In 1922, Colijn accepted the political leadership of the Anti-Revolutionary Party (Calvinist) from
Abraham Kuyper. Only one year later, he succeeded the resigning
Dirk Jan de Geer as
Minister of Finance. Colijn then returned to the
Senate and from 1927 to 1929 served as head of the Dutch delegation to the
League of Nations in
Geneva. At the
election of 1929, he was elected for the House of Representatives, and he immediately became
parliamentary leader of his party. That proved to be a success since at the
election of 1933, the ARP gained two seats, and Colijn became prime minister again. From 1933 to 1939, Colijn served four more times as prime minister. During the 1930s, his government faced the effects of the
Great Depression, which took a heavy toll on the Netherlands. Colijn's government responded to the economic crisis with a strict
protectionist policy, which continued to weaken the Dutch economy. Colijn's decision to adhere to the
gold standard until 1936, long after most of the trading partners of the Netherlands had dropped it, was very unpopular with those in favour of government
fiat money. In 1939, Colijn's last cabinet, with Protestant and liberal ministers but without Catholic ministers, lasted only three days before a government crisis. He resigned as prime minister on 10 August, only three weeks before the outbreak of
World War II. ==World War II and death==