Weimar political parties
In the fourteen years the Weimar Republic was in existence, some forty parties were represented in the Reichstag. This fragmentation of political power was in part due to the use of a peculiar proportional representation electoral system that encouraged regional or small special interest parties[1] and in part due to the many challenges facing the nascent German democracy in this period.
After the Nazi seizure of power, they used the provisions of the Reichstag Fire Decree to effectively eliminate their chief adversaries, first the Communists (March 1933) and then the Social Democrats (22 June 1933) through arrests, confiscation of assets and removal from office. Other parties were pressured into disbanding on their own or were swept away by the "Law Against the Formation of Parties" (14 July 1933) which declared the Nazi Party to be Germany's only legal political party.[2]
Weimar political parties
[edit]Party | Abbr. | Categorization | Stance | Description | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Social Democratic Party of Germany
Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands |
SPD | Centre-left | Pro-Weimar Republic | (between 1917 and 1922 also called Mehrheitssozialdemokratische Partei (MSPD) – Majority Social Democrats). Founded in 1875, it was one of the earliest Marxist-influenced parties in the world. A member of the Weimar Coalition, the SPD supported the parliamentary system of democracy and extensive social programs in the economy. For most of the Weimar Republic's existence until 1932, the SPD was the largest single party in the Reichstag and it participated in several coalition governments. Its party newspaper was the Vorwärts. | |
National Socialist German Workers' Party
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei |
NSDAP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nazi Party). This was a far-right political party in Germany that was active between 1920 and 1945, and that created and supported the ideology of Nazism. Its precursor, the German Workers' Party (Deutsche Arbeiterpartei; DAP), existed from 1919 to 1920. The Nazi Party emerged from the German nationalist, racist and populist Freikorps paramilitary culture, which fought against the communist uprisings in post-World War I Germany. It supported the ideas of Führerprinzip, Volksgemeinschaft, Pan-Germanism, Lebensraum and the "Aryan Master Race". The party incorporated fervent antisemitism, anti-communism, anti-capitalism, scientific racism, and the use of eugenics into its creed. Headed by Adolf Hitler from 1921, the party became the largest in the Reichstag by July 1932. Its main newspaper was the Völkischer Beobachter. | |
Communist Party of Germany
Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands |
KPD | Far-left | Anti-Weimar Republic | Communist Party of Germany. Formed at the very end of 1918 out of a number of left-wing groups, including the left-wing of the USPD and the Spartacus League. It was a Marxist-Leninist party that advocated revolution by the proletariat and the creation of a communist regime according to the example of the Soviet Union. It was the main far-left party for the majority of the Weimar period. The party's major paper was the Die Rote Fahne (The Red Flag). Between 1920 and 1922 known as the United Communist Party of Germany (Vereinigte Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands, VKPD) | |
Centre Party
Zentrumspartei |
Centre-right | Pro-Weimar Republic | It was the continuation of the pre-Weimar Catholic party of the same name. A member of the Weimar Coalition, the Centre Party was the third-largest party in the Reichstag for most of the Weimar Republic and participated in all governments until 1932. Their party newspaper was Germania. | ||
German National People's Party
Deutschnationale Volkspartei |
DNVP | Right-wing to far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | It presented itself as a volksgemeinschaft or non-class party. It included remnants from the German Conservative Party, the Free Conservative Party, the Völkische movement, the Christian Social movement, and the Pan-German Association. It established two labor unions; one for the blue-collar worker (the DNAB) and one for the white-collar worker (DNAgB), which had been politically unimportant. The DNVP was the main authoritarian right party of Weimar Germany but moved to the radical right after coming under the control of press baron Alfred Hugenberg in 1928. It organized the National Opposition in 1929, together with leaders of Der Stahlhelm, Hjalmar Schacht, the president of the Reichsbank, and the Nazi Party, to oppose Chancellor Hermann Müller's Grand Coalition. It joined in coalition with Hitler's government in January 1933. | |
