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Hitler's Shattered Dream, 1932 |
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February 2011 | ||||||||||||||||||
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Whistling into the storm
The magazine furnishes the total deputies for fifteen parties and the popular vote for nine of these, although the precise numbers aren't important — and in fact the magazine has gotten the date wrong. The Nazis had the biggest decline of two million votes and 35 seats, followed by the Socialists; while the Nationalists and Communists gained seats. Hermann Goering had become President of the Reichstag on 30 August 1932 after the previous election and subsequent negotiations, and retained this office for the Nazi Party. The news magazine quotes extensively from John Elliott, Berlin correspondent to the New York Herald Tribune, of which I find this particularly revealing:
Elliott characterizes Alfred Hugenberg's Nationalist party as the only bourgeois political party that "has any considerable strength". This is the party of the monarchists in Germany. Most of the larger political parties were in principle if not always tactically hostile to the Weimar Republic as constituted. The Literary Digest's English-relabeled German chart of Reichstag representation after the November 1932 election has haunted me for years:
This political mess after frequent elections in the late Weimar Republic forms a heavy weight in the balance against a system allowing a multiplicity of minority parties, all essentially at ideological loggerheads. With benefit of hindsight, we may look beyond the optimism of The Literary Digest, and of the world, at the end of 1932. The squabbling multiparty interlude was highly unstable and resulted in the single-party totalitarianism of the Nazi state, a disaster for Germany and the world. Less than three months after this last Weimar Republic election, on 30 January 1933 Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. After 14 July 1934 the Nazi Party was the only legal political party. On 12 November 1934 the first election under the Third Reich thus readily provided the decisive pro-Nazi results that Hitler wished, 92 percent of the popular vote and an essentially all-Nazi slate in the Reichstag.
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© 2011 Robert Wilfred Franson |
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