January 28, 2010 <Back to Index>
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Ståhlberg was born in Suomussalmi, in the Kainuu region of Finland.
He was the second child of Johan (Janne) Gabriel Ståhlberg, an
assistant pastor, and Amanda Gustafa Castrén. He was christened Carl Johan, but later Finnicized his name to Kaarlo Juho, as did most Fennomans. Ståhlberg and his family lived in Lahti,
where he also went for grammar school. Ståhlberg's father died
when he was a boy, leaving his family in a difficult financial
position. The family moved to Oulu,
where they entered school, whilst their mother worked to support the
family. Ståhlberg's family had always spoken and supported the Finnish language, and the young Ståhlberg was enrolled in Oulu's private Finnish lycee, where he would excel, and was the primus of his class. In 1889 he graduated as a Bachelor of Arts in Law from the University of Helsinki. He gained his Doctorate in Law in 1893. Ståhlberg soon began a very long career as the presenter and planner of the Senate's legislation, during the unfortunate period when Finland was a Russian Grand Duchy. He was a "constitutionalist"
- supporting the already existing Finnish constitutional framework and
constitutional legislative policies, including legislative resistance,
against the attempted Russification of Finland. He also came to support the call for women's suffrage, and had a moderate line on Prohibition. Ståhlberg served as secretary of the Diet of Finland's finance committee in 1891, as a committee secretary for the Diet of Finland, before being appointed as an assistant professor of Administrative Law and Economics at the University of Helsinki in 1894. It was at this time that he began his active involvement in politics, becoming a member of the Young Finnish Party. In 1893, Ståhlberg married his first wife, Hedvig Irene Wåhlberg (1869-1917). In
1898, Ståhlberg was appointed as Protocol Secretary for the
Senate's civil affairs subdepartment. This was the second-highest Rapporteur position
in the Finnish government. Ironically, this appointment to a senior
position in the Finnish administration was approved by the new Governor General of Finland, Nikolai Bobrikov, whose term in office saw the beginning of the period of Russification, and whose policies represented all that the constitutionalist Ståhlberg
was opposed to. Ståhlberg was elected in 1901 as a member of
Helsinki City Council, serving until 1903. In 1902, he was dismissed as
Protocol Secretary, due to his strict legalist views, and his
opposition to legislation on compulsory military service. Stählberg participated in the Diet of Finland (1904-1905) as a member of the Estate of Burgesses. In 1905, he was appointed as a Senator in the newly formed Senate of Leo Mechelin, with responsibility for trade and industry. One of the most important tasks facing the new constitutionalist Senate was to consider proposals for the reform of the Diet of Finland and,
although initially sceptical about some of the proposal,
Ståhlberg played a role in the drafting of the legislation which
created the Parliament of Finland.
Ståhlberg resigned from the Senate in 1907, due to the rejection
by Parliament of a Senate bill on the prohibition of alcohol. The
following year he resumed his academic career, with his appointment as
Professor of Administrative Law at the University of Helsinki, a
position he retained until 1918. During his time in that post he wrote
his most influential piece of work, "Finnish administrative law, volumes I & II."
He also remained active in politics, being elected to the central
committee of the Young Finnish Party. In 1908, Ståhlberg was
elected as a member of Parliament for the Southern Häme
constituency, which he represented until 1910. He also served as a
member for the Southern Oulu constituency from 1914 until his
appointment as President of the Supreme Administrative Court in 1918.
Ståhlberg also served as Speaker of the Parliament in 1914. After the February Revolution in
1917, Ståhlberg was backed by the majority of the non-socialists
members of Parliament as a candidate to become Vice-Chairman of the
Economic Department of the Senate. However, he did not receive the
support of the Social Democrats, which he had made a precondition of his being elected. Instead, the Social Democrat Oskari Tokoi was
elected, with Ståhlberg being appointed as chairman of the
Constitutional Council. This body had been set up earlier to draw up
plans for a new form of government for Finland, in light of the events
surrounding the February Revolution and the abdication of Nicholas II as Emperor of Russia and Grand Duke of Finland. The new form of government approved by the council was largely based on the 1772 Instrument of Government, dating from the period of Swedish rule. The proposed form of government was rejected by the Russian Provisional Government, and was then left largely forgotten for a time due to the confusion and urgency of the situation surrounding the October Revolution and the declaration of Finland's independence.
