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Strasserism

Strasserism (German: Strasserismus) is an ideological strand of Nazism which adheres to revolutionary nationalism and to economic antisemitism, which conditions are to be achieved with radical, mass-action and worker-based politics that are more aggressive than the politics of the Hitlerite leaders of the Nazi Party. Named after Gregor Strasser and Otto Strasser, the ideology of Strasserism is a type of Third Position, right-wing politics in opposition to Communism and to Hitlerite Nazism.

Otto Strasser speaking in public after return to West Germany in 1945.

In his political career, Otto Strasser led an ultranationalist faction within the Nazi Party, but resigned from the Party in 1930; he later established the Combat League of Revolutionary National Socialists (the Black Front) to rival the Nazi Party.[1] Consequent to his politics, Otto Strasser fled Germany in 1933 and returned at War’s end in 1945. In the intramural politics of the Nazi Party, Strasserism had many supporters among the troops of the Sturmabteilung (SA), which led to Hitler's purging the Strasserist faction and killing their leader, Gregor Strasser, on the Night of the Long Knives in July 1934.

In the 1980s, the revolutionary nationalism and the economic anti-Semitism of Strasserism reappeared in the politics of the National Front Party in the U.K.[2]

Strasser brothers edit

Gregor Strasser edit

Gregor Strasser (1892–1934) began his career in ultranationalist German politics by joining the Freikorps after soldiering in the First World War (1914–1918). He participated in the Kapp Putsch (13 March 1920) and formed his own völkischer Wehrverband, a “popular defense union” that Strasser later merged into the Nazi Party in 1921. Initially a loyal supporter of Hitler, as such, Strasser participated in the Beer Hall Putsch (8–9 November 1923) and held high-level offices in the Nazi Party; however, Strasser became a strong advocate of the radical wing of the Nazi Party, arguing that the nationalist revolution should act to resolve the poverty imposed upon post-war Germany and should seek the political support of the German working class.

After Hitler's installation to German government, Ernst Röhm, who headed the Sturmabteilung (SA), the principal paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party, called for a second, national-socialist revolution to remove the business, social, and political élites from control of the government, the economy, and the politics of Germany. Strasser's proposed revolution was opposed by the German conservative movement and Nazis who preferred an ordered authoritarian régime for Germany to the politically disruptive programs proposed by the Strasserist radicals of the Nazi Party.

Otto Strasser edit

Otto Strasser (1897–1974) had also been a member of the Freikorps, but he joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany and fought against the Kapp Putsch. Strasser joined the Nazi Party in 1925, where he kept promoting the importance of socialism in National Socialism. Considered more of a radical than his brother, Strasser was expelled by the Nazi Party in 1930 and set up the Black Front, his own dissident group which called for a specifically German nationalist form of socialist revolution. Strasser fled Germany in 1933 to live firstly in Czechoslovakia and then Canada before returning to West Germany in later life, all the while writing prolifically about Hitler and what he saw as his betrayal of Nazism's ideals.

Ideology edit

The name Strasserism came to be applied to the form of Nazism associated with the Strasser brothers. Although they had been involved in the creation of the National Socialist Program of 1920, both men called on the party to commit to "breaking the shackles of finance capital".[3] This opposition to what Nazis termed Finanzkapitalismus (finance capitalism) and raffendes Kapital (which translates roughly to "money-grubbing capitalism", and was implied to mean "Jewish capitalism"), which they contrasted to producerism or what was termed "productive capitalism", was shared by Adolf Hitler, who borrowed it from Gottfried Feder.[4]

This populist form of economic antisemitism was espoused by Otto Strasser in Nationalsozialistische Briefe, published in 1925, which discussed notions of class conflict, wealth redistribution and a possible alliance with the Soviet Union. His 1930 follow-up Ministersessel oder Revolution (Cabinet Seat or Revolution) attacked Hitler's betrayal of the socialist aspect of Nazism as well as criticizing the notion of the Führerprinzip.[5] Whilst Gregor Strasser echoed many of the calls of his brother, his influence on the ideology was lower, owing to his remaining in the Nazi Party longer and to his early death. Meanwhile, Otto Strasser continued to expand his argument, calling for the break-up of large estates and the development of something akin to a guild socialism, and the related establishment of a Reich cooperative chamber to take a leading role in economic planning.[6]

