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German Democratic Party

The German Democratic Party (Deutsche Demokratische Partei, or DDP) was a liberal political party in the Weimar Republic, considered centrist[10] or centre-left.[11] Along with the right-liberal German People's Party (Deutsche Volkspartei, or DVP), it represented political liberalism in Germany between 1918 and 1933. It was formed in 1918 from the Progressive People's Party and the liberal wing of the National Liberal Party, both of which had been active in the German Empire.

German Democratic Party
Deutsche Demokratische Partei
Founded20 November 1918; 105 years ago (20 November 1918)
DissolvedJuly 1930; 93 years ago (July 1930)
Preceded byProgressive People's Party
Merged intoGerman State Party
Youth wingYoung Democrats
Paramilitary wingReichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold (1924–1930)
IdeologyRepublicanism[1][2]
Classical liberalism[3][1]
Social liberalism[4][5]
Progressivism[6]
Political positionCentre[7] to centre-left[6][8]
International affiliationInternational Entente of Radical and Similar Democratic Parties
Colours  Black   Red   Gold (republican colors)[9]

After the formation of the first German state to be constituted along pluralist-democratic lines, the DDP took part as a member of varying coalitions in almost all Weimar Republic cabinets from 1919 to 1932. Before the Reichstag elections of 1930, it united with the People’s National Reich Association (Volksnationale Reichsvereinigung), which was part of the nationalist and anti-Semitic Young German Order (Jungdeutscher Orden). From that point on the party called itself the German State Party (Deutsche Staatspartei, or DStP) and retained the name even after the Reich Association left the party. Because of the connection to the Reich Association, members of the left wing of the DDP broke away from the party and toward the end of the Republic founded the Radical Democratic Party, which was unsuccessful in parliament. Others joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD).

After the National Socialists took power, the German State Party was dissolved on 28 June 1933 as part of the process of Gleichschaltung (coordination) by means of which the Nazis established totalitarian control over German society.

Weimar Republic edit

Emergence of the DDP edit

 
Hugo Preuß in 1919

On 16 November 1918, one week after the November Revolution that brought down the monarchy after Germany's defeat in World War I, an appeal for the founding of a new democratic party, written by the editor-in-chief of the Berliner Tageblatt Theodor Wolff and signed by 60 well-known people, appeared in the morning edition of the paper under the headline 'The Great Democratic Party'. An almost identical statement was published at the same time by the Vossische Zeitung (Voss's Newspaper).[12] Four days later members of the Progressive People's Party, which had participated in the last two governments of the German Empire in 1917/18, and the liberal wing of the National Liberal Party joined with Wolff, sociologist Max Weber, economist Alfred Weber, lawyer Hugo Preuß and others to found the German Democratic Party (DDP).

In 1910 the left-liberal Progressive People's Party had emerged from the Free-minded People's Party (Freisinnige Volkspartei), the Free-minded Union (Freisinnige Vereinigung) and the German People's Party (Deutsche Volkspartei, or DtVP) of the German Empire (the latter not to be confused with the German People's Party (DVP) of the Weimar Republic). It was this new party and the comparatively small left wing of the former National Liberal Party of the Empire that under Wolff and his associates merged to form the new German Democratic Party in 1918. The DDP united those holding democratic and liberal ideals and common positions on national and social issues but distanced itself from the wartime annexation policy of the former National Liberals of the Empire. The main representative of that point of view, Gustav Stresemann, who at the time still saw himself as a monarchist, went on to found a party that was somewhat more hostile to the republic, the German People's Party (DVP).

 
Friedrich Naumann c. 1911

No other party identified itself as unreservedly with the parliamentary democracy of the Weimar Republic as the DDP; no other party professed individual freedom and social responsibility so unequivocally. The crucial framers of the Weimar Constitution came from the ranks of the DDP. Hugo Preuß authored the draft version of the constitution that was passed by the Weimar National Assembly; Max Weber served as advisor to the drafting committee; Conrad Haußmann was vice president and chairman of the Constitutional Committee of the National Assembly; and Friedrich Naumann, a member of the Weimar National Assembly and considered one of the 'Fathers of the Constitution', was elected DDP chairman at the First Party Congress in July 1919.

