Conservative People's Party (Germany)

Last updated
Conservative People's Party
Konservative Volkspartei
AbbreviationKVP
ChairmanGottfried Treviranus (28 January 1930 - 15 December 1930)
Paul Lejeune-Jung 15 December 1930 - 11 June 1932
Heinz Dähnhardt (11 June 1932 - 31 March 1933)
Founded28 January 1930
Dissolved31 March 1933
Preceded byPeople's Conservative Association
German National People's Party (DNVP) (splinter factions) [1]
Succeeded byNone
NewspaperVolkskonservative Stimmen (People's Conservative Voices).
Membership10,000
Ideology Conservatism
Christian Democracy [2]
Political position Right-wing
Political alliance Centre Party (Heinrich Brüning)

The Conservative People's Party (German: Konservative Volkspartei, KVP) was a short-lived conservative and Christian democratic political party of the moderate right in the last years of the Weimar Republic. It broke away from the German National People's Party (DNVP) in July 1930 as a result of the DNVP's increasing shift to the right under the leadership of Alfred Hugenberg. [3] It remained a numerically insignificant minor party but was represented in the governments of Heinrich Brüning (1930–1932). The KVP folded on 31 March 1933 after it ran out of funds.

Contents

Name

The term Volkskonservativ (popular conservative) was probably first used by journalist Hermann Ullmann in 1926. He had in mind conservatives of both the Catholic and Protestant faiths whose fundamental attitude was Christian, social and anti-nationalist. In the two years that followed, Volkskonservativ became a collective term for those in the DNVP who opposed the party's 1928 shift to the right and wanted to continue the earlier cooperation with the Catholic Centre Party. [4] The term is also found in a 1927 essay by DNVP politician Walther Lambach, "Monarchism", which stated that the DNVP should not be one-sidedly monarchist but a "popular conservative party of self-help". [5]

Among older DNVP members such as Kuno Graf von Westarp and in the conservative monarchist newspaper Kreuzzeitung , the name was controversial. The Kreuzzeitung said that the original name Volkskonservative Vereinigung (People's Conservative Association) weakened the clear term "conservative", although Hermann Ullmann defended the new name because he thought that "conservative" should never again be understood as "reactionary". [6]

History

Alfred Hugenberg Bundesarchiv Bild 183-2005-0621-500, Reichsminister Alfred Hugenberg.jpg
Alfred Hugenberg

Formation

The new party grew out of criticism in parts of the DNVP of the policies of the publisher Alfred Hugenberg, who had ousted Kuno von Westarp from the post of party chairman in 1928. Hugenberg's active support for the 1929 referendum against the Young Plan that finalized a schedule for German reparations payments to the victors of World War I, and the DNVP's cooperation during the referendum drive with the Nazi Party (NSDAP), met with party members' particular disapproval. When the bill resulting from the referendum, the "Law against the Enslavement of the German People", was put to a vote in the Reichstag, about twenty out of 73 DNVP deputies refused to follow Hugenberg. He responded with party expulsion proceedings. Gottfried Treviranus and other deputies resigned from the party and von Westarp from the chairmanship of the parliamentary group. Some of the dissidents joined the Christian Social People's Service and others the Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party.

A group around Treviranus and Walther Lambach formed the People's Conservative Association at a meeting in the Prussian House of Lords on 28 January 1930. Initially the association was not to be a party, only a means to gather like-minded people together in order to bring the DNVP back to its former course. The provisional People's Conservative Association became a kind of supra-regional political club. In the House of Lords, Treviranus said that the DNVP had to decide between a conservative and a National Socialist course and that the People's Conservative Association was ready to merge into a large right-of-center party. Because of this it had no party program. [7]

A few months later, there were once again splits in the DNVP due to its stance with regard to the government of Chancellor Heinrich Brüning of the Centre Party. A group around von Westarp left the party, came together with the People's Conservative Association and formed the Conservative People's Party.