It is disputed whether Strasserism was a distinct form of Nazism. According to historian Ian Kershaw, "the leaders of the SA [which included Gregor Strasser] did not have another vision of the future of Germany or another politic to propose". The Strasserites advocated the radicalization of the Nazi regime and the toppling of the German elites, calling Hitler's rise to power a half-revolution which needed to be completed.[7]

Otto Strasser was also strongly Pan-European, even going as far as to praise Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi for his efforts advocating Pan-European unity.[8]

Among the policies of Third Reich, which Otto Strasser was most critical of, was the German involvement in the Spanish Civil War. He even called on both the S.S., S.A. and the Reichswehr to revolt against Hitler on the slogan of "No German blood for Spain, Hail Germany".[8]

Influence edit

In 1930s Finland edit

Finnish politician Yrjö Ruutu founded the National Socialist Union of Finland in 1932, which was one of several Finnish Nazi parties at the time. Ruutu's ideas included the nationalization of large companies and other assets vital for national interests, a self-sufficient planned economy, a parliament controlled by trade unions and the appointment of technocrats as ministers.[9] Ruutu's party remained on the fringes of Finnish politics and never gained any seats in parliament, but it is considered to have had a considerable influence on the ideology of the Academic Karelia Society and president Urho Kekkonen.[10] In 1944, all Nazi parties in Finland were dissolved as contrary to Article 21 of the Moscow Armistice, which forbade fascist parties.[11] Some former members of Ruutu's party, such as Yrjö Kilpeläinen and Unto Varjonen, became prominent figures in the right-wing faction of the post-war Social Democratic Party of Finland.[10][12] Another prominent former member, Vietti Nykänen, became the vice chairman of the Radical People's Party.[13] Member of the board of the party Heikki Waris later became Minister of Social Affairs in the Von Fieandt Cabinet in 1957.[14]

In post-war Germany edit

 
Flag of the Black Front, which is commonly used by Strasserists.

During the 1970s, the ideas of Strasserism began to be mentioned more in European far-right groups as younger members with no ties to Hitler and a stronger sense of economic antisemitism came to the fore. Strasserite thought in Germany began to emerge as a tendency within the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) during the late 1960s. These Strasserites played a leading role in securing the removal of Adolf von Thadden from the leadership and after his departure the party became stronger in condemning Hitler for what it saw as his move away from socialism in order to court business and army leaders.[15]

Although initially adopted by the NPD, Strasserism soon became associated with more peripheral extremist figures, notably Michael Kühnen, who produced a 1982 pamphlet Farewell to Hitler which included a strong endorsement of the idea. The People's Socialist Movement of Germany/Labour Party, a minor extremist movement that was outlawed in 1982, adopted the policy. Its successor movement, the Nationalist Front, did likewise, with its ten-point programme calling for an "anti-materialist cultural revolution" and an "anti-capitalist social revolution" to underline its support for the idea.[16] The Free German Workers' Party also moved towards these ideas under the leadership of Friedhelm Busse in the late 1980s.[17]

The flag of the Strasserite movement Black Front and its symbol of a crossed hammer and a sword has been used by German and other European neo-Nazis abroad as a substitute for the more infamous Nazi flag which is banned in some countries such as Germany.

In the United Kingdom edit

Strasserism emerged in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s and centred on the National Front (NF) publication Britain First, the main writers of which were David McCalden, Richard Lawson and Denis Pirie. Opposing the leadership of John Tyndall, they formed an alliance with John Kingsley Read and ultimately followed him into the National Party (NP).[18] The NP called for British workers to seize the right to work and offered a fairly Strasserite economic policy.[19] Nonetheless, the NP was short-lived. Due in part to Read's lack of enthusiasm for Strasserism, the main exponents of the idea drifted away.[citation needed]

The idea was reintroduced to the NF by Andrew Brons in the early 1980s when he decided to make the party's ideology clearer.[20] However, Strasserism was soon to become the province of the radicals in the Official National Front, with Richard Lawson brought in a behind-the-scenes role to help direct policy.[21] This Political Soldier wing ultimately opted for the indigenous alternative of distributism, but their strong anti-capitalist rhetoric as well as that of their International Third Position successor demonstrated influences from Strasserism. From this background emerged Troy Southgate, whose own ideology and those of related groups such as the English Nationalist Movement and National Revolutionary Faction were influenced by Strasserism.

