Fritz Clausen
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Fritz Clausen (1893-1945) was leader of the Danish Nazi Party (DNSAP) prior to and during World War II.
Born in Abenra, Prussia, Clausen served in the German Army during World War I. After the war, Clausen studied medicine in Heidelberg and became a doctor in 1924, after which time he returned to Abenra and set up a practice. Clausen initially became involved in politics as an advocate of Abenra once again becoming a part of Germany (it became part of Denmark in 1920), but he eventually turned to Danish politics, advocating causes that favored the German minority in southern Jutland.
Clausen at first became a member of the Free People's Party (or Peasants’ Party), but he eventually resigned from the party and in 1931 joined Danmarks National-Socialistiske Arbejder Parti (DNSAP). Two years later, Clausen ousted the leadership committee of the party (whose members were Einar Jorgensen, C. C. Hansen, and C. Lembcke) from power and became the party’s sole leader.
Under Clausen’s direction, the party essentially espoused nationalism and called for a stronger relationship between Denmark and Nazi Germany. Clausen’s policies were widely unpopular with the vast majority of Danes, and he essentially received what support he had from the German minority population in southern Jutland. At the height of its popularity, the DNSAP only had about 20,000 members and 20,000 sympathizers. As such, the party fared poorly in the 1939 elections, winning only three seats in the Danish Parliament. A year later, when Germany invaded Denmark, Clausen became a strong supporter of the German occupation and took credit for the lenient way in which Germany governed the country.
The Germans attempted to reward Clausen for his services by trying to persuade King Christian X to let Clausen and his followers have roles in the nation’s government in 1940 and 1943, but the king opposed any such suggestions. Much to Clausen’s chagrin, The German government was unwilling to forcibly put him in charge of Denmark (for fear of angering its people), although there were talks of doing so in 1940 and 1942. The Germans did hope, however, that Clausen would legally seize power over the nation in the 1943 elections, but the DNSAP performed just as poorly in the elections as it did in 1939, once again winning only three seats in the parliament.
After the elections, a bitter Clausen joined the German Army and saw active service on the Eastern front as a surgeon, although he did not resign his position as chief of the DNSAP. Clausen returned to Denmark in the spring of 1944, after which time his political career was terminated.
Clausen’s failure in the elections and his unwillingness to actively assist in forming a Danish branch of the Schutzstaffel alienated his German supporters, and as such SS Obergruppenführer Dr. Werner Best, the Plenipotentiary of the German Reich for Denmark, convinced Clausen to step down as leader of the party and replaced him with a three man committee shortly after his return to Denmark.
After Germany’s occupation of Denmark ended in May of 1945, Clausen was captured and sent to do hard labor at Froslov Prison Camp. Clausen was later given a formal trial, but he died of a heart attack before it could be completed.