German People's Party
Deutsche Volkspartei |
DVP | Before 1929: Centre to centre-right After 1929: Centre-right to right-wing |
Formed in 1918 from the pre-Weimar National Liberals, it was a center-right party supporting right-liberalism. Its platform stressed Christian family values, secular education, lower tariffs, opposition to welfare spending and agrarian subsidies, and hostility to socialism. Gustav Stresemann was its chairman and it participated in all governments until 1931. After Stresseann's death, the party turned further to the right. | ||
German Democratic Party
Deutsche Demokratische Partei |
DDP | Centre to centre-left | Pro-Weimar Republic | Formed in 1918 as the successor to the Progressive People's Party, the DDP was a center-left party that supported social liberalism. A member of the Weimar Coalition, it was one of the main liberal parties and participated in several coalition governments. | |
Old Social Democratic Party of Germany
Alte Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands |
ASPD | Centre-left | Old Social Democratic Party of Germany. A regional party based in Saxony that split from the SPD in 1926. It never gained a mass following and disbanded in 1932. | ||
Communist Workers' Party of Germany
Kommunistische Arbeiter-Partei Deutschlands |
KAPD | Far-left | Anti-Weimar Republic | Communist Workers' Party of Germany. An ultra-leftist party that split from the KPD in April 1920. They rejected participation in the Reichstag and called for immediate revolutionary action. Immediately after its formation the party endured a series of splinters and lost much of the little influence it had. | |
Communist Party of Germany (Opposition)
Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands (Opposition) |
KPO | Left-wing | Split from the KPD in 1928, representing the "Right Opposition" of the Bukharinists against the Stalinist "Center" and the Trotskyist "Left Opposition". It never intended to be a real political party, but to influence the KPD. | ||
Socialist Workers' Party of Germany
Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands |
SAPD | Left-wing | A left-wing faction that split from the SPD in 1931. Parts of the USPD and dissenters from the KPD and the KPO joined it, but it remained small. Its political positions were near to those of the USPD, wavering between the SPD and the KPD. | ||
Socialist League
Sozialistischer Bund |
Left-wing | A splinter party that formed from the USPD in 1922 and merged into the SAPD in 1931. | |||
Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany
Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands |
USPD | Left-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | This was formed by an anti-war faction that split from the SPD in 1917. It was a Marxist party that sought change through parliament and social progressive programs. The left-wing majority of the party joined the Communist Party in December 1920, while the remainder reunited with the MSPD in September 1922. A splinter element (Sozialistischer Bund) continued as an independent party, never attaining any real electoral success and finally merging with the SAPD in 1931. | |
German Farmers' Party
Deutsche Bauernpartei |
DBP | Centre | An agrarian party founded in 1928 to advocate for the economic interests of small farmers and peasants. | ||
German State Party
Deutsche Staatspartei |
DStP | Centre | Pro-Weimar Republic | German State Party. Formed in 1930 by a merger of the DDP and the Volksnationale Reichsvereinigung (VNRV) (People's National Reich Association), the political wing of the Young German Order. The VNRV Reichstag delegates soon seceded from the party, leaving it essentially the DDP under a new name. | |
Hanseatic People's League
Hanseatischer Volksbund |
HVB | Right-wing | A regional party founded in Lübeck in 1926, supported by the middle classes opposed to Marxism and social democracy. It was allied with the DVP. | ||
Schleswig-Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy
Schleswig-Holsteinische Bauern- und Landarbeiterdemokratie |
SHBLD | Centre | A regional agrarian party active in Schleswig-Holstein between 1919 and 1924. It was a moderate party that leaned towards liberalism, and co-operated with the DVP. | ||
People's National Reich Association
Volksnationale Reichsvereinigung |
Centre | Pro-Weimar Republic | This was the political wing of the Young German Order and it briefly merged with the DDP in 1930 to form the DStP. | ||
Bavarian People's Party
Bayerische Volkspartei |
BVP | Centre-right | Pro-Weimar Republic | A Catholic and conservative party, in 1918 it split off from the Centre Party to pursue a more conservative and particularist Bavarian course. | |
Brunswick Lower Saxon Party