After Finland gained its independence in December 1917, the
Constitutional Committee drafted new proposals for a form of government
of an independent Republic of Finland. As chairman of the council,
Ståhlberg was involved in the drafting and re-drafting of
constitutional proposals during 1918, when the impact of the Finnish Civil War,
and debates between republicans and monarchists on the future
constitution, all led to various proposals. His proposals would
eventually be enacted as the Constitution of Finland in 1919. In 1918,
Ståhlberg supported the idea of republic instead of the then-popular constitutional monarchy.
Ståhlberg's appointment as the first President of the Supreme
Administrative Court in 1918 meant that he relinquished his role as a
member of Parliament, and was therefore not involved in the election by
the Parliament of Prince Frederick Charles of Hesse as King of Finland in
October of that year. As it became clear that Finland would be a
republic, Stålberg also championed direct election of the President of Finland, but the Council of State chose the electoral college system, although the first President would be elected by Parliament. Ståhlberg emerged as a candidate for President, with the support of the newly formed National Progressive Party, of which he was a member, and the Agrarian League. He was elected by Parliament as President of the Republic on July 25, 1919, defeating Carl Gustaf Mannerheim (the candidate supported by the National Coalition and Swedish People's parties)
by 143 votes to 50. Ståhlberg was inaugurated as the first
President of the Republic on the following day, and reluctantly moved
out of his home in Helsinki to take up residence in the Presidential Palace. As President, Ståhlberg was very formal and, due to his shyness,
wrote everything he had to say in public beforehand. He also had a
distaste for official occasions, and it was not solely due to
foreign-policy reasons that he declined to make a state visit to Sweden.
He had been a widower since 1917, but in 1920, he married his second
wife, Ester Hällström (1870-1950). As the first President of
the Republic, Ståhlberg had to form various presidential
precedents and interpretations of how the office of President should be
conducted. His term in office was also marked by a succession of
short-lived governments. During his time as president, Ståhlberg
nominated and appointed eight governments. These were mostly coalitions
of the Agrarians and the National Progressive, National Coalition and
Swedish People's parties, although Ståhlberg also appointed two
caretaker governments. Importantly, Ståhlberg generally supported
all the governments that he nominated, although he also sometimes
disagreed with them. He forced Kyösti Kallio's first government to
resign in January 1924, when he demanded early elections to restore the
full membership of Parliament - 200 deputies - and Kallio disagreed.
The Parliament had lacked 27 deputies since August 1923, when the
Communist deputies had been arrested on suspicions of treason. Ståhlberg
supported moderate social and economic reforms to make even the former
Reds accept the bourgeois republic. He pardoned most of the Red
prisoners, despite the strong criticism that this aroused from many
right-wing Finns, especially the White veterans of the Civil War and
several senior army officers. He signed into law bills that gave the
trade unions an equal power with the employers' organizations to
negotiate labour contracts, a bill to improve the public care for the
poor, and the Lex Kallio bill which distributed land from the wealthy
landowners to the former tenant farmers and other landless rural people. In foreign policy Ståhlberg was markedly reserved towards Sweden, largely as a consequence of the Åland crisis, which marked the early years of his presidency. He was also cautious towards Germany, and generally unsuccessful in his attempts to establish closer contacts with Poland, the United Kingdom and France. Ståhlberg
did not seek re-election in 1925, finding his difficult term of office
a great strain. He also believed that the right-wing and the
monarchists would become more reconciled to the republic if he stepped
down. He was offered the post of Chancellor of the University of
Helsinki, but declined it, instead becoming a member of the
government's Law Drafting Committee. He also served as a National
Progressive member of Parliament again, as a member for the Uusimaa
constituency from 1930 to 1933. In 1930, activists from the right-wing Lapua Movement kidnapped him and his wife, attempting to send them to the Soviet Union,
but the incident merely hastened the Lapua Movement's demise.
Ståhlberg was a National Progressive Party candidate in the 1931
Presidential election, eventually losing to Pehr Evind Svinhufvud by only two votes in the third ballot. He was also a candidate in the 1937 election, eventually finishing third. In 1946, Ståhlberg retired and became the legal adviser of President Juho Kusti Paasikivi.
Paasikivi often consulted Ståhlberg, for example on the 1950
presidential election which Ståhlberg believed should be normal,
if the Finnish people wanted to deserve an independent republic. He
died in 1952, and was buried in Helsinki's Hietaniemi cemetery with full honours. |