Kuno von Westarp Kuno von Westarp.jpg
Kuno von Westarp

Participation in government

The party supported Brüning's center-right policy. From March 1930 to May 1932 Gottfried Treviranus served in the government in various ministerial positions, including Minister for the Occupied Territories and Minister of Transport. His presence in the cabinet gave the party a weight beyond its tiny representation in parliament, which was just four seats out of 577 after the September 1930 election. With Brüning's dismissal in May 1932, Treviranus' tenure as minister also ended, and with it the KVP's participation in political power. The KVP did not run in the July 1932 election, the first in which the Nazi Party won the largest number of seats.

Outside of parliament

In the period of the presidential cabinets that followed Brüning, the KVP was no longer represented in parliament. They reacted to the government of Franz von Papen with wait-and-see skepticism. They expected a prolonged era of reaction and were critical of the curtailment of unemployment insurance and of Papen's foreign policy, but they initially welcomed the 1932 Prussian coup d'état, when Reich President Paul von Hindenburg replaced the legal government of the Free State of Prussia by von Papen as Reich Commissioner. [8]

Initially the party distanced itself from Reich Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher – the last Chancellor before Adolf Hitler  – but later, out of necessity, took a more positive stance towards his government. Even if they formed no strong ties with him, the party's attitude became more favorable when he returned to Brüning's policies. Heinz Dähnhardt, one of the original founders of the KVP, said that Schleicher was the only alternative to Hitler. In doing so, he echoed the opinion of the influential German National Association of Commercial Employees, which had previously favored a coalition between the National Socialists and the Centre Party. [9]

The KVP viewed Adolf Hitler and his program with uncertainty. It was not clear to them what a term like "Third Reich" was supposed to mean. Even on 18 February 1933, when Hitler was already chancellor, they were still saying that a fascist experiment could not last long and that the only possible form of government for Germany in the future would be an authoritarian state. The crisis of the KVP was clearly reflected in the contradictory recommendations that were issued for the Reichstag elections on March 5. Some were for the Combat Front Black-White-Red made up of the DNVP and its paramilitary wing the Stahlhelm, and some for the Christian Social People's Service and indirectly also for the National Socialists. [8]

Bruning cabinet. Gottfried Treviranus, back row, far left. Bundesarchiv Bild 183-H29788, Reichskabinett Bruning I.jpg
Brüning cabinet. Gottfried Treviranus, back row, far left.

On 31 March 1933, the KVP folded due to lack of funds, and Heinz Dähnhardt destroyed the party's archives on 1 May 1933. Like all other remaining parties, the KVP was banned by law on 14 July 1933. Treviranus fled abroad in mid-1934. [10]

Program

The Conservative People's Party called for an end to the "system of disorderly mass rule, by means of a state structured in accordance with the historical development and natural segmentation of the people". What was meant by this was a constitution oriented around occupational class. [11]

In its 1930 election appeal, the KVP advocated a nationalist but moderate foreign policy, calling for a revision of "tribute burdens" (First World War reparations), a referendum for the three cantons known as Eupen-Malmedy that had been ceded to Belgium at the end of the war, the return to Germany of the Saar basin, also lost in the war, and a new border in the East. In domestic policy, the party wanted an unspecified reform of functions at the federal and state level, a strengthening of local self-government, and secure positions for public servants. Instead of "party and program elections", "elections of individuals" were to be introduced. [12]

Economically, the KVP wanted to see a "viable market" and independent trade that was to be protected from competition and nationalization. Occupational-class structures were to be expanded. Culture promoted by the state had to be "consistent with the principles of the Christian doctrines of salvation and morality". [13]

Structure

The People's Conservative Association and then the People's Conservative Party had a national office in Berlin. According to its statutes of 17 December 1930, the KVP had a 25-member Reich Executive Committee that was elected for a two-year term. It in turn elected the eleven-member Reich Executive Board which included the party chairman and the editor of the party newspaper Volkskonservative Stimmen (People's Conservative Voices). A member of the executive committee had responsibility for day-to-day management. The first chairman was Treviranus, then from December 15 Paul Lejeune-Jung. After he resigned in 1932, Heinz Dähnhardt took over management. The KVP had little presence in the German states. [14]