Braunschweigisch-Niedersächsische Partei |
BNP | Right-wing | This was a small regional party active in the Free State of Brunswick. It was conservative, monarchist and anti-republican. It formed an electoral alliance with the DVP and the DNVP. | ||
Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party
Christlich-Nationale Bauern- und Landvolkpartei |
CNBL | Right-wing | Christian National Peasants' and Farmers' Party. This was a conservative agrarian party that broke off from the German National People's Party (DNVP) in 1928. It contested the 1930 and 1932 Reichstag elections under the name Deutsches Landvolk (German Rural Folk). | ||
Christian Social People's Service
Christlich-Sozialer Volksdienst |
CSVD | Centre-right to right-wing | A conservative Protestant party formed at the end of 1929, it was mainly supported by the middle class and Christian trade unionists. It supported state welfare, trade unions and workers participation in management; it opposed atheism, liberalism and Marxism. Also known as Christlich-sozialer Volksdienst (Evangelische Bewegung). | ||
Christian People's Party
Christliche Volkspartei |
CVP | Right-wing | Pro-Weimar Republic | A short-lived Catholic party based in the Rhineland.[3] | |
German-Hanoverian Party
Deutsch-Hannoversche Partei |
DHP | Centre-left | Also known as the Guelph Party. A regional party in Prussia's Province of Hanover that unsuccessfully advocated for a Free State of Hanover. Formerly conservative and centre-right, the party moved to the left in the 1920s. | ||
German Workers' Party
Deutsche Arbeiterpartei |
DAP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | This was formed in 1919 by Anton Drexler, with Gottfried Feder, Dietrich Eckart and Karl Harrer, and derived in part from the Thule Society, the cover organization of the occult ariosophist Germanenorden. This party added the adjective "National Socialist" in its name and became the "National Socialist German Workers' Party" (NSDAP) in 1920. | |
German Reform Party
Deutsche Reformpartei |
DRP | Far-right | (splinter party) | ||
German Social Party
Deutschsoziale Partei |
DSP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | A far-right antisemitic and Völkisch political party, active from 1921 to 1929. | |
German-Socialist Party
Deutschsozialistische Partei |
DSP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | A far-right, nationalist party heavily influenced by the antisemitic Thule Society. It was headed by Julius Streicher, and it was also highly organized, despite having a rather small size. In a controversial move, it dissolved itself in 1922 and many of its members entered the (then very new) Nazi Party. | |
German Völkisch Freedom Party
Deutschvölkische Freiheitspartei |
DVFP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | The party of General Ludendorff. It campaigned for an authoritarian regime that would be very nationalistic and promoted socioeconomic questions. It also sought to close the stock exchanges and nationalize the banks. In May 1924, it obtained 6.4% of the vote in alliance with NSDAP, but fell to 3% in the next election, in December 1924. | |
German Völkisch Empire Party
Deutschvölkische Reichspartei |
DVRP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | ||
Greater German Workers' Party
Großdeutsche Arbeiterpartei |
GDAP | Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | ||
Greater German People's Community
Großdeutsche Volksgemeinschaft |
GVG | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | A Nazi front organization established in January 1924 when the Nazi Party was outlawed. Centered in Bavaria, it was led by Alfred Rosenberg until July when he was ousted by Julius Streicher. Opposed to electoral politics, it was not represented in the Reichstag. It dissolved in March 1925 and was reabsorbed by the Nazi Party. | |
Conservative People's Party
Konservative Volkspartei |
KVP | Right-wing | Pro-Weimar Republic | It split off from the DNVP in 1930, following that party's turn to the far-right under Alfred Hugenberg. | |
National Socialist Freedom Party
Nationalsozialistische Freiheitspartei |
NSFP | Far-right | Anti-Weimar Republic | A Nazi front organization established in April 1924 when the Nazi Party was outlawed and Hitler was jailed. The remaining Nazis formed it as a legal means of carrying on the party and its ideology. As the National Socialist Freedom movement (NSFB), it ran as a combined list with the DVFP in the 1924 Reichstag elections and disbanded shortly after the Nazi Party was re-established in February 1925. | |
Economic Party
Reichspartei des deutschen Mittelstandes |