The party strove for a unified federal state and demanded – like almost all other parties – a revision of the Treaty of Versailles that had imposed harsh terms on Germany after its defeat in World War I. The DDP supported the League of Nations as an institution for the peaceful reconciliation of interests between states. In social policy, the party was close to the reform efforts of the Hirsch-Duncker Trade Associations whose aim was to implement social reform through cooperation between employees and employers, following the example of English trade unions. The DDP also sought a balance between the social and economic policy ideas of labor and the middle classes through cooperation with the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). The DDP supported the principle of private enterprise but also called for the possibility of state intervention. Because of its clear commitment to liberalism and the parliamentary system, the DDP was the target of constant attacks from the ranks of the nationalist and conservative German National People's Party (Deutschnationale Volkspartei, or DNVP) and the German Ethnic Freedom Party (Deutschvölkische Freiheitspartei, or DVFP).[13]

The program of the DDP was a synthesis of liberal and social ideas. In the pre-war period, such a fusion had been attempted by Friedrich Naumann. He was a Protestant theologian and came from the Christian social movement. Supporters and members of the party were recruited primarily from the liberal professions, teachers, and university lecturers, i.e., from the educated middle classes, or Bildungsbürgertum. It was also supported by executives and civil servants, industrialists mainly from the chemical and electrical industries and liberal Jews. More Jews voted for the DDP than for any other party.[14] It was therefore dubbed the "party of Jews and professors".[15]

 
Marie-Elisabeth Lüders

In addition to Naumann, prominent members of the DDP included Hugo Preuß (the 'father' of the Weimar Constitution) and Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau. The DDP provided a home for politically active women in the Weimar Republic such as Marie-Elisabeth Lüders who in the 1950s was named 'Alterspräsidentin' of the West German Bundestag, an honorific given to the oldest or longest-serving member. Physicist Albert Einstein co-signed the DDP's founding document but was not an active party member.[16] (See also the 'Notable Members' section below.)

Along with the SPD, the DDP was one of the staunchest supporters of the Weimar Republic. Party strongholds were found in Berlin, Potsdam, Schleswig-Holstein, Württemberg, the Weser-Ems area, and especially in Hamburg, where the 1919 to 1924 party leader Carl Wilhelm Petersen was First Mayor and head of government.

In the first nationwide elections to the National Assembly of the still young republic, the DDP received 18 percent of the vote and in 1919/1920 formed the Weimar Coalition with the SPD and the Catholic Centre Party as the first government of the Weimar Republic. While the party counted around 800,000 members one year after its founding, by 1927 its membership had dropped to 117,000.[17] In spite its steadily dwindling size, the DDP played an important political role in the early years of the Republic. For one, its position between the SPD and the Centre Party helped stabilize the Weimar Coalition nationwide and especially in Prussia. Wilhelm Abegg, for example, the state secretary in the Prussian Ministry of the Interior, reorganized and modernized the Prussian police. In addition, members of the DDP formed an important reservoir of personnel for high positions in public administration. No other party was able to provide to a similar extent civil servants who both possessed the professional training and were loyal to the democratic system of the Weimar Republic, something that was not the case with the mostly monarchist and anti-democratic civil servants inherited from the Empire.

Decline during the 1920s edit

In 1920 the DDP had already lost votes, in large measure to the German People's Party, German National People's Party, and to parties focused on single issues. This was due to disagreements within the DDP over how to deal with the Versailles Peace Treaty, of which some deputies approved. The loss of votes was accompanied by a simultaneous loss of members, finances and journalistic support. Important newspapers such as the Vossische Zeitung and the Frankfurter Zeitung held views that were close to those of the DDP, but the party was never able to establish an important party paper of its own such as the SPD's Vorwärts or later the Nazi Party's Völkischer Beobachter. The prejudice that the DDP was the 'party of big capital' held credence among part of the public, a prejudice that was factually false and charged with anti-Semitism. In later years, the Nazi Party exploited this by defaming the DDP as 'the Jewish party'.

Another reason for the decline was their program of 'social capitalism' in which workers and owners mutually recognized "duty, right, performance and profit"[18] and where solidarity was to prevail between employees, workers and owners. This visionary idea was out of touch with the reality of rising unemployment and economic difficulties under the pressure of the Treaty of Versailles.

Renaming to the German State Party edit

In July 1930 the DDP united with the People's National Reich Association (VNR) to form the German State Party, initially for the upcoming Reichstag elections. This brought fierce conflicts within the party, as the VNR was the political arm of Artur Mahraun's conservative and anti-Semitic Young German Order.[19] After the merger many members of the left wing, including Ludwig Quidde and Hellmut von Gerlach, left the party and in 1930 founded the Radical Democratic Party, which was largely unsuccessful politically. The Young German Order broke away from the DDP immediately after the Reichstag elections, but the DDP nevertheless formally renamed itself the German State Party (DStP) in November 1930.[20]

