Ko Suurhoff | |
|---|---|
Ko Suurhoff in 1965 | |
| Minister of Transport and Water Management | |
| In office 30 June 1966 – 22 November 1966 | |
| Prime Minister | Jo Cals |
| Preceded by | Pieter Bogaers(Ad interim) |
| Succeeded by | Jan de Quay |
| In office 14 April 1965 – 1 May 1966 | |
| Prime Minister | Jo Cals |
| Preceded by | Jan van Aartsen |
| Succeeded by | Pieter Bogaers(Ad interim) |
| Chairman of the Labour Party | |
| In office 24 March 1961 – 14 April 1965 | |
| Leader | Jaap Burger(1961–1962) Anne Vondeling(1962–1965) |
| Preceded by | Hein Vos |
| Succeeded by | Sjeng Tans |
| Minister of the Interior | |
| In office 13 October 1956 – 29 October 1956 Ad interim | |
| Prime Minister | Willem Drees |
| Preceded by | Julius Christiaan van Oven(Ad interim) |
| Succeeded by | Teun Struycken as Minister of the Interior, Property and Public Sector Organisations |
| Minister of Social Affairsand Health | |
| In office 2 September 1952 – 22 December 1958 | |
| Prime Minister | Willem Drees |
| Preceded by | Dolf Joekes |
| Succeeded by | Louis Beel |
| Member of the House of Representatives | |
| In office 23 February 1967 – 14 March 1967 | |
| In office 20 March 1959 – 14 April 1965 | |
| In office 3 July 1956 – 3 October 1956 | |
| In office 24 October 1946 – 2 September 1952 | |
| In office 21 September 1939 – 4 June 1946 | |
| Parliamentary group | Labour Party (1946–1965) Social Democratic Workers' Party (1939–1946) |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Jacobus Gerardus Suurhoff (1905-07-23)23 July 1905 |
| Died | 14 March 1967(1967-03-14) (aged 61) |
| Cause of death | Cancer |
| Political party | Labour Party(from 1946) |
| Other political affiliations | Social Democratic Workers' Party(1923–1946) |
| Spouse | |
| Children | 2 sons and 2 daughters |
| Occupation | Politician ·Trade Union leader ·Accountant ·Activist |
| Military service | |
| Allegiance | |
| Branch/service | Royal Netherlands Army |
| Years of service | 1925–1927 (Conscription) 1927–1935 (Reserve) |
| Rank | |
| Unit | Johan Willem Friso Regiment |
| Battles/wars | Interbellum |
Jacobus Gerardus "Ko" Suurhoff (23 July 1905 – 14 March 1967) was a Dutch politician of the defunctSocial Democratic Workers' Party (SDAP) and co-founder of theLabour Party (PvdA) and trade union leader.[1]
Suurhoff attended aLyceum inAmsterdam from May 1917 until July 1920. Suurhoff worked as a clerk for theNetherlands Steamship Company (SMN) from July 1920 until December 1924. Suurhoff wasconscripted in theRoyal Netherlands Army serving in the infantryJohan Willem Friso Regiment as astaff sergeant from January 1925 until October 1927. Suurhoff worked as an accountant for the trading companyCeteco from October 1927 until April 1930. Suurhoff worked as a trade union leader for theDutch Trade Unions association (NVV) from April 1930 until May 1940. Suurhoff served on theMunicipal Council of Amsterdam from June 1939 until February 1941.
Suurhoff became aMember of the House of Representatives afterWillem Albarda was appointed asMinister of Water Management in theCabinet De Geer II, taking office on 21 September 1939 serving as abackbencher. On 10 May 1940Nazi Germanyinvaded the Netherlands and thegovernment fled toLondon to escape theGerman occupation. During the German occupation Suurhoff continued to serve as a Member of the House of Representativesin name only but in reality thede facto political influence of the House of Representatives was marginalized by theGerman occupation authority.
