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  2. Urho Kekkonen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urho_Kekkonen

    Juho Kekkonen, the youngest son of the family, who had gone travelling from the family's home in Korvenmökki in the village of Koivujärvi, was the father of Urho Kekkonen. Aatu Pylvänäinen, Urho Kekkonen's maternal grandfather, who worked as a farmer at the Tarkkala farm in Kangasniemi, married Amanda Manninen in the summer of 1878 when she ...

  3. Kekkonen IV cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekkonen_IV_Cabinet

    Kekkonen's fourth cabinet was the 36th government of Finland, and it lasted from 9 August 1953 to 17 November 1953. It was a majority government headed by Urho Kekkonen . [ 1 ]

  4. Kekkonen III cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekkonen_III_Cabinet

    Kekkonen's third cabinet was the 35th government of Finland. The majority government lasted from 20 September 1951 to 9 August 1953. The majority government lasted from 20 September 1951 to 9 August 1953.

  5. Kekkonen I cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekkonen_I_Cabinet

    Kekkonen's first cabinet was the 33rd government of Finland. The cabinet existed from 17 March 1950 to 17 January 1951. It was a minority government. The cabinet's Prime Minister was Urho Kekkonen. [1] During the cabinet's run, Kekkonen took a more significant role in the management of Soviet relations than president Paasikivi.

  6. Kekkonen II cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekkonen_II_Cabinet

    Kekkonen's second cabinet was the 34th government of Finland, which existed from 17 January 1951 to 20 September 1951. It was a majority government, and its Prime Minister was Urho Kekkonen . Ministers

  7. 1978 Finnish presidential election - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1978_Finnish_presidential...

    Urho Kekkonen, president since 1956, was re-elected on the first ballot by the electors. [1] The turnout for the popular vote was 64%. [3] Kekkonen had in the spring of 1975 agreed to become the Social Democratic presidential candidate, and after that all the major Finnish political parties chose him as their candidate.

  8. 1950 Finnish presidential election - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1950_Finnish_presidential...

    Kekkonen also championed a non-partisan democracy that would be neither a social democracy nor a people's democracy. The Communists hoped that their presidential candidate, former Prime Minister Mauno Pekkala, would draw votes away from the Social Democrats (who quietly supported Paasikivi), because Pekkala was a former Social Democrat.

  9. Kekkonen V cabinet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekkonen_V_Cabinet

    Kekkonen's fifth cabinet was the 39th government of Finland.The cabinet existed from 20 October 1954 to 3 March 1956. It was a majority government. Prime Minister Urho Kekkonen was elected the President of Finland on February 15 February 1956, resigning as Prime Minister and dissolving the cabinet in the process.