WP | Right-wing | A conservative pro-business party, founded in 1920 as the Economic Party of the German Middle Class. It commonly was referred to as the Wirtschaftspartei (WP). It supported a reduction in government economic involvement, a freer hand for business, and lower taxes. It was particularly opposed to revaluation, which it considered an attack on the rights of property owners. | ||
People's Justice Party
Volksrechtpartei |
VRP | Right-wing | Officially called the Reich Party for Civil Rights and Deflation. Formed in 1926, the party was conservative in outlook and represented itself as the defender of savers, calling for the creation of as broad a middle class as possible. It sought to represent those worst hit by the hyperinflation of the early 1920s. |
Other political organizations
[edit]Besides the larger parties, there were also a multitude of smaller groups and parties that were either affiliated with the electoral coalitions of larger parties or were organizationally independent and participated with their own lists either throughout the entire Republic or only in individual constituencies.[4]
Party | Abbr. | Categorization | Stance | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
General German Civil Servants Association
Allgemeiner Deutscher Beamtenbund |
AGB | Left-wing | A civil servants' league started by the SPD. | |
German Agrarian League
Bund der Landwirte |
BdL | The Agrarian League was an agricultural advocacy group that opposed free trade, industrialization, and liberalism. It merged with the Deutscher Landbund in 1921 to form the Reichslandbund. | ||
Peasants' Association
Bauernverein |
Peasant association located in Schleswig-Holstein. Without religious ties, it initially supported a liberal economic and political policy. | |||
Peasants' Associations
Bauernvereine |
Centre | Farmers' associations associated with the Center Party, that were located in the Catholic west and south. | ||
Bavarian Peasants' League
Bayerischer Bauernbund |
BBB | Operated throughout Germany but especially in its stronghold of Bavaria. It had democratic, anticlerical leanings and subscribed to a narrow Bavarian particularism. It supported the BVP and the DNVP, and in 1928 helped found the DBP. Also BBB. | ||
Brunswick State Electoral Association
Braunschweigischer Landeswahlverband |
BLWV | Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | This was a regional electoral alliance of conservative bourgeois parties, consisting of the Deutsche Volkspartei (DVP), the Deutschnationale Volkspartei (DNVP) and the Welf–oriented Braunschweigisch-Niedersächsische Partei (BNP), or Brunswick Lower–Saxon Party. It was active between 1918 and 1922 in the Free State of Brunswick. |
Christian-Federalist Imperial Electoral List
Christlich-föderalistische Reichswahlliste |
Centre | Pro-Weimar Republic | Combined list of the Bavarian People's Party (BVP), the Christliche Volkspartei (CVP) and a Hessian party.[3] | |
Christian People's Party
Christliche Volkspartei |
CVP | Centre | Pro-Weimar Republic | Combined list of the Bavarian People's Party (BVP) and the Center Party. |
Spartacus League
Spartakusbund |
Left-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | Originally formed in 1914 by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, it joined the USPD in 1917. During the November Revolution, it reformed but shortly joined the KPD when it was founded on 1 January 1919. | |
Workers' Party for the Working and Creating People
Arbeiterpartei für das arbeitende und schaffende Volk |
AASV | Left-wing | [5] | |
Workers' and Peasants' Party of Germany, Christian-Radical People's Front
Arbeiter- und Bauernpartei Deutschlands, Christlich-Radikale Volksfront |
ABDCV | Left-wing | Associated with the KPD.[6] | |
League of the Unemployed of Berlin
Bund der Erwerbslosen Berlins |
BEB | Left-wing | Associated with the KPD.[6] | |
Christian-Social Empire Party
Christlich-Soziale Reichspartei |
CSRP | Left-wing | [5] | |
German Employee Party
Deutsche Arbeitnehmerpartei |
Darpa | Left-wing | Associated with the Christian Social People's Service (Evangelical Movement) Also DAnP. | |
German Socialist Combat Movement
Deutsche Sozialistische Kampfbewegung |
DSKB | Left-wing | [5] | |
Combat Community of Workers' and Peasants'
Kampfgemeinschaft der Arbeiter und Bauern |
KAB | Left-wing | [5] | |
Left Communists
Linke Kommunisten |
LK | Left-wing | ||
Middle Class Party (Unitarians)
Mittelstandspartei (Unitaristen) |
MP (U) | Left-wing | Associated with the KPD. | |
National-Communist-Party of Germany
Nationale-Kommunistische-Partei Deutschlands |
NKPD | Left-wing | [5] | |
Party of the Unemployed for Work and Bread
Partei der Erwerbslosen für Arbeit und Brot |
PEAB | Left-wing | Associated with the KPD[6] and/or NSDAP.[7] | |
Radical-Democratic Party
Radikaldemokratische Partei |
RDP | Left-wing | [5] | |
