
Monuments and memorials

Branting is commemorated by the Branting Monument in Stockholm. Additionally in Gothenburg, there is a tram and bus interchange named after Branting (Swedish: Hjalmar Brantingsplatsen). Stockholms Plads (Stockholm Square) in Copenhagen was renamed Hjalmar Brantings Plads in 1925.
See also
References
External links
- Template:Internet Archive author
- Hjalmar Branting Archive at marxists.org
- Template:Nobelprize
- Template:PM20
Template:S-start Template:S-ppo Template:Succession box Template:S-off Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:Succession box Template:S-end Template:Navboxes Template:Authority control
- Hjalmar Branting
- 1860 births
- 1925 deaths
- People convicted of blasphemy
- Politicians from Stockholm
- Prime ministers of Sweden
- Leaders of the Swedish Social Democratic Party
- Members of the Executive of the Labour and Socialist International
- Members of the Riksdag from the Social Democrats
- Racism in Sweden
- Nobel Peace Prize laureates
- Swedish democracy activists
- Ministers of finance of Sweden
- Ministers for foreign affairs of Sweden
- Swedish Nobel laureates
- Uppsala University alumni
- 20th-century Swedish politicians
- 19th-century Swedish politicians
- Swedish newspaper editors
- Swedish magazine founders
- White supremacists