(Redirected from Austro-fascist)
'Austrofascism' is a term which is frequently used by left-wing historians to describe the authoritarian rule installed in
Austria between
1934 and
1938. It was based on a ruling party, the
Fatherland Front (''Vaterländische Front'') and the
Heimwehr (Homeguard) paramilitary units. Leaders were
Engelbert Dollfuß and, after Dollfuß's assassination,
Kurt Schuschnigg, who originally were politicians of the
Christian Social Party, which was quickly integrated into the new movement.
Origins and ideology
The system of Austrofascism was partly based on
Gentile's
Italian fascism and conservative
Political Catholicism (
Clerical Fascism). Its basis was laid in the
Korneuburg Program of the Christian Social Party on
May 18,
1930. Effectively, it meant that the democratic
constitution and
parliamentarism were replaced by an
authoritarian system, the so-called ''Ständestaat'' (State of Estates).
Notably, in the ''Ständestaat'' constitution, Austria was not a
republic, but its official name was ''Bundesstaat Österreich'' (Federation of Austria), which belies the fact that the country's constituent parts, the
States of Austria, effectively had fewer powers than under the 1920 constitution.
History
In May 1930 the
Christian social paramilitary organization
Heimwehr released a political declaration condemning both “Marxist class struggle” and “liberal-capitalistic economical structures” and calling for an authoritarian state. These political views were also shared by young Christian social militants like the future chancellor of the
Second Austrian Republic,
Leopold Figl.
On
4 March 1933, a parliamentary blockage due to internal procedure issues offered chancellor
Dollfuß a reason for the elimination of the parliament from the political life. Thus, three days later he enacted an assembly ban and restored censorship. As the opposition attempted to resume the parliament’s activity on
15 March 1933, the MPs were impeded from entering the Parliament Hall.
Thereafter the Dollfuß government established an authoritarian regime ruling with special enacting laws for wartime economy which dated from 1917. The new authoritarian regime took a set of actions aiming at consolidating power, disbanding the paramilitary organization of the social democrat party (
Republican Protection League) (
31 March 1933), suspending parliamentary and local elections (
10 May 1933) and proclaiming the
Fatherland Front (
20 May 1933). Political parties not affiliated to the Fatherland Front have been proscribed: the
Communist Party of Austria (
26 May 1933) and the
NSDAP (
19 June 1933).
After the
February Uprising of
1934 opposing social democrats and conservatives, the
Social Democratic Party of Austria was banned as well. Dollfuß completed his work with the constitution of
May 1,
1934. Austrofascism then remained in place until the
Anschluss to
Germany in
1938.
Criticism of the term
Although the term "Austrofascism" was used by the proponents of the regime itself, it is still disputed today. It is predominantly used by left-wing historians, while most historians prefer the term ''Ständestaat''. On a political level, criticism sometimes comes from representatives of the
Austrian People's Party (ÖVP; the post-WW2 successors of the Christian Social Party), some of whom do not distance themselves from the authoritarian Austrian regime of the Patriotic Front. They usually stress the Austro-fascists' merits in fighting for Austria's independence and against
Nazism. Other parties often critizise the ÖVP for keeping a picture of Dollfuß — the man who abolished parlamentarism — on one of the walls of its offices in the Austrian parliament.
While it is undisputed that the regime was an authoritarian dictatorship in character (it locked away members of the opposition, mostly nazis, communists and social-democrats, in
concentration camps called ''Anhaltelager'' or imprisonment centers), some historians argue that it lacked certain characteristics of true fascism. Although the Patriotic Front used fascist-like symbols (such as the ''Kruckenkreuz'') and was meant to be a party of the masses, it lacked a solid basis in the population, especially among labourers who tended to support the
Communists or the
Nazis. The Austrian government also did not target minorities or engage in any sort of expansionism.
According to some historians, Austrofascism was a contrived and desperate attempt to "out-Hitler" ("''überhitlern''") the Nazis, a term used by Dollfuß himself. They argue that Dollfuß was interested in a renaissance of
Catholicism rather than in a
totalitarian state, meaning that he wanted to return to the time before the ideas of the
French Revolution of
1789 took hold.
Ernst Hanisch, for example, speaks of ''semi-fascism''. Some parallels to
Spain under
Francisco Franco cannot be overlooked however. Austrofascism is sometimes also called ''imitation fascism''.
External links
★
no-racism.net // Austrofaschismus
★
Der austrofaschistische Staatsstreich 1934