The People's Conservative Association, which was temporarily revived alongside the KVP, adopted a charter in 1931 according to which it strove for "the political unification of all forces" that were "determined to fight for a free, vigorously led German state in the spirit of the 'Conservative Manifesto' of 15 February 1931". Any German could become a member. The general meeting, the "Conservative Reich Convention", elected a "Leadership Ring" for two years, which chose a speaker. Reichstag and Landtag (state parliament) deputies were not allowed to be members, but instead belonged to a "Parliamentary Ring". [15]

Beginning in 1930, the association published a series of People's Conservative pamphlets and, for its employees, the People's Conservative Leadership Letters. In addition, the People's Conservatives had contacts with the newspapers Tägliche Rundschau and the Deutsche Allgemeine Zeitung . [16]

Significance

The Conservative People's Party saw itself as the core of a movement around which the bourgeoisie could crystallize. [17] That, however, did not happen, and the organization remained a party without a mass following or a party apparatus worth mentioning. In particular, unlike the DNVP, it lacked the support of the agrarian interest groups in the conservative strongholds of eastern Prussia. In 1930, it had just 10,000 members. It received considerable financial support from industry, which rejected Hugenberg's anti-governmental policies.

In elections, the party remained largely unsuccessful. In the Reichstag elections of 1930, it won four seats through a combined list with the Landvolkpartei (Farmers' Party). But even in that election, it gained only about 300,000 votes, or 0.8% of the votes cast. [18] It achieved its only mandate at the state level in 1930, in the parliamentary elections in Bremen. [19] The attempt to unite the bourgeois parties, including the KVP, failed in 1932, as the result of which the KVP did not run in the 1932 Reichstag elections. That marked the end of its meaningful political activity.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">German People's Party</span> Political party in Germany

The German People's Party was a conservative-liberal political party during the Weimar Republic that was the successor to the National Liberal Party of the German Empire. Along with the left-liberal German Democratic Party (DDP), it represented political liberalism in Germany between 1918 and 1933.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alfred Hugenberg</span> German businessman and politician (1865–1951)

Alfred Ernst Christian Alexander Hugenberg was an influential German businessman and politician. An important figure in nationalist politics in Germany during the first three decades of the twentieth century, Hugenberg became the country's leading media proprietor during the 1920s. As leader of the German National People's Party, he played a part in helping Adolf Hitler become chancellor of Germany and served in his first cabinet in 1933, hoping to control Hitler and use him as his tool. The plan failed, and by the end of 1933 Hugenberg had been pushed to the sidelines. Although he continued to serve as a guest member of the Reichstag until 1945, he wielded no political influence. Following World War II, he was interned by the British in 1946 and classified as "exonerated" in 1951 after undergoing denazification.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Franz von Papen</span> German diplomat, reactionary, politician, nobleman and general staff officer of Germany (1879–1969)

Franz Joseph Hermann Michael Maria von Papen, Erbsälzer zu Werl und Neuwerk was a German conservative politician, reactionary, diplomat, Prussian nobleman and General Staff officer. He served as the chancellor of Germany in 1932, and then as the vice-chancellor under Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1934.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Centre Party (Germany)</span> Political party in Germany

The Centre Party, officially the German Centre Party and also known in English as the Catholic Centre Party, is a Christian democratic political party in Germany. Influential in the German Empire and Weimar Republic, it is the oldest German political party in existence. Formed in 1870, it successfully battled the Kulturkampf waged by Chancellor Otto von Bismarck against the Catholic Church. It soon won a quarter of the seats in the Reichstag, and its middle position on most issues allowed it to play a decisive role in the formation of majorities. The party name Zentrum (Centre) originally came from the fact that Catholic representatives would take up the middle section of seats in parliament between the social democrats and the conservatives.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">German National People's Party</span> Political party in Germany

The German National People's Party was a national-conservative and monarchist political party in Germany during the Weimar Republic. Before the rise of the Nazi Party, it was the major nationalist party in Weimar Germany. It was an alliance of conservative, nationalist, monarchist, völkisch, and antisemitic elements supported by the Pan-German League. Ideologically, the party was described as subscribing to authoritarian conservatism, German nationalism, monarchism, and from 1931 onwards also to corporatism in economic policy. It held anti-communist, anti-Catholic, and antisemitic views. On the left–right political spectrum, it belonged on the right-wing, and is classified as far-right in its early years and then again from the late 1920s when it moved back rightward.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1932 German presidential election</span>

