Piłsudski's colonels


Piłsudski's colonels, or the colonels' regime, dominated the government of the Second Polish Republic from 1926 to 1939. In some contexts, the term refers primarily to the final period, 1935–39, following the death of their mentor and patron, Józef Piłsudski.

History

Close allies of Józef Piłsudski, most of "the colonels" had served as officers in the Polish Legions and Polish Military Organization, and in the Polish Army. They had held key, if not necessarily the highest, military ranks during Piłsudski's May 1926 coup d'état.
Later they became important figures in Piłsudski's Sanation movement and ministers in several governments. After the BBWR's 1930 electoral victory, Piłsudski left most internal matters in the hands of his "colonels", while himself concentrating on military and foreign affairs.
The "colonels" included Józef Beck, Janusz Jędrzejewicz, Wacław Jędrzejewicz, Adam Koc, Leon Kozłowski, Ignacy Matuszewski,, Bronisław Pieracki, Aleksander Prystor, Adam Skwarczyński, Walery Sławek, and Kazimierz Świtalski.
One can divide the colonels' régime into three periods: 1926-1929; 1930–1935; and 1935-1939.
During the first period, after the May 1926 coup, the colonels consolidated their control over the government.
The second period, following the 1930 "Brest elections", saw the colonels' regime under Piłsudski's guidance, with power exercised by his allies and friends such as Walery Slawek and Aleksander Prystor.
After Piłsudski's death, the hardliner "colonels", led by Walery Sławek, lost influence to the Castle faction of Ignacy Mościcki and Edward Rydz-Śmigły. Nevertheless, the "colonels' regime" and Sanation still dominated the Polish government in 1935–39 until the German invasion of Poland in September 1939. Some scholars draw a distinction between the "Piłsudski period" and the "colonels' period, proper".
From 1937 the colonels' new political front would be the Camp of National Unity. In that last period, the Polish government—a "dictatorship without a dictator"—in order to bolster its popular support, paradoxically adopted some of the nationalistic, anti-minority policies that had been opposed by Piłsudski and advocated by his most vocal adversaries, the National Democrats.