Christian Democratic Union (East Germany)

Last updated

Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Christlich-Demokratische Union Deutschlands
Leader
Founded26 June 1945
Dissolved2 October 1990
Merged into Christian Democratic Union
Headquarters East Berlin
Newspaper
See list
Membership (1987)140,000 [1]
Ideology
National affiliation
Colors Blue, yellow
Party flag
Flagge der CDU (Ost).svg

The Christian Democratic Union of Germany (German : Christlich-Demokratische Union Deutschlands, CDU) was an East German political party founded in 1945. It was part of the National Front with the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) and a bloc party until 1989.

Contents

It contested the free elections in 1990 as an arm of the West German Christian Democratic Union, into which it merged after German reunification later that same year.

Party politics

CDU poster showing Otto Nuschke and reading 20 years of CDU and Christians in service of peace and Socialism CDU-DDR20jahre.jpg
CDU poster showing Otto Nuschke and reading 20 years of CDU and Christians in service of peace and Socialism

The CDU was originally very similar to its West German counterpart. Like the West German CDU, its support came mostly from devout middle class Christians. However, it was a little more left-leaning than the West German CDU.

Its first chairman was Andreas Hermes, who had been a prominent member of the Centre Party during the Weimar Republic and a three-time minister. He fled to the West in 1946 and was replaced by Jakob Kaiser, another former Centre Party member and a leading member of the resistance movement during World War II. Kaiser had been a prominent member of the Centre's left wing, and favoured nationalisation of heavy industries and a land distribution programme suggested by the Communists. However, his criticism of the Communists resulted in him being pushed out in 1947 in favour of the more pliant Otto Nuschke, a former member of the German Democratic Party (DDP).

Nuschke and his supporters gradually pushed out those CDU members who were not willing to do the Communists' bidding. This culminated at the Sixth Party Congress in 1952, at which it formally transformed itself into a loyal partner of the Communists. At this gathering, it declared itself "a Socialist party without any limitations" in accordance with the new line of "Christian realism".

In the 22 "Theses on Christian Realism", the CDU committed itself to the "Socialist reorganisation of Society" (1st edition, 1951). Emphasising the "exemplary realisation" of Karl Marx's "teaching on building a new, better social order" in the USSR, it was declared that Socialism offered at the time "the best opportunity for the realisation of Christ's demands and for exercising the practical Christianity". The programme also asserted the CDU's support for the working class' leading role in establishing socialism, a development which the party regarded from its 6th Congress onward as "historically necessary and consistent". [5]

Its deputies, like all other East German parties, consistently voted for the government's proposals in the Volkskammer. The only exception was the vote on 9 March 1972 vote on the abortion law, when there were 14 'nays' and 8 absentees among the CDU deputies.

After Nuschke's death, August Bach, another former DDP member, led the party for the remainder of the 1950s. In 1966 long-time general secretary Gerald Götting was elected chairman. Götting, who was chairman of the Volkskammer (and de facto vice president of the GDR) from 1969 to 1976, carried on and elaborated the pro-government line.

Götting remained chairman and an SED ally until Erich Honecker was deposed in favour of Egon Krenz in October 1989. On 2 November 1989, Götting was deposed by inner party reformers. In December 1989 Lothar de Maizière, a lawyer and deputy chairman of the Evangelical Church Synod of East Germany, was elected chairman. From that point on the party deposed (and later expelled) its former top figures, and became the strongest proponent of speedy reunification with West Germany.

In March 1990, the CDU became the main element of the Alliance for Germany, a centre-right coalition. It won the first (and as it turned out, only) free general election and became the biggest party in the People's Chamber. In April de Maizière became Prime Minister of the GDR, heading a grand coalition that immediately set about reuniting the country with the West.

In August 1990, the Democratic Awakening, a minor member of the governing coalition, merged into the East German CDU. The merger brought Democratic Awakening spokeswoman and future Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel into the party.

In October 1990, the East German CDU merged into the West German CDU.