Presidential elections were held in Germany on 13 March 1932, with a runoff on 10 April. Independent incumbent Paul von Hindenburg won a second seven-year term against Adolf Hitler of the Nazi Party (NSDAP). Communist Party (KPD) leader Ernst Thälmann also ran and received more than ten percent of the vote in the runoff. Theodor Duesterberg, the deputy leader of the World War I veterans' organization Der Stahlhelm, ran in the first round but dropped out of the runoff. This was the second and final direct election to the office of President of the Reich, Germany's head of state under the Weimar Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">July 1932 German federal election</span>

Federal elections were held in Germany on 31 July 1932, following the premature dissolution of the Reichstag. The Nazi Party made significant gains and became the largest party in the Reichstag for the first time, although they failed to win a majority. The Communist Party increased their vote share as well. All other parties combined held less than half the seats in the Reichstag, meaning no majority coalition government could be formed without including at least one of these two parties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1930 German federal election</span>

Federal elections were held in Germany on 14 September 1930. Despite losing ten seats, the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) remained the largest party in the Reichstag, winning 143 of the 577 seats, while the Nazi Party (NSDAP) dramatically increased its number of seats from 12 to 107. The Communists also increased their parliamentary representation, gaining 23 seats and becoming the third-largest party in the Reichstag.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian Social People's Service</span> Political party in Germany

The Christian Social People's Service was a Protestant conservative political party in the Weimar Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harzburg Front</span> German far-right political alliance, 1931-1933

The Harzburg Front was a short-lived radical right-wing, anti-democratic political alliance in Weimar Germany, formed in 1931 as an attempt to present a unified opposition to the government of Chancellor Heinrich Brüning. It was a coalition of the national conservative German National People's Party (DNVP) under millionaire press-baron Alfred Hugenberg with Adolf Hitler's National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP), the leadership of Der Stahlhelm paramilitary veterans' association, the Agricultural League and the Pan-German League organizations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paul Lejeune-Jung</span> German politician

Paul Adolf Franz Lejeune-Jung, was a German economist, politician, lawyer in the wood pulp industry, and resistance fighter against Adolf Hitler's Third Reich.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus (politician)</span> German politician (1891-1971)

Gottfried Reinhold Treviranus was a German politician from the Conservative People's Party and a Reichsminister in both of Chancellor Heinrich Brüning's cabinets. In the first he was Minister for the Occupied Territories and then Minister without Portfolio ; in the second, he served as Minister of Transport.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kuno von Westarp</span> German politician (1864-1945)

Count Kuno Friedrich Viktor von Westarp was a conservative politician in Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1929 German referendum</span> Plebiscite in Weimar Germany

The 1929 German Referendum was an attempt during the Weimar Republic to use popular legislation to annul the agreement in the Young Plan between the German government and the World War I opponents of the German Reich regarding the amount and conditions of reparations payments. The referendum was the result of the initiative "Against the Enslavement of the German People " launched in 1929 by right-wing parties and organizations. It called for an overall revision of the Treaty of Versailles and stipulated that government officials who accepted new reparation obligations would be committing treason.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Papen cabinet</span> 1932 cabinet of Weimar Germany

The Papen cabinet, headed by the independent Franz von Papen, was the nineteenth government of the Weimar Republic. It took office on 1 June 1932 when it replaced the second Brüning cabinet, which had resigned the same day after it lost the confidence of President Paul von Hindenburg.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Martin Schiele</span> German politician

Martin Schiele was a German nationalist politician. He was part of the leadership of the German National People's Party (DNVP) from its 1918 founding until Alfred Hugenberg became leader in 1928. He was also the chief representative of the agrarian wing of the DNVP. As a member of Hans Luther's coalition government, Schiele secured the restoration of agricultural and industrial protectionism with the tariff of 1925. As minister of food in 1927–28, he favored state credit as a means for subsidising agriculture.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Von Schleicher cabinet</span> 1932–33 cabinet of Weimar Germany