Elsewhere edit

 
Logo of Polish Partia Narodowych Socjalistów.

Third Position groups, whose inspiration is generally more Italian in derivation, have often looked to Strasserism, owing to their strong opposition to capitalism based on economic antisemitic grounds. This was noted in France, where the student group Groupe Union Défense and the more recent Renouveau français both extolled Strasserite economic platforms.[22]

Attempts to reinterpret Nazism as having a left-wing base have also been heavily influenced by this school of thought, notably through the work of Povl Riis-Knudsen, who produced the Strasser-influenced work National Socialism: A Left-Wing Movement in 1984.[23]

In the United States, Tom Metzger, a white supremacist, had some affiliation to Strasserism, having been influenced by Kühnen's pamphlet.[24] Also in the United States, Matthew Heimbach of the former Traditionalist Worker Party identifies as a Strasserist.[25] Heimbach often engages primarily in anti-capitalist rhetoric during public speeches instead of overt antisemitism, anti-Masonry or anti-communist rhetoric. Heimbach was expelled from the National Socialist Movement due to his economic views being seen by the group as too left-wing.[26] Heimbach stated that the NSM "essentially want it to remain a politically impotent white supremacist gang".[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kedar, Asaf (2010). National Socialism Before Nazism: Friedrich Naumann and Theodor Fritsch, 1890-1914. University of California, Berkeley. p. 169.
  2. ^ Sykes, Alan (2005). The Radical Right in Britain: Social Imperialism to the BNP. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0333599242 p. 124.
  3. ^ C. T. Husbands, 'Militant Neo-Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany' in L. Cheles, R. Ferguson & M. Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, 1992, p. 98.
  4. ^ Ian Kershaw, Hitler: A Profile in Power, first chapter (London, 1991, rev. 2001).
  5. ^ Karl Dietrich Bracher, The German Dictatorship, 1973, pp. 230–231.
  6. ^ Nolte, Ernst (1969). Three Faces of Fascism: Action Française, Italian fascism, National Socialism. New York: Mentor. pp. 425–426.
  7. ^ Ian Kershaw, 1991, chapter III, first section.
  8. ^ a b Strasser, Otto (1940). Germany Tomorrow. London: Jonathan Cape Thirty Bedford Square. p. 100.
  9. ^ "Pohtiva - Suomen Kansallissosialistisen Liiton yleisohjelma". www.fsd.tuni.fi. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  10. ^ a b Soikkanen, Timo (14 June 2002). "Ruutu, Yrjö (1887–1956)". Suomen kansallisbiografia.
  11. ^ Mikko Uola: "Suomi sitoutuu hajottamaan...": Järjestöjen lakkauttaminen vuoden 1944 välirauhansopimuksen 21. artiklan perusteella, s. 262–271. Helsinki: Suomen Historiallinen Seura, 1999. ISBN 951-710-119-8.
  12. ^ Ekberg, Henrik (1991). Führerns trogna följeslagare. Den finländska nazismen 1932–1944. Schildts. pp. 95–99. ISBN 951-50-0522-1.
  13. ^ Uola, Mikko (1997). Ernesti Hentunen – tasavallan hovinarri. Turun Yliopiston poliittisen historian tutkimuksia 7 (in Finnish). Turku: Turun yliopiston poliittisen historian laitos. ISBN 951-29-1024-1. ISSN 1238-9420.
  14. ^ Autio, Veli-Matti (toim.): Professorimatrikkeli 1918–1996 Professorsmatrikel, s. 598–599. Helsinki: Helsingin yliopisto, 1997. ISBN 951-45-7818-X.
  15. ^ R. Eatwell, Fascism: A History, 2003, p. 283.
  16. ^ C. T. Husbands, "Militant Neo-Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany" in L. Cheles, R. Ferguson, M. Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, 1992, pp. 99–100.
  17. ^ C. T. Husbands, "Militant Neo-Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany" in L. Cheles, R. Ferguson, M. Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, 1992, p. 97.
  18. ^ N. Copsey, Contemporary British Fascism: The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy, 2004, pp. 17–18.
  19. ^ M. Walker, The National Front, 1977, p. 194.
  20. ^ N. Copsey, Contemporary British Fascism: The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy, 2004, pp. 33–34.
  21. ^ G. Gable, 'The Far Right in Contemporary Britain' in L. Cheles, R. Ferguson & M. Vaughan, Neo-Fascism in Europe, 1992, p. 97.
  22. ^ R. Griffin, The Nature of Fascism, 1993, p. 166.
  23. ^ P. Riis-Knudsen 2009-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ M. A. Lee, The Beast Reawakens, 1997, p. 257.
  25. ^ "Matthew Heimbach Expelled from National Socialist Movement, Source Says".
  26. ^ "Matthew Heimbach Kicked out of National Socialist Movement for Being a 'Communist'".
  27. ^ "Neo-Nazi group's new leader, a black activist, has vowed to end it".

