Hitler's rise to power
Hitler's rise to power
- Political
Problems of the Weimar Republic
- The
association between the Weimar and the humiliation of the Treaty of Versailles
- Weak
constitution
- Article
48
- Gave
the President extensive emergency powers
- He was
able to suspend civil liberties in the event of an emergency
- This
undermined the populations confidence in the democratic state
- Became
important after the Reichstag Fire where Hindenburg used it to declare a state
of emergency in which Hitler was enabled to arrest Communist and Socialist
opponents and close down their newspapers
- Proportional
Representation
- Parties
gain the same percentage of seats in the Reichstag as the percentage of votes
they gain in the elections
- Led to
weak coalition governments, which undermined the credibility of the Weimar
Republic, and led to many different governments (8 between 19-23). This also
led to the fact that the governments had a hard time agreeing on anything.
- Economic
weakness of the Weimar Republic
- Treaty
of Versailles
- Loss of
territory
- Lost
13% of European territory and all overseas colonies
- This
included important industrial areas, such as Upper Silesia, Alsace-Lorraine and
the Sudetenland.
- Lost
75% of their iron ore
- Loss of
population
- Lost
12% of their population
- Reparations
- Allied
Reparations Committee in April 1921 had determined the reparations to £6,600
million
- This led
to serious inflation as the government tried to finance the war pensioners and
the reparations by printing more paper money undermining the mark. This led to
serious dissatisfaction from the population whose savings were lost
- The
Ruhr Crisis (1923)
- Worsened
the economic situation and led to hyperinflation and this resulted in the
creation of the Dawes Plan (1924)
- The
Dawes Plan (1924) and the Young Plan (1929)
- Although
the decreased the rate of payment and the Young Plan reduced the final amount
of reparations they did tie the German economy closer to the American ones
which had grave consequence when the Wall St Crash happened
- Nazi
exploitation of the ‘stab in the back’ myth
- Ring-wing
and nationalists blamed the Politicians (Catholics, Socialists and Jews) for
losing the war as they believed that Germany still had the military strength to
win the war. Hitler used this propaganda in his campaigns to gain their votes.
- The
impact of the Great Depression
- The Germany
economy was greatly dependent on loans from America to keep their economy
afloat, with the Wall St Crash this flow of capital seized and the Allied powers
demanded their reparations this deeply damage the economy
- Unemployment
rose from under 2 million before the crisis to 3.5 in 1930, 4.4 million in 1931
and peaked at 6 million in 1932
- This
caused further distrust in the government by the population
- Correlation
between unemployment and Nazi votes
- Less than
3% in 1928 to 107 in 1930 and to 230 in 1932
- Political
intrigue in the Reichstag
- Von Schleicher
replaced Von Papen as Chancellor, however Von Schleicher’s land reform worried
the conservative president Hindenburg and he therefore wanted to replace him
with Hitler to stabilize the government and he and his allies also believed
that they would be able to control Hitler
- He was
appointed in March 1933 and immediately had the SA begin to attack their political
enemies (especially the Communists and Social Democrats). They closed down
their papers, their meetings were attacked and their members were beaten.
Hitler promised the army to tear up the military clauses in the Versailles
Treaty to stop them from intervening
- Alleged
Dutch communist Van der Lubbe set fire to the Reichstag building, which Hitler
took advantage of and passed an emergency law which allowed the Chancellor to
suspend the parliament, which formed the basis of a police power state
- March
1933 Nazi gained 52% in elections
- Hitler passed
the emergency law called the ‘Enabling Act’. To gain support for the act the SA
stood outside the parliament to intimidate the members of parliament to vote for
the act. The act allowed Hitler to pass
laws without seeking the approval of parliament or the President. It formed the
legal basis of the Nazi dictatorship. The Nazis could now close down the other
opposing political parties, arrest political opponents etc. They could crush
all opposition.
- In 1934, Hitler was the
sole leader of the Nazis and he could start build the Nazi dictatorship.
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