Until 1932 the DStP participated in the majority of Reich governments, but in the elections of that year it received only about one percent of the vote and sank to insignificance. In the March 1933 elections, after Adolf Hitler had been named chancellor, the DStP obtained five seats in the Reichstag with the help of a combined list with the SPD.[21] The five DStP deputies, as opposed to the SPD, voted for the Nazi-sponsored Enabling Act, which effectively disempowered the Reichstag.[22] Their "yes" to the Enabling Act was justified by the deputy Reinhold Maier. The final sentence of his speech read: "In the interest of the people and the Fatherland and in the expectation of lawful developments, we will put aside our serious misgivings and agree to the Enabling Act."[23]

Development after the Nazi seizure of power edit

Self-dissolution in 1933 edit

Since the mandates of the DStP’s Reichstag deputies had been won by means of nominations from the Social Democratic Party, they expired in July 1933 based on a provision of the Gleichschaltung Law of 31 March 1933.[24] The self-dissolution of the DStP, forced by the National Socialists, took place on 28 June 1933. The law against the formation of new parties enacted on 14 July codified the existence of a single party in the Nazi state, the NSDAP, and any activity on behalf of other parties was made a punishable offense.[25]

Resistance to National Socialism edit

 
Otto Geßler

Individual members of the DStP participated in the resistance to National Socialism. The only left-liberal resistance group, the Robinsohn-Strassmann group, consisted mainly of former DDP/DStP members. A middle-class resistance circle with about sixty members was the Sperr Circle in Bavaria. It consisted of the diplomat Franz Sperr as well as the former Weimar Reich ministers and DDP members Otto Geßler and Eduard Hamm. Many former members of the DDP and Radical Democratic Party also found themselves forced into exile either because of their stance against the regime or their pacifist attitudes, among them Ludwig Quidde and Wilhelm Abegg. Others were murdered by the National Socialists, including Fritz Elsas.

DDP politicians after World War II edit

After World War II former members of the DDP were instrumental in founding both the West German Free Democratic Party (FDP) – for example Theodor Heuss, Thomas Dehler and Reinhold Maier – and the East German Liberal Democratic Party (LDPD) – including Wilhelm Külz, Eugen Schiffer and Waldemar Koch – while others such as Ernst Lemmer, Ferdinand Friedensburg and August Bach went to the Christian Democratic Union (CDU), or the Social Democratic Party, including Erich Lüth. Otto Nuschke became leader of the East German CDU.

The youth organization Young Democrats (Jungdemokraten), which had been close to the DDP, continued to exist until 2018.

Election results edit

Election year Votes % Seats +/–
1919 5,641,825 18.6 (3rd)
75 / 423
New Party
1920 2,333,741 8.3 (6th)
39 / 459
  36
May 1924 1,655,129 5.7 (7th)
28 / 472
  11
December 1924 1,919,829 6.3 (6th)
32 / 493
  4
1928 1,479,374 4.8 (6th)
25 / 491
  7
1930 1,322,034 3.8 (8th)
20 / 577
  5
July 1932 371,800 1.0 (8th)
4 / 608
  16
November 1932 336,447 1.0 (9th)
2 / 584
  2
1933 334,242 0.9 (9th)
5 / 647
  3
Elections in the Prussian Landtag 1918–1933
1919 1% 65 Seats
1921 05,9 % 26 Seats
1924 05,9 % 27 Seats
1928 04,4 % 21 Seats
1932 01,5 % 02 Seats
1933 00,7 % 03 Seats

Party chairmen of the DDP and DStP

Year Party Chairman
1919 DDP Friedrich Naumann
1919–1924 DDP Carl Wilhelm Petersen
1924–1930 DDP Erich Koch-Weser
1930–1933 DStP Hermann Dietrich