On 4 May 1942 Suurhoff was arrested by theGestapo and detained inKamp Sint-Michielsgestel and was released on 21 June 1943. Following the end ofWorld War II Queen Wilhelmina ordered aRecall of Parliament and Suurhoff remained in the House of Representatives. Suurhoff again served on the Municipal Council of Amsterdam from June 1945 until October 1946. On 9 February 1946 the Social Democratic Workers' Party (SDAP), theFree-thinking Democratic League (VDB) and theChristian Democratic Union (CDU) choose to merge to form the Labour Party (PvdA). Suurhoff was one of the co-founders and became one of the unofficialDeputy Leaders of the Labour Party. After theelection of 1946 Suurhoff wasn't reelected and he continued to serve until the end of the parliamentary term on 4 June 1946.
Suurhoff again worked as a trade union leader for the Dutch Trade Unions association from June 1946 until September 1952 serving as General-Secretary of the Executive Board from August 1949 until September 1952. Suurhoff returned as a Member of the House of Representatives following the resignation ofJo Stokvis, taking office on 24 October 1946 serving as afrontbencher andspokesperson forSocial Affairs. After theelection of 1952 Suurhoff was appointed asMinister of Social Affairsand Health in theCabinet Drees II, taking office on 2 September 1952. After theelection of 1956 Suurhoff returned as Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 3 July 1956. Following thecabinet formation of 1956 Suurhof continued as Minister of Social Affairs and Health in theCabinet Drees III, taking office on 13 October 1956. Suurhoff served as actingMinister of the Interior from 13 October 1956 until 29 October 1956 until the appointment ofTeun Struycken who had served asGovernor of the Netherlands Antilles. The Cabinet Drees III fell on 11 December 1958 on after the Labour Party and theCatholic People's Party (KVP) disagreed on a proposedTax increase and continued to serve in ademissionary capacity until thecabinet formation of 1958 when it was replaced bycaretakerCabinet Beel II on 22 December 1958.
After theelection of 1959 Suurhoff again returned as Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 20 March 1959 serving as a frontbencher chairing the parliamentary committee for Social Affairs and special parliamentary committee for the Merger Treaty and spokesperson for Social Affairs. Suurhoff also served asChairman of the Labour Party from 24 March 1961 until 14 April 1965. On 27 February 1965 the Cabinet Marijnen fell and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity until thecabinet formation of 1965 when it was replaced with theCabinet Cals with Suurhoff appointed asMinister of Transport and Water Management, taking office on 14 April 1965. Suurhoff took a medical leave of absence from 1 May 1966 until 30 June 1966 during whichMinister of Housing and Spatial PlanningPieter Bogaers served as acting Minister of Transport and Water Management. The Cabinet Cals fell on 14 October 1966 after theLeader of the Catholic People's PartyNorbert Schmelzer had proposed a motion that called for a stronger austerity policy to further reduce thedeficit was seen an indirectmotion of no confidence and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity until thecabinet formation of 1966 when it was replaced by thecaretakerCabinet Zijlstra on 22 November 1966. After theelection of 1967 Suurhoff again returned as a Member of the House of Representatives, taking office on 23 February 1967 but shortly thereafter he was diagnosed withterminal cancer, he died a month later at the age of 61.
Suurhoff was known for his abilities as adebater andmanager. He holds the distinction as the third longest-serving Minister of Social Affairs afterWorld War II with 6 years, 111 days.
| Ribbon bar | Honour | Country | Date | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grand Officer of theOrder of Orange-Nassau | Netherlands | 22 December 1958 | ||
| Commander of theOrder of the Netherlands Lion | Netherlands | 5 December 1966 | Elevated from Knight (28 April 1951) |
| Party political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Chairman of the Labour Party 1961–1965 | Succeeded by Sjeng Tans |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Minister of Social Affairsand Health 1952–1958 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Julius Christiaan van Oven Ad interim | Minister of the Interior Ad interim 1956 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Minister of Transport and Water Management 1965–1966 1966 | Succeeded by Pieter Bogaers Ad interim |
| Preceded by Pieter Bogaers Ad interim | Succeeded by | |