Republican Party of Germany
Republikanische Partei Deutschlands |
RPD | Left-wing | [5] | |
Socialist Combat Community
Sozialistische Kampfgemeinschaft |
SKG | Left-wing | [5] | |
Social-Republican Party (Hörsing-Movement for Employment)
Sozial-Republikanische Partei (Hörsing-Bewegung für Arbeitsbeschaffung) |
SRPD | Left-wing | [5] | |
Unitarian Movement of Germany
Unitaristen Union Deutschlands |
UUD | Left-wing | [5] | |
People's Socialists
Volkssozialisten |
VSoz | Left-wing | [5] | |
National Association of Deserters
Reichsbund der Deserteure |
Left-wing | Led by Karl Liebknecht and formed before the breakup from the Independent Socialists. | ||
The Steel Helmet, League of Front-Line Soldiers
Der Stahlhelm, Bund der Frontsoldaten |
Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | Founded in December 1918 by Franz Seldte, this was the First World War veteran's organisation. Officially above party politics, it was conservative, nationalistic and monarchist. After 1929, it took on an anti-republican and anti-democratic character. Its goals were the overthrow of the Republic in favor of a dictatorship and a revanchist program. In 1931, it joined the DNVP and the NSDAP to form the Harzburg Front. | |
German Nationalist Protection and Defiance Federation
Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund |
Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | This was the largest and the most active anti-Semitic federation in Germany. Founded in 1919, it was anti-democratic and advocated violence. After the murder of Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau in 1922, it was banned in most states of the Reich and disbanded by 1924. | |
Harzburg Front
Harzburger Front |
Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | A right-wing, anti-democratic political alliance of the NSDAP, DNVP, Der Stahlhelm, the Agricultural League and the Pan-German League. It was formed in 1931 to present a unified right-wing opposition to the Weimar government. | |
Combat League of Revolutionary National Socialists
Kampfgemeinschaft Revolutionärer Nationalsozialisten |
KGRNS | Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | Commonly known as the Black Front. An opposition group formed by Otto Strasser in 1930 after he resigned from the Nazi Party to continue what he saw as the Party's original anti-capitalist stance. |
Rural People's Movement
Landvolkbewegung |
Right-wing | A farmers' movement, mainly in Schleswig-Holstein, formed in the aftermath of January 1928 demonstrations against trade and tax policies. | ||
Agricultural League
Reichslandbund |
Right-wing | Anti-Weimar Republic | Also known as National Rural League. It was formed in 1921 through the merger of the two large Protestant right-wing agricultural associations, the Bund der Landwirte (BdL) and the Deutscher Landbund, in order to more effectively assert agricultural interests against the forces of labor and big business. It strove to maintain as much influence as possible for large Junker landowners from east of the Elbe, who were heavily represented among its leadership. Opposed to the Republic, it first was allied with the DNVP and later the Nazi Party. | |
Völkisch-Social Bloc
Völkisch-Sozialer Block |
Right-wing | This was a right-wing electoral alliance of völkisch, anti-Semitic and anti-republican groups formed in 1924 during the period that the Nazi Party was outlawed, and was closely aligned with its ideology. It was particularly strong in Bavaria and Thuringia. It disbanded in March 1925, following the reestablishment of the Nazi Party. | ||
German Social Monarchist Party
Deutsche Soziale Monarchisten-Partei |
DSMP | Right-wing | Associated with the DNVP. | |
Expropriated middle class
Enteigneter Mittelstand |
entM | Right-wing | Associated with the DNVP. | |
German Empire-Againist-Interest-Movement
Deutsche Reichs-Gegen-Zins-Bewegung |
RGZP | Right-wing | Associated with the NSDAP. | |
Imperial Party of German National Catholics
Reichspartei Nationaler Deutscher Katholiken |
Right-wing | Associated with the NSDAP. | ||
German National Citizen-Bloc
Deutscher nationaler Bürger-Block |
DnBB | Associated with the German People's Party. | ||
Liberal National-Social German Middle Class Movement
Freiheitliche National-Soziale Deutsche Mittelstandsbewegung |
FNSM | Associated with the National-Social Party of the Centre (Nationalsoziale Partei der Mitte) and Greater German People's Party (Großdeutsche Volkspartei (Liste Schmalix)) | ||
Freedom Movement Black-White-Red
Freiheitsbewegung Schwarz-Weiß-Rot (Reichsbund der Baltikum-, Oberschlesien-, Grenzschutz- und Freikorpskämpfer) |
FSWR | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Freiwirtschaftsbund
Freiwirtschaftsbund |
