Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Leopold Skulski

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Preceded by
  
Ignacy Paderewski

Religion
  
Roman Catholicism

Succeeded by
  
Wladyslaw Grabski

Occupation
  
Politician, chemist

Died
  
1940, Brest, Belarus

Nationality
  
Polish

Role
  
Legislator

Preceded by
  
Jozef Kuczynski

Name
  
Leopold Skulski


Leopold Skulski httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
15 November 1877 Zamosc, Russian Empire (
1877-11-15
)

Political party
  
Polish People's Party "Piast"

Party
  
Polish People's Party "Piast"

Leopold Skulski [lɛˈɔpɔlt ˈskulskʲi]; (15 November 1878, Zamość – Brest, likely in 1940) served as prime minister of Poland for six months from 13 December 1919 until 9 June 1920 in the interim Legislative Sejm during the formation of sovereign Second Polish Republic following World War I.

Contents

Life

Skulski was involved in politics from at least the mid 1910s, and served as mayor of Łódź between 1917 an 1919. During the rebirth of sovereign Poland, he was active in the conservative Zjednoczenie Narodowe, representing the interests of landowners from Liga Narodowa.

He became a deputy in the Polish parliament (Sejm) after the 1919 elections from the parliamentary wing of Narodowe Zjednoczenie Ludowe (NZL) which split from Zwiazek Ludowo Narodowy (ZLN) under his leadership, and on 13 December 1919 he became the Prime Minister of Poland. His government resigned on 9 June 1920, in the aftermath of the failure of the Kiev Offensive and the success of the Bolshevik counteroffensive, in as much as the constitutional impasse resulting from the split of PSL "Wyzwolenie". Skulski was also the Minister of Internal Affairs under the government of Wincenty Witos (from 24 July 1920 to 28 June 1921). He was a member of the State Tribunal of Poland from 1925. President of the Polish Radio in the 1930s, he did not take an active role in political life in the last decade of his life.

Death

During the Invasion of Poland he was arrested in Pińsk by the Soviet NKVD; shortly thereafter he died in the NKVD prison in Brest.

References

Leopold Skulski Wikipedia