Further reading edit

  • Bolton, Kerry Raymond (2017). "Otto Strasser's 'Europe'". In Southgate, Troy (ed.). Eye of the Storm. The Conservative Revolutionaries of 1920s, 1930s and 1940s Germany. London, UK: Black Front Press. pp. 7–31.
  • Reed, Douglas (1940). Nemesis: The Story of Otto Strasser.
  • Reed, Douglas (1953). The Prisoner of Ottawa: Otto Strasser.
  • Hafeneger, Benno [in German] (1989-01-18). "Wiederherstellung der europäischen Weltgeltung: Die Europäisierung und Vernetzung der extremen Rechten schreitet zügig voran: 17 Abgeordnete im Europaparlament / Kontakte, Treffen und gemeinsame Herausgabe von Zeitschriften / Ein missionarischer Euro-Chauvinismus tritt in den Vordergrund" [Restoration of Europe's world standing: The Europeanization and networking of the extreme right is progressing rapidly: 17 members of the European Parliament / Contacts, meetings and joint publication of magazines / A missionary Euro-chauvinism comes to the foreground]. Die Tageszeitung (in German). from the original on 2022-04-22. Retrieved 2022-04-22. Über die "Eurorechte" hinaus gibt es Verbindungen zwischen militanz- und gewaltorientrierten, nationalrevolutionären Gruppen wie dem "Movimento des Accao National" (Bewegung der Nationalen Aktion) (MAN) in Portugal, die, angelehnt an der auch als "Strasserismus" bezeichneten italienischen "terza Positione" nationalrevolutionär orientiert ist. Die MAN hat Kontakte zu "Troisieme Voie" (Frankreich), zur "National Front" (Großbritannien) und spanischen Nationalrevolutionären "Basista Nacional Revolucionario Espanol". Im neonazistischen Organisationsbereich gibt es die "Europäische Bewegung", bei der über das sogenannte "Führerthing" NS-Aktivisten aus der Bundesrepublik, Frankreich, Belgien, Dänemark und den Niederlanden Verbindungen haben. An dem von Belgien ausgehenden "Euroring" sind darüber hinaus Neonazis aus Großbritannien beteiligt. Ein für August 1988 geplanter "Euroring"-Kongreß wurde verboten.
  • Priester, Karin [in German] (2010-11-01). "Fließende Grenzen zwischen Rechtsextremismus und Rechtspopulismus in Europa?" [Flowing borders between right-wing extremism and right-wing populism in Europe?]. Extremismus [Extremism] (PDF). Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte [de] (APuZ), addon to weekly journal Das Parlament [de] (in German). Vol. 2010. Bonn, Germany: Bundeszentrale für politische Bildung. pp. 33–39 [34]. ISSN 0479-611X. No. 44. (PDF) from the original on 2021-10-07. Retrieved 2022-04-02. p. 34: Der Unterschied zwischen [Rechtsextremismus] und Rechtspopulismus liegt vor allem auf ideologischem Gebiet: [Rechtsextremismus] vertritt eine holistische Ideologie, in deren Zentrum die ethnisch-kulturell homogene Volksgemeinschaft steht. Daraus folgt eine antipluralistische, antiliberale Staats- und Gesellschaftskonzeption, die unterhalb dieser Ebene Spielraum für verschiedene Richtungen lässt, für völkische nationalsozialistische Traditionalisten, Deutschnationale beziehungsweise die "klassische" Rechte in anderen Ländern und Nationalrevolutionäre. Diese sind zwar eine Minderheit im [Rechtsextremismus], aber europaweit unter verschiedenen Bezeichnungen (Strasserismus, Solidarismus, Dritte Position) vernetzt.

