Dirk Jan de Geer (born Dec. 14, 1870, Groningen, Neth.—died Nov. 28, 1960, Soest) was a conservative statesman and prime minister of the Netherlands (1926–29, 1939–40) who was disgraced for attempting to negotiate a peace settlement between Great Britain and Nazi Germany in 1940.
After receiving his doctorate in law in 1895, de Geer worked as a journalist and acted as town councillor of Rotterdam (1901–07). He served as a Christian Historical member of Parliament (1907–21, 1933–39), minister of finance (1921–23, 1929–33, 1939–40), and minister of the interior (1925–26). He continued his second term as prime minister in London after the German invasion of the Netherlands in May 1940.
De Geer’s abortive attempt to mediate between Great Britain and Germany following the collapse of France in June 1940 was disavowed by Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands and her cabinet (in exile in England), and he resigned on Sept. 3, 1940. He was then entrusted with a mission to the Dutch East Indies but instead returned to the Netherlands and was denounced on a Netherlands government-in-exile broadcast (Radio Orange) from London on Feb. 6, 1941. For his mediation efforts of 1940, he was in 1947 dismissed from his post as minister of state, fined 20,000 guilders, and sentenced to one year’s imprisonment. The prison sentence was suspended because of his poor health and advanced age.