First Alexander Frick cabinet

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First Alexander Frick cabinet
File:Flag of Liechtenstein (1937–1982).svg
Government of Liechtenstein
File:Government of Liechtenstein 1949.jpg
Frick's cabinet in 1949
Date formed3 September 1945 (1945-09-03)
Date dissolved8 March 1951 (1951-03-08)
People and organisations
Head of stateFranz Joseph II
Head of governmentAlexander Frick
Deputy head of governmentFerdinand Nigg
Total no. of members5
Member partiesFBP
VU
Status in legislatureCoalition
15 / 15 (100%)
History
Election1949
PredecessorFourth Hoop cabinet
SuccessorSecond Alexander Frick cabinet

The first Alexander Frick cabinet was the governing body of Liechtenstein from 3 September 1945 to 8 March 1951. It was appointed by Franz Joseph II and chaired by Alexander Frick.

History

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Josef Hoop resigned as Prime Minister of Liechtenstein on 3 September 1945, and as a result the Fourth Hoop cabinet was dissolved.[1] He was succeeded by Alexander Frick.[1][2]

Upon taking office in 1945, the cabinet was faced with the challenge of dealing with the members of the First Russian National Army that had taken refuge in the country a few months prior.[3] They were cared for by the Liechtenstein Red Cross. On 16 August 1945, the Soviet Union sent a delegation to Liechtenstein in an attempt to repatriate the Russians, which was refused despite increasing Soviet pressure to participate in the repatriation program.[4] Eventually the government of Argentina offered the Russians asylum, and about a hundred people left.[5] Liechtenstein was the only country that did not participate in the Soviet repatriation program.[4]

According to Frick, with the support of Franz Joseph II, the Russians were at no point in danger of being extradited and the general population of Liechtenstein supported the government in providing asylum to them.[4]

In 1949, the government oversaw Liechtenstein ceding the Ellhorn mountain to Switzerland as a result of Swiss demands and threats to, among other things, cease end the customs union between the two countries. Despite the local community in Balzers previously refusing to do so in November 1948, the transfer was approved by the Landtag of Liechtenstein the following month. In exchange to the transfer, Switzerland agreed to forgive much of Liechtenstein's debt that it had acquired to the country throughout World War II.[6]

The cabinet was continued following the 1949 Liechtenstein general election. It was dissolved on 8 March 1951 and succeeded by the Second Alexander Frick cabinet.[7]

Members

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Picture Name Term Party
Prime Minister
File:Alexander Frick 1954.jpg Alexander Frick 3 September 1945 – 8 March 1951 Progressive Citizens' Party
Deputy Prime Minister
File:Stellvertretender Ministerpräsident Ferdinand Nigg.jpg Ferdinand Nigg 3 September 1945 – 8 March 1951 Patriotic Union
Government councillors
File:Franz Xaver Hoop 1949 (cropped).jpg Franz Xaver Hoop 3 September 1945 – 8 March 1951 Progressive Citizens' Party
Alois Wille 3 September 1945 – 8 April 1949 Patriotic Union
File:Marzell Heidegger (cropped).jpg Marzell Heidegger 8 April 1949 – 8 March 1951 Patriotic Union

See also

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References

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