strasserism, german, ideological, strand, nazism, which, adheres, revolutionary, nationalism, economic, antisemitism, which, conditions, achieved, with, radical, mass, action, worker, based, politics, that, more, aggressive, than, politics, hitlerite, leaders,. Strasserism German Strasserismus is an ideological strand of Nazism which adheres to revolutionary nationalism and to economic antisemitism which conditions are to be achieved with radical mass action and worker based politics that are more aggressive than the politics of the Hitlerite leaders of the Nazi Party Named after Gregor Strasser and Otto Strasser the ideology of Strasserism is a type of Third Position right wing politics in opposition to Communism and to Hitlerite Nazism Gregor Strasser in 1928 Otto Strasser speaking in public after return to West Germany in 1945 In his political career Otto Strasser led an ultranationalist faction within the Nazi Party but resigned from the Party in 1930 he later established the Combat League of Revolutionary National Socialists the Black Front to rival the Nazi Party 1 Consequent to his politics Otto Strasser fled Germany in 1933 and returned at War s end in 1945 In the intramural politics of the Nazi Party Strasserism had many supporters among the troops of the Sturmabteilung SA which led to Hitler s purging the Strasserist faction and killing their leader Gregor Strasser on the Night of the Long Knives in July 1934 In the 1980s the revolutionary nationalism and the economic anti Semitism of Strasserism reappeared in the politics of the National Front Party in the U K 2 Contents 1 Strasser brothers 1 1 Gregor Strasser 1 2 Otto Strasser 2 Ideology 3 Influence 3 1 In 1930s Finland 3 2 In post war Germany 3 3 In the United Kingdom 3 4 Elsewhere 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingStrasser brothers editGregor Strasser edit Main article Gregor Strasser Gregor Strasser 1892 1934 began his career in ultranationalist German politics by joining the Freikorps after soldiering in the First World War 1914 1918 He participated in the Kapp Putsch 13 March 1920 and formed his own volkischer Wehrverband a popular defense union that Strasser later merged into the Nazi Party in 1921 Initially a loyal supporter of Hitler as such Strasser participated in the Beer Hall Putsch 8 9 November 1923 and held high level offices in the Nazi Party however Strasser became a strong advocate of the radical wing of the Nazi Party arguing that the nationalist revolution should act to resolve the poverty imposed upon post war Germany and should seek the political support of the German working class After Hitler s installation to German government Ernst Rohm who headed the Sturmabteilung SA the principal paramilitary wing of the Nazi Party called for a second national socialist revolution to remove the business social and political elites from control of the government the economy and the politics of Germany Strasser s proposed revolution was opposed by the German conservative movement and Nazis who preferred an ordered authoritarian regime for Germany to the politically disruptive programs proposed by the Strasserist radicals of the Nazi Party Otto Strasser edit Main article Otto Strasser Otto Strasser 1897 1974 had also been a member of the Freikorps but he joined the Social Democratic Party of Germany and fought against the Kapp Putsch Strasser joined the Nazi Party in 1925 where he kept promoting the importance of socialism in National Socialism Considered more of a radical than his brother Strasser was expelled by the Nazi Party in 1930 and set up the Black Front his own dissident group which called for a specifically German nationalist form of socialist revolution Strasser fled Germany in 1933 to live firstly in Czechoslovakia and then Canada before returning to West Germany in later life all the while writing prolifically about Hitler and what he saw as his betrayal of Nazism s ideals Ideology editThe name Strasserism came to be applied to the form of Nazism associated with the Strasser brothers Although they had been involved in the creation of the National Socialist Program of 1920 both men called on the party to commit to breaking the shackles of finance capital 3 This opposition to what Nazis termed Finanzkapitalismus finance capitalism and raffendes Kapital which translates roughly to money grubbing capitalism and was implied to mean Jewish capitalism which they contrasted to producerism or what was termed productive