Newspaper

Exterior of Neue Zeit building, rear view, with the Berlin Wall in the foreground, 1984. Exterior of East Berlin Neue Zeit newspaper, with Berlin Wall in foreground.jpg
Exterior of Neue Zeit building, rear view, with the Berlin Wall in the foreground, 1984.

The official newspaper of the party was Neue Zeit, published by Union: Verlag. [6]

International relations

The CDU maintained close relations with other Christian democratic parties in the Soviet bloc. Relations with the state-sponsored and -controlled Catholic PAX Association in Poland and the Czechoslovak People's Party (CSL) were especially close. There were some contacts with individual members of the Italian Christian Democracy party (DC), the Belgian Christian People's Party (CVP) and Christian Social Party (PSC) and the Dutch Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA). [7]

Although the East German CDU and its West German counterpart were often at odds with each other, they maintained official relations. [8]

The East German Christian Democrats also had close relations with the Russian Orthodox Church. [9]

Chairmen

NameTerm
Andreas Hermes 1945
Jakob Kaiser 1945–1947
Otto Nuschke 1948–1957
August Bach 1957–1966
Gerald Götting 1966–1989
Wolfgang Heyl 1989 (acting)
Lothar de Maizière 1989–1990

General secretaries

NameTerm
Georg Dertinger 1946–1949
Gerald Götting 1949–1966
Martin Kirchner 1989–1990

East German CDU politicians

Electoral history

ElectionVotes %Seats+/–
1949 as part of Democratic Bloc
45 / 330
[lower-alpha 1]
new
1950 as part of National Front
60 / 400
Increase2.svg 15
1954
45 / 466
Decrease2.svg 15
1958
45 / 466
Steady2.svg
1963
45 / 434
Steady2.svg
1967
45 / 434
Steady2.svg
1971
45 / 434
Steady2.svg
1976
45 / 434
Steady2.svg
1981
52 / 500
Increase2.svg 7
1986
52 / 500
Steady2.svg
1990 4,710,59840.8
163 / 400
Increase2.svg 111
  1. The 1,400 elected members of the Third German People's Congress selected the members of the second German People's Council.

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian Democratic Union of Germany</span> Centre-right political party in Germany

The Christian Democratic Union of Germany is a Christian democratic and conservative political party in Germany. It is the major catch-all party of the centre-right in German politics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany</span> East German political party

The Democratic Farmers' Party of Germany was an East German political party. The DBD was founded in 1948. It had 52 representatives in the Volkskammer, as part of the National Front. The DBD participated in all GDR cabinets. The founding of the DBD was an attempt by the SED to weaken the influence of CDU/LDPD in the rural community by establishing a party loyal to the SED. The leadership cadre came mainly from the ranks of the SED. In the late 1980s, the party had 117,000 members.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Willi Stoph</span> German politician (1914–1999)

Wilhelm Stoph was a German politician. He served as Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the German Democratic Republic from 1964 to 1973, and again from 1976 until 1989. He also served as chairman of the State Council from 1973 to 1976.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liberal Democratic Party of Germany</span> German political party

The Liberal Democratic Party of Germany was a political party in East Germany. Like the other allied bloc parties of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) in the National Front, it had 52 representatives in the People's Chamber.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gerald Götting</span> East German politician (1923–2015)

Gerald Götting was a German politician and chairman of the East German Christian Democratic Union (CDU) from 1966 until 1989. He served as President of the People's Chamber (Volkskammer) from 1969 to 1976 and deputy chairman of the State Council of East Germany from 1960 to 1989.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Otto Nuschke</span> German politician (1883–1957)

Otto Nuschke was a German politician.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">August Bach</span> East German politician

August Bach was a German politician who led the Christian Democratic Union in East Germany from 1958 to 1966.