Noted members of the DDP and DStP edit

Pictures edit

See also edit

Preceded by German Democratic Party
1918–1930
Succeeded by

References edit

  1. ^ a b Kurlander, Eric (2006). The Price of Exclusion: Ethnicity, National Identity, and the Decline of German Liberalism, 1898–1933. Berghahn Books. p. 197. ISBN 1-8454-5069-8.
  2. ^ Maier, Charles S. (1975). Recasting Bourgeois Europe: Stabilization in France, Germany and Italy in the Decade after World War I. Princeton University Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-691-05220-4.
  3. ^ Mommsen, Hans (1996). The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy. University of North Carolina Press. p. 58. ISBN 0-8078-2249-3.
  4. ^ Van De Grift, Liesbeth (2012). Securing the Communist State: The Reconstruction of Coercive Institutions in the Soviet Zone of Germany and Romania, 1944–48. Lexington Books. p. 41. ISBN 978-0-7391-7178-3.
  5. ^ Lash, Scott; Urry, John (1987). The End of Organized Capitalism. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 27. ISBN 0-7456-0068-9.
  6. ^ a b Sartori, Giovanni (1976). Parties and Party Systems. Vol. 1. Cambridge University Press. p. 156.
  7. ^ Lee, Stephen J. (1998). The Weimar Republic. Routledge. p. 23. ISBN 0-415-17178-4.
  8. ^ Allinson, Mark (2015). Germany and Austria since 1814 (second ed.). Routledge. p. 58.
  9. ^ Preuss, Hugo (2008). Schwarz-Rot-Gold: Zum Nürnberger Parteitag (1920) [Black-Red-Gold: For the Nuremberg Party Congress (1920)] (in German). Mohr Siebeck. p. 155. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Lee, Stephen J. (1998). The Weimar Republic. Library Genesis. London ; New York : Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-17178-6.
  11. ^ Orlow, Dietrich (15 December 1986). Weimar Prussia, 1918–1925: The Unlikely Rock of Democracy. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 329. ISBN 978-0-8229-7640-0.
  12. ^ Wagner, Horst (1998). "Die Gründung der DDP 1918" [The Founding of the DDP 1918]. Berlinische Monatsschrift (Luisenstädtischer Bildungsverein) (in German). 11. ISSN 0944-5560.
  13. ^ "Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei (DDP)". Deutsches Historisches Museum. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  14. ^ Niewyk, Donald L. (1930). The Jews in Weimar Germany. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 31.
  15. ^ Baumgarten, Alfred I. (2010). Elias Bickerman as a historian of the Jews: a twentieth-century tale. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 9783161501715.
  16. ^ Möller, Horst (2018). Die Weimarer Republik: Demokratie in der Krise [The Weimar Republic: Democracy in Crisis] (in German). Munich: Piper.
  17. ^ "Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei". Deutsches Historisches Museum www.dhm.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-11-19.
  18. ^ Schneider, Werner (1978). Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei in der Weimarer Republik 1924–1930 [The German Democratic Party in the Weimar Republic 1924–1930] (in German). Munich: Fink. p. 58. ISBN 3-7705-1549-8.
  19. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (2002). Der lange Weg nach Westen. Deutsche Geschichte 1806–1933 [The Long Road to the West. German History 1806–1933] (in German). Bonn: C.H. Beck. p. 487. ISBN 9783893314638.
  20. ^ Brauers, Christof (2007). Die FDP in Hamburg 1945 bis 1953 [The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953] (in German). Munich: Peter Lang. pp. 75 ff.
  21. ^ "Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei (DDP)". Deutsches Historisches Museum. 8 June 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2022.
  22. ^ "Reichstag – 2. Sitzung. Donnerstag den 23. März 1933 S. 25 S. 45". Verhandlungen des deutschen Reichstags. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
  23. ^ "Reichstag – 2. Sitzung. Donnerstag den 23. März 1933 S. 25". Verhandlungen des deutschen Reichstags. Retrieved 2022-11-20.
  24. ^ "Reichsgesetzblatt, Jahrgang 1933 S. 462". ALEX Historische Rechts- und Gesetzestexte. Retrieved 2022-11-19.
  25. ^ [Law against the formation of new parties of 14 July 1933]. Verfassungen der Welt. Archived from the original on 21 December 2008. Retrieved 19 November 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Frye, Bruce B. (1963). "The German Democratic Party 1918–1930". Political Research Quarterly. 16 (1): 167–179. doi:10.1177/106591296301600112. S2CID 154947747.

