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Revision as of 17:57, 3 November 2023

Anton Weintraub
Portrait of Ernst Bassermann.jpg
Minister-President of Hanover
In office
20 November 1924 – 20 November 1939
MonarchFrederick
DeputyJonas Hahnemann
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byJonas Hahnemann
Leader of the Hanoverian Union Party
In office
5 December 1924 – 20 November 1939
DeputyJonas Hahnemann
Succeeded byJonas Hahnemann
Member of the Hanoverian Parliament
for Lehrte
In office
20 November 1924 – 20 November 1939
Succeeded byEmanuel Mann
Personal details
Born
Anton Schmidt Weintraub

(1876-03-10)March 10, 1876
Goslar, Kingdom of Hanover
DiedMay 22, 1981(1981-05-22) (aged 105)
King Frederick City, Hanover
Political partyHanoverian Union Party
SpouseMadia Thimig
Children3

Anton Schmidt Weintraub (10 March 1876 - 22 May 1981) was a Hanoverian politician and banker who served as the first minister-president of Hanover and was the founding leader of the Hanoverian Union Party from 1924 to 1939. A hugely popular figure in modern-day Hanover, Weintraub is widely regarded by many Hanoverians for his successful efforts in establishing an elected government for Hanover, as well as for his founding of the Hanoverian Union Party, which would come to dominate Hanoverian politics in the decades following his retirement. Among supporters, he is popularly nicknamed "Kaiser Anton" while Winston Churchill dubbed him "Britain's very own Bismarck".

The only son of a German banking family in Hanover, Weintraub, a promising and fairly successful banker in his family's tradition, first rose to prominence as one of the founding members of the Democratic Movement for Hanover, a group of Hanoverian activists and thinkers concerned with modernisation and reform of the administration of Hanover which, by the early 20th century, had begun to be seen by large sectors of society as outdated and archaic given that the kingdom's administrative leader, known as a viceroy, was an unelected position. In 1907, following the death of the group's founder Patrik Rosenhain, Weintraub was subsequently elected as the group's new leader, allowing him to further advance the group's cause which became more and more noticeable and popular following the end of World War I during which post-war tensions had thrown the future of Hanover into doubt. Eventually, on November 1924, following Hanover's formal incorporation into the United Kingdom as an autonomous constituent country as a result of the passage of the Kingdom of Hanover Act 1924, in the country's first state elections, Weintraub was elected as the country's first minister-president, a role which he held from 1924 until 1939 before voluntarily stepping down in accordance to a tradition he had established himself whereby each officeholder would voluntarily resign after holding the office for fifteen years. It has since come to be known as the "Weintraub rule", named in honour of the party's founder.

As minister-president, Weintraub initially presided over the post-war economic boom following the First World War before later overseeing a major financial crisis caused by the Great Depression in 1929. Around that same time, the growing ideology of Nazism in the neighbouring Weimar Republic became an issue of concern for Weintraub, a moderate conservative, who subsequently took great effort in rooting out as well as preventing the Nazi ideology from ever taking hold in Hanover while at the same time greatly promoting efforts to alleviate the general population's hardships caused by the Great Depression. Around November 1939, Weintraub voluntarily resigned from his position but continued to retain significant influence especially during the Second World War and the subsequent Cold War conflict with Weintraub being a prominent anti-communist voice who routinely condemned the Soviet Union.

On 22 May 1981, at the age of 105, Weintraub died from natural causes, making him the longest-lived minister-president of Hanover and the only one to have lived beyond the age of 100.