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Rudolf Ramek

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President
  
Michael Hainisch

Preceded by
  
Ignaz Seipel

Name
  
Rudolf Ramek

Political party
  
Christian Social Party

Deputy
  
Leopold Waber

Nationality
  
Austrian

Role
  
Austrian Politician

Succeeded by
  
Ignaz Seipel

Rudolf Ramek wwwaeiouataeiouencyclopdataimagerr105536ajpg
Born
  
12 April 1881 Teschen, Austrian Silesia, Austria-Hungary (
1881-04-12
)

Resting place
  
Municipal Cemetery in Salzburg

Died
  
July 24, 1941, Vienna, Austria

Rudolf Ramek (12 April 1881 – 24 July 1941 ) was an Austrian Christian Social politician, who served as Chancellor of Austria from 1924 to 1926.

Life

Ramek was born in Teschen in Austrian Silesia (present-day Cieszyn, Poland). A member of the Christian Social Party, he was a delegate of the Austrian Constitutional Assembly in 1919 and served as State Secretary of Justice in the rank of minister in State Chancellor Karl Renner's cabinet until 24 June 1920. A member of the National Council after the 1920 legislative election, he succeeded his party fellow Ignaz Seipel as Austrian chancellor on 20 November 1924.

Under Ramek's government, the Schilling became the official Austrian currency in 1925, after a hyperinflation period of the old Austrian krone in the early 1920s. The supervision of the country's finances by a League of Nations Commissioner finished the next year, however, the depression continued and unemployment figures were rising. Ramek finally resigned during the crisis around the state-owned Osterreichische Postsparkasse postal savings bank on 20 October 1926, again succeeded by Ignaz Seipel.

Upon the 1930 legislative election, Ramek became vice president of the National Council parliament. Together with the other members of the chairmanship, Karl Renner and Sepp Straffner, he resigned on 4 March 1933 after a quarrel over voting irregularities, giving Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss the opportunity to prevent any further meetings of the legislature. After the Social Democratic February Uprising of 1934 was crushed, Ramek on 30 April reconvened the assembly, only to adopt the imposed May Constitution of the Federal State of Austria, whereby the National Council was abolished.

Ramek died in Vienna and was buried in the Salzburg Municipal Cemetery.

References

Rudolf Ramek Wikipedia