The von Schleicher cabinet, headed by Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher, was the 20th and last government of the Weimar Republic. Schleicher assumed office on 3 December 1932 after he had pressured his predecessor, Franz von Papen, to resign. Most of his cabinet's members were holdovers from the Papen cabinet and included many right-wing independents along with two members of the nationalist German National People's Party (DNVP).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Presidential cabinets of the Weimar Republic</span> Series of government of the Weimar Republic

The presidential cabinets were a succession of governments of the Weimar Republic whose legitimacy derived exclusively from presidential emergency decrees. From April 1930 to January 1933, three chancellors, Heinrich Brüning, Franz von Papen, and Kurt von Schleicher were appointed by President Paul von Hindenburg, and governed without the consent of the Reichstag, Germany's lower house of parliament. After Schleicher's tenure, the leader of the Nazis Adolf Hitler succeeded to the chancellorship, ending the Weimar Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">First Brüning cabinet</span> 1930–31 cabinet of Weimar Germany

The first Brüning cabinet, headed by Heinrich Brüning of the Centre Party, was the seventeenth democratically elected government during the Weimar Republic. It took office on 30 March 1930 when it replaced the second Müller cabinet, which had resigned on 27 March over the issue of how to fund unemployment compensation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Second Brüning cabinet</span> 1931–32 cabinet of Weimar Germany

The second Brüning cabinet, headed by Heinrich Brüning of the Centre Party, was the eighteenth democratically elected government during the Weimar Republic. It took office on 10 October 1931 when it replaced the first Brüning cabinet, which had resigned the day before under pressure from President Paul von Hindenburg to move the cabinet significantly to the right.

References

  1. Jonas, Erasmus (1965) Die Volkskonservativen 1928–1933. Entwicklung, Struktur, Standort und staatspolitische Zielsetzung (= Beiträge zur Geschichte des Parlamentarismus und der politischen Parteien. Bd. 30) [The Volkskonservativen 1928-1933: Development, Structure, Standpoint, and Reich Policy Objectives (= Contributions to the History of Parliamentarism and Political Parties. Vol. 30)]. Düsseldorf: Droste. pp. 59-62.
  2. Bessel, Richard; Feuchtwanger, E.J. (1981). Social Change and Political Development in Weimar Germany. Croom Helm. p. 277. ISBN   085664921X.
  3. Bessel, Richard; Feuchtwanger, E.J. (1981). Social Change and Political Development in Weimar Germany. Kent, U.K.: Croom Helm. p. 277. ISBN   085664921X.
  4. Jonas, Erasmus (1965). Die Volkskonservativen 1928–1933. Entwicklung, Struktur, Standort und staatspolitische Zielsetzung[The Volkskonservativen 1928–1933. Development, Structure, Location, and State Policy Objectives] (in German). Düsseldorf: Droste. p. 20.
  5. Jonas 1965, p. 21.
  6. Jonas 1965, pp. 21–22.
  7. Jonas 1965, pp. 59–62.
  8. 1 2 Jonas 1965, pp. 125–126.
  9. Jonas 1965, pp. 127–128.
  10. Jonas 1965, p. 132.
  11. Tormin, Walter (1967). Geschichte der deutschen Parteien seit 1848[History of German Parties since 1848] (in German). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer. p. 196.
  12. Jonas 1965, p. 189.
  13. Jonas 1965, pp. 189–190.
  14. Jonas 1965, p. 137.
  15. Jonas 1965, p. 190–192.
  16. Jonas 1965, p. 140.
  17. Winkler, Heinrich August (1993). Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie[The History of the First German Democracy] (in German). Munich: Beck. p. 385. ISBN   3-406-37646-0.
  18. Möller, Horst (2003). Aufklärung und Demokratie. Historische Studien zur politischen Vernunft[Enlightenment and Democracy. Historical Studies on Political Reason] (in German). Munich: Oldenbourg. p. 232. ISBN   3-486-56707-1.
  19. "Landtagswahlen Freie Hansestadt Bremen" [Parliamentary Elections Free Hanse City Bremen]. Wahlen in Deutschland (in German).