Knud Kristensen

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Knud Kristensen bigraphy, stories - Ministers

Knud Kristensen : biography

October 26, 1880 – September 28, 1962

Knud Kristensen (26 October 1880 – 28 September 1962) was Prime Minister of Denmark 7 November 1945 to 13 November 1947 in the first elected government after the German occupation of Denmark during World War II. After the October 1945 election Knud Kristensen formed the Cabinet of Knud Kristensen, a minority government consisting only of his Liberal Venstre party. Kristensen was a farmer by profession.

Kristensen resigned as Prime Minister when the Folketing passed a vote of no confidence because of his failed enthusiasm for incorporating Southern Schleswig into Denmark. Denmark was forced to cede Schleswig and Holstein in the second war of Schleswig in 1864, and had recovered somewhat more of Northern Schleswig than they should have in the aftermath of World War I as a result of the Schleswig Plebiscite, but had failed to regain Southern Schleswig. Denmark’s new attempt of re-annexation in the vacuum of power after WW2 was unsuccessful due to the violent opposition of South Schleswig’s inhabitants with the exception of a German pro-Danish fraction rewarded with food-parcels, referred to as "Bacon-Danes". German public opinion was supported by the British military governor Hugh Vivian Champion de Crespigny wo feared the chaos that would arise in view of the doubled German population within the area after ingesting expellees of former German territories handed to Poland. It is said that a German lady companion of this status helped him in his decisions. See also Danish minority of Southern Schleswig.

The defeat in the Southern Schleswig case estranged Kristensen from his party and when the new constitution was issued 1953 he terminated his membership of Venstre and founded a new party, De Uafhængige ("The Independents"). This new party was unable to gain influence.