capitalism was shared by Adolf Hitler who borrowed it from Gottfried Feder 4 This populist form of economic antisemitism was espoused by Otto Strasser in Nationalsozialistische Briefe published in 1925 which discussed notions of class conflict wealth redistribution and a possible alliance with the Soviet Union His 1930 follow up Ministersessel oder Revolution Cabinet Seat or Revolution attacked Hitler s betrayal of the socialist aspect of Nazism as well as criticizing the notion of the Fuhrerprinzip 5 Whilst Gregor Strasser echoed many of the calls of his brother his influence on the ideology was lower owing to his remaining in the Nazi Party longer and to his early death Meanwhile Otto Strasser continued to expand his argument calling for the break up of large estates and the development of something akin to a guild socialism and the related establishment of a Reich cooperative chamber to take a leading role in economic planning 6 It is disputed whether Strasserism was a distinct form of Nazism According to historian Ian Kershaw the leaders of the SA which included Gregor Strasser did not have another vision of the future of Germany or another politic to propose The Strasserites advocated the radicalization of the Nazi regime and the toppling of the German elites calling Hitler s rise to power a half revolution which needed to be completed 7 Otto Strasser was also strongly Pan European even going as far as to praise Richard von Coudenhove Kalergi for his efforts advocating Pan European unity 8 Among the policies of Third Reich which Otto Strasser was most critical of was the German involvement in the Spanish Civil War He even called on both the S S S A and the Reichswehr to revolt against Hitler on the slogan of No German blood for Spain Hail Germany 8 Influence editIn 1930s Finland edit Finnish politician Yrjo Ruutu founded the National Socialist Union of Finland in 1932 which was one of several Finnish Nazi parties at the time Ruutu s ideas included the nationalization of large companies and other assets vital for national interests a self sufficient planned economy a parliament controlled by trade unions and the appointment of technocrats as ministers 9 Ruutu s party remained on the fringes of Finnish politics and never gained any seats in parliament but it is considered to have had a considerable influence on the ideology of the Academic Karelia Society and president Urho Kekkonen 10 In 1944 all Nazi parties in Finland were dissolved as contrary to Article 21 of the Moscow Armistice which forbade fascist parties 11 Some former members of Ruutu s party such as Yrjo Kilpelainen and Unto Varjonen became prominent figures in the right wing faction of the post war Social Democratic Party of Finland 10 12 Another prominent former member Vietti Nykanen became the vice chairman of the Radical People s Party 13 Member of the board of the party Heikki Waris later became Minister of Social Affairs in the Von Fieandt Cabinet in 1957 14 In post war Germany edit nbsp Flag of the Black Front which is commonly used by Strasserists During the 1970s the ideas of Strasserism began to be mentioned more in European far right groups as younger members with no ties to Hitler and a stronger sense of economic antisemitism came to the fore Strasserite thought in Germany began to emerge as a tendency within the National Democratic Party of Germany NPD during the late 1960s These Strasserites played a leading role in securing the removal of Adolf von Thadden from the leadership and after his departure the party became stronger in condemning Hitler for what it saw as his move away from socialism in order to court business and army leaders 15 Although initially adopted by the NPD Strasserism soon became associated with more peripheral extremist figures notably Michael Kuhnen who produced a 1982 pamphlet Farewell to Hitler which included a strong endorsement of the idea The People s Socialist Movement of Germany Labour Party a minor extremist movement that was outlawed in 1982 adopted the policy Its successor movement the Nationalist Front did likewise with its ten point programme calling for an anti materialist cultural revolution and an anti capitalist social revolution to underline its support for the idea 16 The Free German Workers Party also moved towards these ideas under the leadership of Friedhelm Busse in the late 1980s 17 The flag of the Strasserite movement Black Front and its symbol of a crossed hammer and a sword has been used by German