Jonas Furrer (born March 3, 1805, Winterthur, Switz.—died July 25, 1861, Bad Ragaz) was a Swiss statesman, who served as the president of the Swiss Confederation four times.
A doctor of jurisprudence and lawyer of national renown, Furrer became, after 1839, leader of the Zürich liberals but only reluctantly aspired to political office. In the cantonal assembly, he rose to the vice presidency (1842) and later the presidency (1846), serving also in 1846 as president of the confederation Diet. During the Sonderbund War (1847), in which seven Catholic cantons formed a separatist confederation, he was a partisan of moderation. Following the adoption of a new federal constitution (September 1848), he was elected first president of the confederation (Bundespräsident) and was subsequently reelected three times (1852, 1855, 1858).
After the European revolutions of 1848, Furrer chose a moderate course in granting asylum to foreign revolutionaries in the face of conflicting demands of foreign powers and native radicals. Between his terms as Bundespräsident, he headed the Department of Justice, where his decisions helped define the proper spheres of federal and cantonal power.