german, democratic, party, confused, with, democratic, party, germany, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, source. Not to be confused with Democratic Party of Germany This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources German Democratic Party news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The German Democratic Party Deutsche Demokratische Partei or DDP was a liberal political party in the Weimar Republic considered centrist 10 or centre left 11 Along with the right liberal German People s Party Deutsche Volkspartei or DVP it represented political liberalism in Germany between 1918 and 1933 It was formed in 1918 from the Progressive People s Party and the liberal wing of the National Liberal Party both of which had been active in the German Empire German Democratic Party Deutsche Demokratische ParteiFounded20 November 1918 105 years ago 20 November 1918 DissolvedJuly 1930 93 years ago July 1930 Preceded byProgressive People s PartyMerged intoGerman State PartyYouth wingYoung DemocratsParamilitary wingReichsbanner Schwarz Rot Gold 1924 1930 IdeologyRepublicanism 1 2 Classical liberalism 3 1 Social liberalism 4 5 Progressivism 6 Political positionCentre 7 to centre left 6 8 International affiliationInternational Entente of Radical and Similar Democratic PartiesColours Black Red Gold republican colors 9 Politics of GermanyPolitical partiesElectionsAfter the formation of the first German state to be constituted along pluralist democratic lines the DDP took part as a member of varying coalitions in almost all Weimar Republic cabinets from 1919 to 1932 Before the Reichstag elections of 1930 it united with the People s National Reich Association Volksnationale Reichsvereinigung which was part of the nationalist and anti Semitic Young German Order Jungdeutscher Orden From that point on the party called itself the German State Party Deutsche Staatspartei or DStP and retained the name even after the Reich Association left the party Because of the connection to the Reich Association members of the left wing of the DDP broke away from the party and toward the end of the Republic founded the Radical Democratic Party which was unsuccessful in parliament Others joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD After the National Socialists took power the German State Party was dissolved on 28 June 1933 as part of the process of Gleichschaltung coordination by means of which the Nazis established totalitarian control over German society Contents 1 Weimar Republic 1 1 Emergence of the DDP 1 2 Decline during the 1920s 1 3 Renaming to the German State Party 2 Development after the Nazi seizure of power 2 1 Self dissolution in 1933 2 2 Resistance to National Socialism 3 DDP politicians after World War II 4 Election results 5 Noted members of the DDP and DStP 6 Pictures 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingWeimar Republic editEmergence of the DDP edit nbsp Hugo Preuss in 1919On 16 November 1918 one week after the November Revolution that brought down the monarchy after Germany s defeat in World War I an appeal for the founding of a new democratic party written by the editor in chief of the Berliner Tageblatt Theodor Wolff and signed by 60 well known people appeared in the morning edition of the paper under the headline The Great Democratic Party An almost identical statement was published at the same time by the Vossische Zeitung Voss s Newspaper 12 Four days later members of the Progressive People s Party which had participated in the last two governments of the German Empire in 1917 18 and the liberal wing of the National Liberal Party joined with Wolff sociologist Max Weber economist Alfred Weber lawyer Hugo Preuss and others to found the German Democratic Party DDP In 1910 the left liberal Progressive People s Party had emerged from the Free minded People s Party Freisinnige Volkspartei the Free minded Union Freisinnige Vereinigung and the German People s Party Deutsche Volkspartei or DtVP of the German Empire the latter not to be confused with the German People s Party DVP of the Weimar Republic It was this new party and the comparatively small left wing of the former National Liberal Party of the Empire that under Wolff and his associates merged to form the new German Democratic Party in 1918 The DDP united those holding democratic and liberal ideals and common positions on national and social issues but distanced itself from the wartime annexation policy of the former National Liberals of the Empire The main representative of that point of view Gustav Stresemann who at the time still saw himself as a monarchist went on to found a party that was somewhat more hostile to the republic the German People s Party DVP nbsp Friedrich Naumann c 1911No other party identified itself as unreservedly with the parliamentary democracy of the Weimar Republic as the DDP no other party professed individual freedom and social responsibility so unequivocally The crucial framers of the Weimar Constitution came from the ranks of the DDP Hugo Preuss authored the draft version of the constitution that was passed by the Weimar National Assembly Max Weber served as advisor to the drafting committee Conrad Haussmann was vice president and chairman of the Constitutional Committee of the National Assembly and Friedrich Naumann a member of the Weimar National Assembly and