Fwb | Associated with the Freiwirtschaftliche Partei Deutschlands (Partei für krisenfreie Volkswirtschaft). | ||
Greater German Middle Class Party for the dictatorship of the Middle Class
Großdeutsche Mittelstandspartei für Mittelstandsdiktatur |
GMP | |||
Craftsmen, traders and business people
Handwerker, Handel- und Gewerbetreibende |
HHG | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Houseworkers and Farmers' Party
Haus- und Landwirtepartei |
HLP | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Interest group for small pensioners and those affected by inflation
Interessengemeinschaft der Kleinrentner und Inflationsgeschädigten |
IKI | |||
Nationalist Party
Nationalistische Partei |
NatP | |||
Combat League of those affected by lower wages and salaries
Kampfbund der Lohn- und Gehaltsabgebauten |
KbL | Associated with the Bavarian People's Party. | ||
Small pensioners, those affected by inflation and those with pre-war money
Kleinrentner, Inflationsgeschädigte und Vorkriegsgeldbesitzer |
KIV | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Land League
Landbund |
Ldbu | Associated with the Thuringian Landbund and the DNVP. | ||
Land League
Landbund |
Ldbu | Associated with the Württ. Bauern- und Weingärtnerbund (Landbund). | ||
Justice-Movement-Meißner
Gerechtigkeits-Bewegung-Meißner |
Meiß | |||
National Freedom Party
Nationale Freiheitspartei |
NFP | Associated with the German State Party. | ||
Radical Middle Class
Radikaler Mittelstand |
RadM | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Socialist Workers' Party of Poland
Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Polen |
SAP | |||
Polish Party
Polnische Partei |
Polen | Also known as Polish People's Party (Polnische Volkspartei). Associated with the National Minorities Germany (Nationale Minderheiten Deutschlands) | ||
For Hindenburg and Papen (Nationalist Combat Movement)
Für Hindenburg und Papen (Nationalistische Kampfbewegung) |
HuP | Associated with the DNVP. | ||
Greater German List Schmalix
Großdeutsche Liste Schmalix |
Schm | Associated with the National-Social Party of the Centre (Nationalsoziale Partei der Mitte) and Greater German People's Party (Großdeutsche Volkspartei (Liste Schmalix)) | ||
Community of fate for the German unemployed (Unemployed Front)
Schicksalsgemeinschaft deutscher Erwerbslosen (Erwerbslosenfront) |
Sgem | Associated with the CSVD. | ||
Schleswig Association
Schleswigscher Verein |
SlV | |||
German Peasants' Party (National-Republican)
Deutsche Bauernpartei (National-Republikanische) |
DB(NR) | |||
Green Front
Grüne Front |
An umbrella group which consisted of the Reichslandbund (RLB), the Deutsche Bauernshaft (formerly Bauernbund), the Association of Christian-German Peasant Unions, and the German Agricultural Council. It too heavily promoted the Junkers interest and drove out many farmers. | |||
German Agricultural Council
Deutsche Landwirtschafsrat |
||||
Federation of German Retail Business |
Unions
[edit]- Allgemeiner Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund (ADGB)
- Allgemeiner freier Angestelltenbund (AfA) white-collar employee union affiliated with the SPD-dominated free trade unions. (Pro-Weimar Republic)
- Deutscher Landarbeiterverband (German Agricultural Workers' Union) SPD-organized. (Pro-Weimar Republic)
- Deutschnationaler Handlungsgehilfenverband (DHV) (National Association of Clerical Employees) — the conservative white-collar worker union. The DHV leadership did not fully support the NSDAP because it didn't recognize the independence of unions. (Against the government)
- Freie Arbeiter-Union Deutschlands (FAUD) — an anarcho-syndicalist trade union that participated in the revolution in Germany and continued to be involved in the German labor movement in the early 1920s.
- Gesamtverband Deutscher Beamtengewerkschaften (GDB) was a conservative civil service union.
- Gewerkschaftsbund der Angestellten (GdA) was a Hirsch-Duncker union.
- Gewerkschaftsbund deutscher Angestelltenverbände (Gedag) was a conservative white-collar union.
- Reichsbund Deutscher Angestellten-Berufsverbände was a conservative white-collar union.
- Vereinigung der chrislichen-deutschen Bauernvereine (Association of Christian-German Peasant Unions)
- Zentralverband der Angestellten (ZdA), an association of white-collar unions started by the SPD. (Pro-Weimar Republic)
Other Organizations
[edit]- Alldeutscher Verband — Pan-German League. A nationalist and colonialist organization whose goal was to nurture, protect and expand German nationality as a unifying force. (Against the government)
- Deutsches Handwerk. German crafts organization headed by Zeleny. Zeleny advocated positions that would improve conditions for the old middle class. It would later back the NSDAP.
