Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
The dissolution of the German party system during the Weimar Republic was well advanced long before either the world economic crisis descended upon Germany with all of its intensity in the early 1930s or the National Socialists scored their first decisive breakthrough into the ranks of Germany's middle-class parties. While both the onset of the depression and the rise of National Socialism greatly accelerated the dissolution of Germany's bourgeois parties, their principal effect was not so much to catalyze this process as to intensify disintegrative factors that had been present ever since the founding of the Weimar Republic. The ultimate cause of the dissolution of the bourgeois party system during the Weimar Republic lay precisely in the inability of established bourgeois parties such as the German Democratic Party (Deutsche Demokratische Partei or DDP), the German People's Party (Deutsche Volkspartei or DVP), the German National People's Party (Deutsdmationale Volkspartei or DNVP), and to a somewhat lesser extent the German Center Party (Deutsche Zentrumspartei) to integrate the diverse and increasingly antagonistic social and economic interests which constituted their material base into a viable and effective social force. The emergence of special-interest parties in the second half of the 1920s bore dramatic testimony to the failure of Germany's nonsocialist parties to provide the more traditional elements of the German middle class with the effective political representation they needed in order to maintain their social and economic position in the face of mounting economic adversity. Not only did the formation of such parries reflect the process of social and political decay that was at work within the German party system, but the increasing fragmentation of Germany's established bourgeois parties greatly facilitated the penetration of National Socialism into the ranks of the German middle strata.
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16 The best source of information on the revaluation campaign is the speech delivered by Adolf Bauser, “Die Geschichte des Aufwertungskampfes,” at a convention held by the Reich Party for People's Right and Revaluation (Reichspartei für Volksrecht und Aufwertung) in Stuttgart, Mar. 5–6, 1927, in Für Wahrheit und Recht: Der Endkampf um eine gerechte Aufwertung: Reden und Aufsätze, ed. Adolf, Bauser (Stuttgart, 1927), pp. 5–11.Google Scholar For further information, see the article by Fritzsch, Werner, “Sparerbund für das Deutsche Reich (Spb) 1922–1939,” in Die bürgerlichai Parteien in Deutschland: Handbuch der Geschichte der bürgerlichen Parteien und anderer bürgerlichen Interessenorganisationen vom Vonnärz bis zum jahre 1945, 2 vols. (East Berlin, 1968–1970), 2:648–53.Google Scholar
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30 Recent quantitative research by Professor Thomas Childers of the University of Pennsylvania has indicated that the losses of the two liberal parties in the 1924 Reichstag elections were heaviest among those segments of the population which had suffered most as a result of the inflation, namely, pensioners, small investors, widows, disabled veterans, and others living on fixed incomes. According to Childers' evidence, these elements defected primarily to the DNVP and to a lesser degree to the National Socialist German Freedom Movement. The support which the DNVP received from this segment of society reached a high point in the December 1924 elections and declined from that point on. The National Socialists began to score substantial gains within this segment of the population only after the onset of the depression in the late 1920s. For a preliminary sum-mary of Childers' conclusions, see his article, “The Social Bases of the National Socialist Vote,” Journal of Contemporary History 11 (1976): 17–42.
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41 For this correspondence, see Die Aufwertung, Nov. 28, 1924, no. 27.
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64 Posadowsky-Wehner to Westarp, Jan. 5, 1926, NL Westarp.
65 Posadowsky-Wehner to Westarp, June 2, 1926, NL Westarp. See also Posadowsky-Wehner, “Zweierlei Recht,” in Posadowsky-Wehner, Adolf Von, Die Enteignung des Glāaubiger-Vermögens: Eine Sammlung von Aufsätzen (Berlin, n.d. [1928]), pp. 34–36.Google Scholar
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67 Westarp to the Savers' Association, June 11, 1926, NSSA Osnabrück, C1/90/71–73, and June 17, 1926, NL Westarp.
68 Bauser, “Notwendigkeit, Aufgaben und Zicle der Volksrechtspartei,” in Für Wahrheit und Recht, pp. 90–91. For further information on the founding and history of the, see Werner Fritzsch, “Reichspartei für Volksrecht und Aufwertung (Volksrechtspartei) 1926–1933,” in Die bürgalichen Parteien in Deutschland, 2:555–60.
69 On the goals and basic orientation of the VRP, see Bauser, “Notwendigkeit, Aufgaben und Ziele der Volksrechtspartei,” pp. 92–95, and Posadowsky-Weliner. “Ansprache, gehalten auf der Reichsdelegiertentagung des Sparerbundes zu Erfurt am 28. August 1926,” in Die Enteignung des Cläubiger-Vermögens, pp. 42–46.
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78 On the outcome of the Saxon Landtag elections, see Kölnische Zeitung, Nov. 2, 1926, no. 815.
79 Memorandum by Rademacher on the revaluation question, Nov. 19, 1926, NL Westarp.
80 On the significance of Saxony as a paradigm for the collapse of the German party system, see Fenske, Hans, Wahlrecht und Parteiensystem: Ein Beitrag zur deutschen Parteienge sehichte (Frankfurt a.M., 1972), pp. 285–304.Google Scholar
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82 Fritsch, “Reichspartei für Volksrecht und Aufwertung,” pp. 556–58.
83 Bauser, , “Nach der Wahl,” Deutsches Volksrecht: Offizielles Zentralorgan der Volksrechtspartei und des Sparerbundes, June 6, 1928, no. 45.Google Scholar Of the established bourgeois parties, the DNVP seems to have been most severely affected by the VRP's performance at the polls. According to a confidential DNVP source whose figures cannot be corroborated, no less than 450,000 of the VRP's 480,000 votes in the 1928 Reichstag elections were estimated to have come form the ranks of those who had voted for the DNVP in 1924, while another 300,000 former Nationalist voters were estimated to have defected directly to the SPD as a result of the DNVP's duplicity in the revaluation question. See the memorandum from the central headquarters of the German National Workers' League, (Deutschnationaler Arbeiterbund), June 12, 1928Google Scholar, NL Westarp.
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