considered one of the Fathers of the Constitution was elected DDP chairman at the First Party Congress in July 1919 The party strove for a unified federal state and demanded like almost all other parties a revision of the Treaty of Versailles that had imposed harsh terms on Germany after its defeat in World War I The DDP supported the League of Nations as an institution for the peaceful reconciliation of interests between states In social policy the party was close to the reform efforts of the Hirsch Duncker Trade Associations whose aim was to implement social reform through cooperation between employees and employers following the example of English trade unions The DDP also sought a balance between the social and economic policy ideas of labor and the middle classes through cooperation with the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD The DDP supported the principle of private enterprise but also called for the possibility of state intervention Because of its clear commitment to liberalism and the parliamentary system the DDP was the target of constant attacks from the ranks of the nationalist and conservative German National People s Party Deutschnationale Volkspartei or DNVP and the German Ethnic Freedom Party Deutschvolkische Freiheitspartei or DVFP 13 The program of the DDP was a synthesis of liberal and social ideas In the pre war period such a fusion had been attempted by Friedrich Naumann He was a Protestant theologian and came from the Christian social movement Supporters and members of the party were recruited primarily from the liberal professions teachers and university lecturers i e from the educated middle classes or Bildungsburgertum It was also supported by executives and civil servants industrialists mainly from the chemical and electrical industries and liberal Jews More Jews voted for the DDP than for any other party 14 It was therefore dubbed the party of Jews and professors 15 nbsp Marie Elisabeth LudersIn addition to Naumann prominent members of the DDP included Hugo Preuss the father of the Weimar Constitution and Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau The DDP provided a home for politically active women in the Weimar Republic such as Marie Elisabeth Luders who in the 1950s was named Altersprasidentin of the West German Bundestag an honorific given to the oldest or longest serving member Physicist Albert Einstein co signed the DDP s founding document but was not an active party member 16 See also the Notable Members section below Along with the SPD the DDP was one of the staunchest supporters of the Weimar Republic Party strongholds were found in Berlin Potsdam Schleswig Holstein Wurttemberg the Weser Ems area and especially in Hamburg where the 1919 to 1924 party leader Carl Wilhelm Petersen was First Mayor and head of government In the first nationwide elections to the National Assembly of the still young republic the DDP received 18 percent of the vote and in 1919 1920 formed the Weimar Coalition with the SPD and the Catholic Centre Party as the first government of the Weimar Republic While the party counted around 800 000 members one year after its founding by 1927 its membership had dropped to 117 000 17 In spite its steadily dwindling size the DDP played an important political role in the early years of the Republic For one its position between the SPD and the Centre Party helped stabilize the Weimar Coalition nationwide and especially in Prussia Wilhelm Abegg for example the state secretary in the Prussian Ministry of the Interior reorganized and modernized the Prussian police In addition members of the DDP formed an important reservoir of personnel for high positions in public administration No other party was able to provide to a similar extent civil servants who both possessed the professional training and were loyal to the democratic system of the Weimar Republic something that was not the case with the mostly monarchist and anti democratic civil servants inherited from the Empire Decline during the 1920s edit In 1920 the DDP had already lost votes in large measure to the German People s Party German National People s Party and to parties focused on single issues This was due to disagreements within the DDP over how to deal with the Versailles Peace Treaty of which some deputies approved The loss of votes was accompanied by a simultaneous loss of members finances and journalistic support Important newspapers such as the Vossische Zeitung and the Frankfurter Zeitung held views that were close to those of the DDP but the party was never able to establish an important party paper of its own such as the SPD s Vorwarts or later the Nazi Party s Volkischer Beobachter The prejudice that the DDP was the party of big capital held credence among part of the public a prejudice that was factually false and charged with anti Semitism In later years the Nazi Party exploited this by defaming the DDP as the Jewish party Another reason for the decline was their program of social capitalism in which workers and owners mutually recognized duty right performance and profit 18 and where solidarity was to prevail between employees workers and owners This visionary idea was out of touch with the reality of rising unemployment and economic difficulties under the pressure of the Treaty of Versailles Renaming to the German State Party edit In July 1930 the DDP