Santeri Alkio | |
---|---|
President of the Centre Party of Finland | |
In office 1918–1919 |
|
Preceded by | Filip Saalasti |
Succeeded by | Petter Vilhelm Heikkinen |
Personal details | |
Born | 17 June 1862 Laihia, Finland |
Died | 24 July 1930 Laihia, Finland |
(aged 68)
Nationality | Finnish |
Political party | Centre Party |
Spouse(s) | Susanna Mannila (1884–1894), Anna Augusta Falenius (1896–1930) |
Occupation | politician, political ideologist |
Profession | Writer |
Religion | Pantheism, Christianity |
Santeri Alkio (Finnicized form of Aleksander Filander; 17 June 1862 in Laihia, Finland – 24 July 1930 in Laihia) was a Finnish politician, author and journalist. He is also considered to be the ideological father of Finnish Centre Party.
Alkio's parents were Juho and Maria (née Jakku) Filander. He married teacher Anna Augusta Falenius in 1896.
Initially Santeri Alkio was active in the Young Finnish Party, but in the end decided it was too liberal for the farming population; urbanized parties did not, in his estimation, pay enough attention to the causes that were most important to farmers. To keep the agrarian folk from becoming ensnared by socialism, he founded the Etelä-Pohjanmaan Nuorsuomalainen Maalaisliitto ("Young-Finnish Countrymens' Union of Southern Ostrobothnia"), which he later fused into the less ideological Maalaisväestön liitto ("Union of the Rural Population", later Centre Party of Finland). Alkio became the chief ideologue of the Maalaisliitto, and is still considered the father of the party in spirit. The party still refers to alkioish tendencies in some of its factions.
Alkio was a member of the Finnish House of Representatives from 1907–1908 and again from 1914–1922. He was vice-chairman of the Eduskunta in 1917 and 1918, and minister of social affairs from 1919–1920. He was the minister of social affairs of the Vennola government from (15 August 1919 – 15 March 1920). An ardent temperance-movement activist, he participated in drafting the Finnish Prohibition and also was the minister responsible for the confirmation of president K. J. Ståhlberg.
Alkio was an extremely prolific author. He founded the newspaper Ilkka and was its editor through the years 1906–1930.
His likeness graced a Finnish stamp on 17 July 1962.
Alkio was a fervent spokesman for democracy and Finnish national independence. He led the youth association movement, which above all wanted to defend the values of rural life and foster temperance and healthy living, a desire the movement held in common with the coeval Christian revivalist and labor movements.