Schwarzenbach was born in Rüschlikon to a Protestant industrialist family and went on to develop publishing industries. He converted to Roman Catholicism while at university, in 1933. In 1934, as a student, Schwarzenbach orchestrated a public uproar by his fellow members of the pro-Nazi movement National Front when the anti-fascist cabaret group "Die Pfeffermühle", in exile from Germany, was touring in Switzerland. In Zürich the cabaret, led by Therese Giehse, Erika Mann, and Klaus Mann, was only able to perform under police protection. James Schwarzenbach's aunt Renée Schwarzenbach-Wille was suspected to be the power behind the turmoil. She accused Erika Mann to have set up her daughter, the writer Annemarie Schwarzenbach who was a close friend of the Mann family, against her own family. In 1939, at the age of 28, Schwarzenbach earned his doctorate in history at the University of Zurich. The subject of his thesis was the neutrality policy of Switzerland. Schwarzenbach was a member of the Swiss National Council representing the National Action in the legislature between 1967 and 1971. Schwarzenbach's Republican Movement originated as a split of National Action in 1971, and it lasted until its dissolution in 1989. Schwarzenbach is chiefly known for his initiative on Überfremdung that was in June 1970. The referendum had a record turnout, with 45% of the votes supporting Schwarzenbach's proposal. The proposal, if accepted, would have meant that the Swiss government had to limit foreign workers to Switzerland to 10%, which then would mean the deportation of up to 300,000 foreigners over 4 years. Although not enacted, the referendum did cause the number of available work-permits to be lowered. Xenophobia in Switzerland at the time was chiefly directed against Italianmigrant workers, whose number had increased from 300,000 to over 1 million during the economic surge after World War II between 1950 and 1970. Xenophobia decreased in the later 1970s as with slackening economy nearly as many migrant workers as had been targeted by the Schwarzenbach initiative lost their jobs and left Switzerland, raising its head again in the mid-1990s, this time targeting Ausländerkriminalität, in particular, fuelled by felonies committed by youths of Balkan origin. In this period, the xenophobic sentiment was addressed by populist propaganda of the Swiss People's Party, with Schwarzenbach's erstwhile secretary Ulrich Schlüer pursuing his former employer's politics within the ranks of the SVP.
In his later years, Schwarzenbach also voiced opposition against the EFTA, or the EU common market, as well as international institutions like the UN. James Schwarzenbach who was also a writer of regional novels died at 83 in St. Moritz.
Valuation
Buomberger claimed Schwarzenbach's ideology to be racist, nationalist, xenophobic, and given to antisemitic and anti-communistconspiracy theories, and he emphasized Schwarzenbach's role as pioneer in European right-wing populism which, outside of Switzerland, grew to notability only in the 1980s with parties such as the French Front National.
Publications
Literature
Drews, Isabel, Schweizer erwache!" : der Rechtspopulist James Schwarzenbach , Studien zur Zeitgeschichte 7, .
Maiolino, Angelo, Als die Italiener waren noch Tschinggen: Der Widerstand gegen die-Schwarzenbach Initiative, Zurich, Rotpunkt, .
Scomazzon, Francesco, A Swiss populism? Italian workers in Switzerland between acceptance and xenophobia , in C. Chini, S. Moroni, "Populism. A historiographic category?, Cambridge, Cambridge Scholar Publishing, pp. 109–19.