united with the People s National Reich Association VNR to form the German State Party initially for the upcoming Reichstag elections This brought fierce conflicts within the party as the VNR was the political arm of Artur Mahraun s conservative and anti Semitic Young German Order 19 After the merger many members of the left wing including Ludwig Quidde and Hellmut von Gerlach left the party and in 1930 founded the Radical Democratic Party which was largely unsuccessful politically The Young German Order broke away from the DDP immediately after the Reichstag elections but the DDP nevertheless formally renamed itself the German State Party DStP in November 1930 20 Until 1932 the DStP participated in the majority of Reich governments but in the elections of that year it received only about one percent of the vote and sank to insignificance In the March 1933 elections after Adolf Hitler had been named chancellor the DStP obtained five seats in the Reichstag with the help of a combined list with the SPD 21 The five DStP deputies as opposed to the SPD voted for the Nazi sponsored Enabling Act which effectively disempowered the Reichstag 22 Their yes to the Enabling Act was justified by the deputy Reinhold Maier The final sentence of his speech read In the interest of the people and the Fatherland and in the expectation of lawful developments we will put aside our serious misgivings and agree to the Enabling Act 23 Development after the Nazi seizure of power editSelf dissolution in 1933 edit Since the mandates of the DStP s Reichstag deputies had been won by means of nominations from the Social Democratic Party they expired in July 1933 based on a provision of the Gleichschaltung Law of 31 March 1933 24 The self dissolution of the DStP forced by the National Socialists took place on 28 June 1933 The law against the formation of new parties enacted on 14 July codified the existence of a single party in the Nazi state the NSDAP and any activity on behalf of other parties was made a punishable offense 25 Resistance to National Socialism edit nbsp Otto GesslerIndividual members of the DStP participated in the resistance to National Socialism The only left liberal resistance group the Robinsohn Strassmann group consisted mainly of former DDP DStP members A middle class resistance circle with about sixty members was the Sperr Circle in Bavaria It consisted of the diplomat Franz Sperr as well as the former Weimar Reich ministers and DDP members Otto Gessler and Eduard Hamm Many former members of the DDP and Radical Democratic Party also found themselves forced into exile either because of their stance against the regime or their pacifist attitudes among them Ludwig Quidde and Wilhelm Abegg Others were murdered by the National Socialists including Fritz Elsas DDP politicians after World War II editAfter World War II former members of the DDP were instrumental in founding both the West German Free Democratic Party FDP for example Theodor Heuss Thomas Dehler and Reinhold Maier and the East German Liberal Democratic Party LDPD including Wilhelm Kulz Eugen Schiffer and Waldemar Koch while others such as Ernst Lemmer Ferdinand Friedensburg and August Bach went to the Christian Democratic Union CDU or the Social Democratic Party including Erich Luth Otto Nuschke became leader of the East German CDU The youth organization Young Democrats Jungdemokraten which had been close to the DDP continued to exist until 2018 Election results editElection year Votes Seats 1919 5 641 825 18 6 3rd 75 423 New Party1920 2 333 741 8 3 6th 39 459 nbsp 36May 1924 1 655 129 5 7 7th 28 472 nbsp 11December 1924 1 919 829 6 3 6th 32 493 nbsp 41928 1 479 374 4 8 6th 25 491 nbsp 71930 1 322 034 3 8 8th 20 577 nbsp 5July 1932 371 800 1 0 8th 4 608 nbsp 16November 1932 336 447 1 0 9th 2 584 nbsp 21933 334 242 0 9 9th 5 647 nbsp 3Elections in the Prussian Landtag 1918 19331919 1 65 Seats1921 0 5 9 26 Seats1924 0 5 9 27 Seats1928 0 4 4 21 Seats1932 0 1 5 0 2 Seats1933 0 0 7 0 3 SeatsParty chairmen of the DDP and DStP Year Party Chairman1919 DDP Friedrich Naumann1919 1924 DDP Carl Wilhelm Petersen1924 1930 DDP Erich Koch Weser1930 1933 DStP Hermann DietrichNoted members of the DDP and DStP editGertrud Baumer 1873 1954 women s rights activist Thomas Dehler 1897 1967 lawyer Bernhard Dernburg 1865 1937 banker Hermann Dietrich 1879 1954 Reich Minister of Agriculture and Finance Vice Chancellor and party chairman Hellmut von Gerlach 1866 1935 publisher Otto Gessler 1875 1955 Reich Minister of Defense Adolf Grimme 1889 1963 cultural politician Willy Hellpach 1877 1955 psychologist Theodor Heuss 1884 1963 journalist and university lecturer Elly Heuss Knapp 1881 1952 social reformer Harry Graf Kessler 1868 1937 art collector and diplomat Erich Koch Weser 1875 1944 party chairman Wilhelm Kulz 1875 1948 Reich Minister of the Interior and Lord Mayor of Dresden Helene Lange 1848 1930 women s rights activist Ernst Lemmer 1898 1970 trade union leader Marie Elisabeth Luders 1878 1966 women s rights activist Thomas Mann 1875 1955 writer Reinhold Maier 1889 1971 lawyer Friedrich Meinecke 1862 1954 historian Friedrich Naumann 1860 1919 party leader and publisher Otto Nuschke 1883 1957 journalist Friedrich von Payer 1847 1931 parliamentary group chairman Carl Wilhelm Petersen 1868 1933 party chairman Hugo Preuss 1860 1925 constitutional lawyer and Reich Minister of