and other European neo Nazis abroad as a substitute for the more infamous Nazi flag which is banned in some countries such as Germany In the United Kingdom edit Strasserism emerged in the United Kingdom in the early 1970s and centred on the National Front NF publication Britain First the main writers of which were David McCalden Richard Lawson and Denis Pirie Opposing the leadership of John Tyndall they formed an alliance with John Kingsley Read and ultimately followed him into the National Party NP 18 The NP called for British workers to seize the right to work and offered a fairly Strasserite economic policy 19 Nonetheless the NP was short lived Due in part to Read s lack of enthusiasm for Strasserism the main exponents of the idea drifted away citation needed The idea was reintroduced to the NF by Andrew Brons in the early 1980s when he decided to make the party s ideology clearer 20 However Strasserism was soon to become the province of the radicals in the Official National Front with Richard Lawson brought in a behind the scenes role to help direct policy 21 This Political Soldier wing ultimately opted for the indigenous alternative of distributism but their strong anti capitalist rhetoric as well as that of their International Third Position successor demonstrated influences from Strasserism From this background emerged Troy Southgate whose own ideology and those of related groups such as the English Nationalist Movement and National Revolutionary Faction were influenced by Strasserism Elsewhere edit nbsp Logo of Polish Partia Narodowych Socjalistow Third Position groups whose inspiration is generally more Italian in derivation have often looked to Strasserism owing to their strong opposition to capitalism based on economic antisemitic grounds This was noted in France where the student group Groupe Union Defense and the more recent Renouveau francais both extolled Strasserite economic platforms 22 Attempts to reinterpret Nazism as having a left wing base have also been heavily influenced by this school of thought notably through the work of Povl Riis Knudsen who produced the Strasser influenced work National Socialism A Left Wing Movement in 1984 23 In the United States Tom Metzger a white supremacist had some affiliation to Strasserism having been influenced by Kuhnen s pamphlet 24 Also in the United States Matthew Heimbach of the former Traditionalist Worker Party identifies as a Strasserist 25 Heimbach often engages primarily in anti capitalist rhetoric during public speeches instead of overt antisemitism anti Masonry or anti communist rhetoric Heimbach was expelled from the National Socialist Movement due to his economic views being seen by the group as too left wing 26 Heimbach stated that the NSM essentially want it to remain a politically impotent white supremacist gang 27 See also editBeefsteak Nazi National anarchism National Bolshevism Nazi Maoism Fascist syndicalism Sorelianism Solidarism Strasser crisis de References edit Kedar Asaf 2010 National Socialism Before Nazism Friedrich Naumann and Theodor Fritsch 1890 1914 University of California Berkeley p 169 Sykes Alan 2005 The Radical Right in Britain Social Imperialism to the BNP Basingstoke and New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0333599242 p 124 C T Husbands Militant Neo Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany in L Cheles R Ferguson amp M Vaughan Neo Fascism in Europe 1992 p 98 Ian Kershaw Hitler A Profile in Power first chapter London 1991 rev 2001 Karl Dietrich Bracher The German Dictatorship 1973 pp 230 231 Nolte Ernst 1969 Three Faces of Fascism Action Francaise Italian fascism National Socialism New York Mentor pp 425 426 Ian Kershaw 1991 chapter III first section a b Strasser Otto 1940 Germany Tomorrow London Jonathan Cape Thirty Bedford Square p 100 Pohtiva Suomen Kansallissosialistisen Liiton yleisohjelma www fsd tuni fi Retrieved 26 March 2021 a b Soikkanen Timo 14 June 2002 Ruutu Yrjo 1887 1956 Suomen kansallisbiografia Mikko Uola Suomi sitoutuu hajottamaan Jarjestojen lakkauttaminen vuoden 1944 valirauhansopimuksen 21 artiklan perusteella s 262 271 Helsinki Suomen Historiallinen Seura 1999 ISBN 951 710 119 8 Ekberg Henrik 1991 Fuhrerns trogna foljeslagare Den finlandska nazismen 1932 1944 Schildts pp 95 99 ISBN 951 50 0522 1 Uola Mikko 1997 Ernesti Hentunen tasavallan hovinarri Turun Yliopiston poliittisen historian tutkimuksia 7 in Finnish Turku Turun yliopiston poliittisen historian laitos ISBN 951 