1 / 26

Hitler becomes Chancellor

Hitler becomes Chancellor. The short version - Economic Crisis. 3rd October 1929- Stresemann died. This left Germany weak without one of its most able politicians. October 1929- The Wall Street crash.

thelma
Download Presentation

Hitler becomes Chancellor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hitler becomes Chancellor

  2. The short version - Economic Crisis • 3rd October 1929- Stresemann died. This left Germany weak without one of its most able politicians. • October 1929- The Wall Street crash. • US loans to German industries were called in, leaving industries unable to function. Many closed down, and unemployment rose dramatically. • Wages were low • People began to turn on the Weimar Republic again • People looked to more extremist groups, like the Nazis and Communists for a solution

  3. Short version - The Political Crisis

  4. Year Unemployed 1928 650 000 1929 1 320 000 1930 3 000 000 1931 4 350 000 1932 5 102 000 1933 6 100 000 The Depression

  5. Depression • Muller’s coalition – fell apart March 1930 – couldn’t agree on how to finance national insurance for unemployment • Brüning appointed – manoeuvred in by conservative-nationalists • Plan – cut spending • Rejected by Reichstag – used Article 48

  6. Chancellor Bruning-the Centre Party Remember the weakness of the Weimar Constitution-PR-He did not have a majority Had to rely on President Hindenburg-Article 48

  7. §48! • Used to pass economic policy • Reichstag challenged the decree’s legality • Reichstag dissolved July 1930

  8. New election September 1930 • 1928 – NS get 2.8% • 1930 – NS get 18.3% • DDP and DVP lost 20 seats • SPD vote decreased • KPD vote increased

  9. Brüning’s rule • Rule by decree ‘tolerated’ by SPD • 1930 – 5 decrees • 1932 – 66 decrees • Sitting days – 94 in 1930, 13 in 1932 • Did Brüning mind? • Ultra-conservative monarchist with little sympathy for republic • Wanted to weaken Reichstag and get authoritarian constitution

  10. The fall of Brüning • Economic policy led to reduced demand – slump worse • Mass rally Oct 31 to denounce Brüning • Wanted to turn Junker estates in to 600 000 allotments for unemployed workers • May 32 – Hindenburg stopped signing decrees

  11. Manoeuvring • Right wing conspiracy – group led by Schleicher convinces Hindenburg to force Brüning to resign in order to get a right wing govt

  12. Von Papen installed • Aristocratic, and Schleicher thought he could be influenced • New cabinet of landowners and industrialists • Wanted support of NSDAP • Hitler agreed if • The ban on SA and SS was ended • There were new elections

  13. July 1932 • NSDAP 37.3%, 230 seats • DDP/DVP collapse – 2.2% of vote total • 84% turnout • Only 39.5% voted for democratic parties

  14. Violence! • July 1932 - 461 riots in Prussia • 10 July – 10 killed in Nazi-Communist fighting

  15. Von Papen out • 12 Sept – Vote of No Confidence in Von Papen 512-42 • Reichstag dissolved • Hitler refuses to cooperate unless chancellor • Von Papen – plans martial law • Schleicher – convinces Hindenburg to get Papen to resign – didn’t have confidence of army

  16. Schleicher Chancellor • Aim – split left and right wings of NSDAP • Appointed Gregor Strasser vice-chancellor • Hitler had loyalty of party leadership – forced Strasser to resign

  17. Final manoeuvring • Von Papen wants office again • Convinces Hindenburg to make Hitler chancellor and he would be vice-chancellor – said Schleicher hadn’t brought stability • Said he could control Hitler

  18. 30 Jan 1933

  19. Why did politics become more extreme? Politicians argue who should run Germany Communist & Nazis promise to take action No Action is taken to help the unemployed! Many Germans lose their faith in Democracy Votes for the Nazis & Communist increase. Votes for the Nazis & Communist increase. No Action is taken to help the unemployed Von Papen becomes Chancellor in 1932 Papen is replaced by Schleicher later that year

  20. http://www.authorstream.com/Presentation/cclayton1-1588738-why-was-hitler-invited-to-become-chancellor/http://www.authorstream.com/Presentation/cclayton1-1588738-why-was-hitler-invited-to-become-chancellor/

More Related