- Katholische Burschenvereine. Catholic youth associations that the Catholic Church started in southern Germany to provide Catholic youth with numerous activities.
- Tatkreis movement
- Völkisch movement (Against the government)
Secret societies
[edit]- Bund Wiking — Viking League. A paramilitary organization founded in Munich in 1923 by members of the banned Organisation Consul as a successor group. Its stated aim was the establishment of a military dictatorship and modification of the Treaty of Versailles by armed means, including provocations intended to incite workers into violence and provide the pretext for a coup.
- Organisation Consul (OC) — An ultra-nationalist and anti-Semitic terrorist organization that operated from 1920 to 1922. It was formed by Hermann Ehrhardt and several members of his Freikorps brigade. It was responsible for political assassinations, including former Minister of Finance Matthias Erzberger and Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau, that had the goal of destroying the Republic and replacing it with a right-wing dictatorship. The group was banned by the German government in 1922.
- Schwarze Reichswehr — Black Reichswehr. Extra-legal paramilitary formations promoted by the German Reichswehr to circumvent manpower restrictions imposed by the Versailles Treaty. Black Reichswehr members were responsible for several Feme murders. Active 1921 to 1923.
Reichstag election results
[edit]All vote numbers in thousands.
- Regional= Total for regional parties not listed individually
- Rightist= Total for right-wing parties not listed individually
- Splinter= Total for splinter parties not listed individually or among regional or rightist
6 June 1920 includes by-elections in Schleswig-Holstein and East Prussia (20 February 1921) and Upper Silesia (19 November 1922) Eligible 35,920 Turnout 28,196 % voting 78.4 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 590 4 USPD 5,047 83 SPD 6,104 103 Centre 3,910 64 BVP 1,173 21 DDP 2,334 39 WP 219 4 DVP 3,919 65 DNVP 4,249 71 Regional 709 5 Splinter 161 0 Total 28,415 459
4 May 1924 Eligible 38,375 Turnout 29,282 % voting 76.3 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 3,693 45 USPD 235 0 SPD 6,009 100 Centre 3,914 65 BVP 947 16 DDP 1,655 28 WP 530 10 DVP 2,728 45 DNVP 5,697 95 NSFP 1,918 32 Regional 608 5 Rightist 666 10 Splinter 682 4 Total 29,282 455
7 December 1924 Eligible 33,987 Turnout 30,290 % voting 77.7 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 2,709 45 USPD 99 0 SPD 7,881 131 Centre 4,092 69 BVP 1,134 19 DDP 1,920 32 WP 639 17 DVP 3,049 51 DNVP 6,206 103 NSFB 907 14 Regional 708 4 Rightist 545 8 Splinter 401 0 Total 30,290 493
20 May 1928 Eligible 41,224 Turnout 30,754 % voting 74.6 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 3,265 54 SPD 9,153 153 Centre 3,712 61 BVP 946 17 DDP 1,479 25 WP 1,388 23 DVP 2,680 45 DNVP 4,382 73 NSDAP 810 12 Regional 956 3 Rightist 1,025 23 Splinter 958 2 Total 30,754 491
14 September 1930 Eligible 42,958 Turnout 34,971 % voting 81.4 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 4,592 77 SPD 8,578 143 Centre 4,128 68 BVP 1,059 19 DDP 1,322 20 WP 1,362 23 DVP 1,578 30 DNVP 2,458 41 NSDAP 6,383 107 Regional 683 3 Rightist 2,373 46 Splinter 455 0 Total 34,971 577
31 July 1932 Eligible 44,211 Turnout 36,882 % voting 83.4 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 5,283 89 SPD 7,960 133 Centre 4,589 75 BVP 1,193 22 DDP 372 4 WP 147 2 DVP 136 7 DNVP 2,177 37 NSDAP 13,769 230 Regional 219 0 Rightist 552 9 Splinter 185 0 Total 36,582 608
6 November 1932 Eligible 44,374 Turnout 35,471 % voting 79.9 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 5,980 100 SPD 7,248 121 Centre 4,230 70 BVP 1,095 20 DDP 336 2 WP 110 1 DVP 661 11 DNVP 2,959 52 NSDAP 11,737 196 Regional 353 1 Rightist 510 10 Splinter 252 0 Total 35,471 584