29 1024 1 ISSN 1238 9420 Autio Veli Matti toim Professorimatrikkeli 1918 1996 Professorsmatrikel s 598 599 Helsinki Helsingin yliopisto 1997 ISBN 951 45 7818 X R Eatwell Fascism A History 2003 p 283 C T Husbands Militant Neo Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany in L Cheles R Ferguson M Vaughan Neo Fascism in Europe 1992 pp 99 100 C T Husbands Militant Neo Nazism in the Federal Republic of Germany in L Cheles R Ferguson M Vaughan Neo Fascism in Europe 1992 p 97 N Copsey Contemporary British Fascism The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy 2004 pp 17 18 M Walker The National Front 1977 p 194 N Copsey Contemporary British Fascism The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy 2004 pp 33 34 G Gable The Far Right in Contemporary Britain in L Cheles R Ferguson amp M Vaughan Neo Fascism in Europe 1992 p 97 R Griffin The Nature of Fascism 1993 p 166 P Riis Knudsen Archived 2009 01 05 at the Wayback Machine M A Lee The Beast Reawakens 1997 p 257 Matthew Heimbach Expelled from National Socialist Movement Source Says Matthew Heimbach Kicked out of National Socialist Movement for Being a Communist Neo Nazi group s new leader a black activist has vowed to end it Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Strasserism Bolton Kerry Raymond 2017 Otto Strasser s Europe In Southgate Troy ed Eye of the Storm The Conservative Revolutionaries of 1920s 1930s and 1940s Germany London UK Black Front Press pp 7 31 Reed Douglas 1940 Nemesis The Story of Otto Strasser Reed Douglas 1953 The Prisoner of Ottawa Otto Strasser Hafeneger Benno in German 1989 01 18 Wiederherstellung der europaischen Weltgeltung Die Europaisierung und Vernetzung der extremen Rechten schreitet zugig voran 17 Abgeordnete im Europaparlament Kontakte Treffen und gemeinsame Herausgabe von Zeitschriften Ein missionarischer Euro Chauvinismus tritt in den Vordergrund Restoration of Europe s world standing The Europeanization and networking of the extreme right is progressing rapidly 17 members of the European Parliament Contacts meetings and joint publication of magazines A missionary Euro chauvinism comes to the foreground Die Tageszeitung in German Archived from the original on 2022 04 22 Retrieved 2022 04 22 Uber die Eurorechte hinaus gibt es Verbindungen zwischen militanz und gewaltorientrierten nationalrevolutionaren Gruppen wie dem Movimento des Accao National Bewegung der Nationalen Aktion MAN in Portugal die angelehnt an der auch als Strasserismus bezeichneten italienischen terza Positione nationalrevolutionar orientiert ist Die MAN hat Kontakte zu Troisieme Voie Frankreich zur National Front Grossbritannien und spanischen Nationalrevolutionaren Basista Nacional Revolucionario Espanol Im neonazistischen Organisationsbereich gibt es die Europaische Bewegung bei der uber das sogenannte Fuhrerthing NS Aktivisten aus der Bundesrepublik Frankreich Belgien Danemark und den Niederlanden Verbindungen haben An dem von Belgien ausgehenden Euroring sind daruber hinaus Neonazis aus Grossbritannien beteiligt Ein fur August 1988 geplanter Euroring Kongress wurde verboten Priester Karin in German 2010 11 01 Fliessende Grenzen zwischen Rechtsextremismus und Rechtspopulismus in Europa Flowing borders between right wing extremism and right wing populism in Europe Extremismus Extremism PDF Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte de APuZ addon to weekly journal Das Parlament de in German Vol 2010 Bonn Germany Bundeszentrale fur politische Bildung pp 33 39 34 ISSN 0479 611X No 44 Archived PDF from the original on 2021 10 07 Retrieved 2022 04 02 p 34 Der Unterschied zwischen Rechtsextremismus und Rechtspopulismus liegt vor allem auf ideologischem Gebiet Rechtsextremismus vertritt eine holistische Ideologie in deren Zentrum die ethnisch kulturell homogene Volksgemeinschaft steht Daraus folgt eine antipluralistische antiliberale Staats und Gesellschaftskonzeption die unterhalb dieser Ebene Spielraum fur verschiedene Richtungen lasst fur volkische nationalsozialistische Traditionalisten Deutschnationale beziehungsweise die klassische Rechte in anderen Landern und Nationalrevolutionare Diese sind zwar eine Minderheit im Rechtsextremismus aber europaweit unter verschiedenen Bezeichnungen Strasserismus Solidarismus Dritte Position vernetzt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strasserism amp oldid 1216956680, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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