The German Democratic Republic was created as a socialist republic on 7 October 1949 and began to institute a government based on the government of the Soviet Union during the Stalin era. The equivalent of the Communist Party in East Germany was the Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands, which along with other parties, was part of the National Front of Democratic Germany. It was created in 1946 through the merger of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) and the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) in the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany. Following German reunification, the SED was renamed the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), which eventually merged with the West German Electoral Alternative for Labor and Social Justice to form the modern Left Party.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wilhelm Külz</span> German politician (1875–1948)

Wilhelm Külz was a German liberal politician of the National Liberal Party, the German Democratic Party (DDP) and later the Liberal Democratic Party of Germany (LDPD). He held public office both in the German Empire and in the Weimar Republic. In 1926, he served as interior minister of Germany in the cabinets of chancellors Hans Luther and Wilhelm Marx.

The Council of Ministers was the cabinet and executive branch of the German Democratic Republic from November 1950 until the country was reunified on 3 October 1990. Originally formed as a body of 18 members, by 1989 the council consisted of 44 members.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Social Democratic Party in the GDR</span> Political party in East Germany

The Social Democratic Party in the GDR was a reconstituted Social Democratic Party existing during the final phase of East Germany. Slightly less than a year after its creation it merged with its West German counterpart ahead of German reunification.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1990 East German general election</span>

General elections were held in East Germany on 18 March 1990, and were the first and only free elections held in the state before German reunification. The Alliance for Germany, led by the new East German branch of the right-wing Christian Democratic Union (CDU), won 192 seats and emerged as the largest bloc in the 400-seat Volkskammer, having run on a platform of speedy reunification with West Germany. The East German branch of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), which had been dissolved in 1946 and refounded only six months before the elections, finished second with 88 seats despite being widely expected to win. The former Socialist Unity Party of Germany, restyled as the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS), finished third with 66 seats the first free election in which it participated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hugo Hickmann</span> German politician (1877–1955)

Hugo Hickmann was a German politician.

Helmut Alfred Brandt was a Berlin city councillor and a leading German politician in the Christian Democratic Union , a political party of the centre right.

Christa Schmidt is a retired German politician (CDU). She served as a minister in the last government of East Germany. She had built an earlier career as a teacher and educationalist.

Bertram Wieczorek is a German physician and former politician (CDU).

Else Ackermann was a German physician and pharmacologist who became an East German politician. The report on the power relationships between the citizen and the state which she drafted, and in 1988 presented, known as the "Neuenhagen Letter", was a significant precursor to the changes of 1989 which led to the ending, in the early summer of 1990, of the one-party system, followed by German reunification later that same year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hans Rietz</span> East German politician

Hans Rietz was an East German politician who became a top official in the country's Democratic Farmers' Party , which was one of five so-called bloc parties controlled by the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany . For many years Rietz served as a member of the National parliament ("Volkskammer") and he was also a long-standing deputy chairman of the State Council.

Arnold Gohr was a German clerical worker who became a trade unionist and activist. After 1945 he entered mainstream politics in East Berlin. As the Soviet occupation zone evolved into a Soviet sponsored one-party dictatorship, he never joined the ruling party, remaining instead a leading "collaborationist" member of the eastern version of the Christian Democratic Union. He became a party chairman and served between 1948 and 1958 as "deputy lord mayor" of Berlin, a period during which the increasingly divided city's constitutional status and future were contentious and ambiguous on a number of different levels.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Hans-Wilhelm Ebeling</span> German politician (1934–2021)

Hans-Wilhelm Ebeling was a German Lutheran clergyman and politician.

References

  1. Dirk Jurich, Staatssozialismus und gesellschaftliche Differenzierung: eine empirische Studie, p. 31. Münster: LIT, 2006, ISBN   3825898938
  2. "Die erste und letzte freie DDR-Volkskammerwahl".
  3. "Christlich-Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU) [Ost]".
  4. "DA 11/2011 – Schlomann: Neues über die Ost-CDU".
  5. Ralf G. Jahn, "Christlich-Demokratische Union Deutschlands (CDU) [Ost]"
  6. Neue Zeit OCLC WorldCat
  7. Peter Joachim Lapp Die "befreundeten Parteien" der SED, 1988, p. 103, 108
  8. Peter Joachim Lapp Die "befreundeten Parteien" der SED, 1988, p. 102
  9. Peter Joachim Lapp Die "befreundeten Parteien" der SED, 1988, p. 103