the Interior Ludwig Quidde 1858 1941 historian publisher and pacifist Walther Rathenau 1867 1922 industrialist and Reich Foreign Minister Hjalmar Schacht 1877 1970 Reichsbank president Gerhart von Schulze Gaevernitz 1864 1943 national economist Walther Schucking 1875 1935 pacifist and judge at the Permanent Court of International Justice Wilhelm Solf 1862 1936 diplomat Ernst Troeltsch 1865 1923 theologian Alfred Weber 1868 1958 national economist and sociologist Max Weber 1864 1920 sociologist and national economist Eberhard Wildermuth 1890 1952 director of the German Construction and Land Bank Theodor Wolff 1868 1943 journalistPictures edit nbsp Funeral celebration for Walther Rathenau the murdered DDP minister of foreign affairs 1922 nbsp Psychologist Willy Hellpach DDP candidate for Reich Presidency in 1925 nbsp DDP Ministers Wilhelm Kulz left Interior and Otto Gessler Defense 1926 nbsp One of the political leaders of the party Hermann Dietrich 1926 nbsp Ludwig Quidde winner of the Nobel Peace Prize of 1927 nbsp Paper flag from the DDP campaign for the Berlin City Council in 1929 nbsp Former DDP minister Bernhard Dernburg in 1931 nbsp Allied prisoner Hjalmar Schacht in 1945 nbsp Federal President Theodor Heuss in 1953See also editLiberalism in Germany Democratic Party of Germany Liberalism List of liberal parties National League of German Democratic Youth Clubs youth wing of the party Weimar RepublicPreceded byProgressive People s Party German Democratic Party1918 1930 Succeeded byGerman State PartyReferences edit a b Kurlander Eric 2006 The Price of Exclusion Ethnicity National Identity and the Decline of German Liberalism 1898 1933 Berghahn Books p 197 ISBN 1 8454 5069 8 Maier Charles S 1975 Recasting Bourgeois Europe Stabilization in France Germany and Italy in the Decade after World War I Princeton University Press p 56 ISBN 0 691 05220 4 Mommsen Hans 1996 The Rise and Fall of Weimar Democracy University of North Carolina Press p 58 ISBN 0 8078 2249 3 Van De Grift Liesbeth 2012 Securing the Communist State The Reconstruction of Coercive Institutions in the Soviet Zone of Germany and Romania 1944 48 Lexington Books p 41 ISBN 978 0 7391 7178 3 Lash Scott Urry John 1987 The End of Organized Capitalism University of Wisconsin Press p 27 ISBN 0 7456 0068 9 a b Sartori Giovanni 1976 Parties and Party Systems Vol 1 Cambridge University Press p 156 Lee Stephen J 1998 The Weimar Republic Routledge p 23 ISBN 0 415 17178 4 Allinson Mark 2015 Germany and Austria since 1814 second ed Routledge p 58 Preuss Hugo 2008 Schwarz Rot Gold Zum Nurnberger Parteitag 1920 Black Red Gold For the Nuremberg Party Congress 1920 in German Mohr Siebeck p 155 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Lee Stephen J 1998 The Weimar Republic Library Genesis London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 17178 6 Orlow Dietrich 15 December 1986 Weimar Prussia 1918 1925 The Unlikely Rock of Democracy University of Pittsburgh Press p 329 ISBN 978 0 8229 7640 0 Wagner Horst 1998 Die Grundung der DDP 1918 The Founding of the DDP 1918 Berlinische Monatsschrift Luisenstadtischer Bildungsverein in German 11 ISSN 0944 5560 Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei DDP Deutsches Historisches Museum 8 June 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2022 Niewyk Donald L 1930 The Jews in Weimar Germany Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press p 31 Baumgarten Alfred I 2010 Elias Bickerman as a historian of the Jews a twentieth century tale Tubingen Mohr Siebeck ISBN 9783161501715 Moller Horst 2018 Die Weimarer Republik Demokratie in der Krise The Weimar Republic Democracy in Crisis in German Munich Piper Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei Deutsches Historisches Museum www dhm de in German Retrieved 2022 11 19 Schneider Werner 1978 Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei in der Weimarer Republik 1924 1930 The German Democratic Party in the Weimar Republic 1924 1930 in German Munich Fink p 58 ISBN 3 7705 1549 8 Winkler Heinrich August 2002 Der lange Weg nach Westen Deutsche Geschichte 1806 1933 The Long Road to the West German History 1806 1933 in German Bonn C H Beck p 487 ISBN 9783893314638 Brauers Christof 2007 Die FDP in Hamburg 1945 bis 1953 The FDP in Hamburg 1945 to 1953 in German Munich Peter Lang pp 75 ff Die Deutsche Demokratische Partei DDP Deutsches Historisches Museum 8 June 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2022 Reichstag 2 Sitzung Donnerstag den 23 Marz 1933 S 25 S 45 Verhandlungen des deutschen Reichstags Retrieved 2022 11 20 Reichstag 2 Sitzung Donnerstag den 23 Marz 1933 S 25 Verhandlungen des deutschen Reichstags Retrieved 2022 11 20 Reichsgesetzblatt Jahrgang 1933 S 462 ALEX Historische Rechts und Gesetzestexte Retrieved 2022 11 19 Gesetz gegen die Neubildung von Parteien vom 14 Juli 1933 Law against the formation of new parties of 14 July 1933 Verfassungen der Welt Archived from the original on 21 December 2008 Retrieved 19 November 2022 Further reading editFrye Bruce B 1963 The German Democratic Party 1918 1930 Political Research Quarterly 16 1 167 179 doi 10 1177 106591296301600112 S2CID 154947747 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German Democratic Party amp oldid 1203874135, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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