5 March 1933 Eligible 44,665 Turnout 39,343 % voting 88.1 (Party, Votes, Seats) KPD 4,848 81 SPD 7,181 120 Centre 4,425 74 BVP 1,074 18 DDP 334 5 DVP 432 2 DNVP 3,137 52 NSDAP 17,277 288 Regional 1,246 0 Rightist 384 7 Splinter 5 0 Total 39,343 647
List by abbreviation
[edit]- ADB — Allgemeiner Deutscher Beamtenbund
- AfA — Allgemeiner Freier Angestelltenbund
- ASPD — Old Social Democratic Party of Germany
- BB — Bavarian Peasants' League
- BdL — German Agrarian League
- BLWV — Brunswick State Electoral Association
- BVP — Bavarian People's Party
- CNBL — Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party
- DAP — German Workers' Party
- DBB — German Civil Service Federation
- DBP — German Farmers' Party
- DDP — German Democratic Party
- DHP — German-Hanoverian Party
- DHV — Deutschnationaler Handlungsgehilfenverband
- DNAgB — Deutschnationaler Angestelltenbund
- DNAP — Deutschnational Arbeiterband
- DNVP — German National People's Party
- DSP — German Social Party
- DSP — German Socialist Party
- DStP — German State Party
- DVFP — German Völkisch Freedom Party
- DVP — German People's Party
- GdA — Gewerkschaftsbund der Angestellten
- GDB — Gesamtverband Deutscher Beamtengewerkschaften
- Gedag — Gewerkschaftsbund deutscher Angestelltenverbände
- GVG — Greater German People's Community
- HVB — Hanseatic People's League
- KAPD — Communist Workers' Party of Germany
- KGRNS — Combat League of Revolutionary National Socialists
- KPD — Communist Party of Germany
- KPO — Communist Party of Germany (Opposition)
- NSDAP — National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nazi Party)
- NSFP — National Socialist Freedom Party
- NSV — National Socialist People's Welfare
- OC — Organisation Consul
- RDA — Reichsbund Deutscher Angestellten-Berufsverbände
- RLB — Agricultural League
- SAPD — Socialist Workers' Party of Germany
- SHBLD — Schleswig-Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy
- SPD — Social Democratic Party of Germany
- USPD — Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany
- VKPD — United Communist Party of Germany
- VRP — People's Justice Party
- VSB — Völkisch-Social Bloc
- WP — Economic Party
- Z — Center Party
- ZdA — Zentralverband der Angestellten
See also
[edit]- Weimar paramilitary groups
- Weimar Republic
- Glossary of the Weimar Republic
- Glossary of the Third Reich
- Weimar Timeline
References
[edit]- ^ Luebke, David. "The Weimar Constitution: A Primer". University of Oregon. Retrieved 6 October 2022.
- ^ "Law against the Founding of New Parties". Holocaust Encyclopedia. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
- ^ a b Carina Simon (2016). "Heinz Brauweiler: Eine politische Biographie im Zeichen des antidemokratischen Denkens" (PDF).
- ^ "Vielparteiensystem Parteien Weimarer Republik 1918/19-1933". teachsam.de. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Reichstagswahlen 1919-1933 - Diverse Linke". www.wahlen-in-deutschland.de. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
- ^ a b c "Preußen: Wahl zum 6. Reichstag 1932". www.gonschior.de. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
- ^ "Vielparteiensystem Parteien Weimarer Republik 1918/19-1933". teachsam.de. Retrieved 2024-05-18.
Sources
[edit]- Brustein, William (1996). The Logic of Evil: The Social Origins of the Nazi Party, 1925–1933. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-06533-6.
- Mitcham, Samuel W. (1996). Why Hitler, The Genesis of the Nazi Reich. Westport, CT: Praeger. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-274-65916-6.
- Zentner, Christian; Bedürftig, Friedemann, eds. (1997) [1991]. The Encyclopedia of the Third Reich. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80793-0.
Further reading
[edit]- Halperin, S. William (1946). Germany Tried Democracy: A Political History of the Reich from 1918 to 1933 online.
- Parteien in der Weimarer Republik Vielparteiensystem Weimarer Republik 1918/19-1933 (in German)