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Joseph Wirth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chancellor of Germany from 1921 to 1922
Joseph Wirth
Wirthc. 1920
Chancellor of Germany
(Weimar Republic)
In office
10 May 1921 – 22 November 1922
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
DeputyGustav Bauer
Preceded byConstantin Fehrenbach
Succeeded byWilhelm Cuno
Foreign Minister
Acting
26 October 1921 – 31 January 1922
ChancellorJoseph Wirth
Preceded byFriedrich Rosen
Succeeded byWalther Rathenau
Acting
24 June 1922 – 22 November 1922
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
ChancellorJoseph Wirth
Preceded byWalther Rathenau
Succeeded byHans von Rosenberg
Minister of Finance
In office
27 March 1920 – 22 October 1921
ChancellorHermann Müller
Constantin Fehrenbach
Joseph Wirth
Preceded byMatthias Erzberger
Succeeded byAndreas Hermes
Minister of the Interior
In office
30 March 1930 – 7 October 1931
ChancellorHeinrich Brüning
Preceded byCarl Severing
Succeeded byWilhelm Groener
Minister for the Occupied Territories
In office
13 April 1929 – 27 March 1930
ChancellorHermann Müller
Preceded byCarl Severing
Succeeded byGottfried Treviranus
Member of the Reichstag
(Weimar Republic)
In office
1920–1933
ConstituencyNational list (1932–1933)
Liegnitz (1930–1932)
National list (1928–1930)
Baden (1920–1928)
(German Empire)
In office
1914–1918
ConstituencyBaden 7
Member of theWeimar National Assembly
In office
6 February 1919 – 21 May 1920
ConstituencyBaden
Personal details
Born
Karl Joseph Wirth

(1879-09-06)6 September 1879
Freiburg im Breisgau,Grand Duchy of Baden,German Empire
Died3 January 1956(1956-01-03) (aged 76)
Freiburg im Breisgau,Baden-Württemberg,West Germany
Political partyZentrum
Christian Democratic Union of Germany
Alliance of Germans

Karl Joseph Wirth (German pronunciation:[kaɐ̯ljo:zɛfvɪɐ̯t]; 6 September 1879 – 3 January 1956) was a German politician of theCatholic Centre Party who waschancellor of Germany from May 1921 to November 1922, during the early years of theWeimar Republic. He was also minister of four government departments between 1920 and 1931 (Foreign Affairs, Finance, Interior, and Occupied Territories). Wirth was strongly influenced by Christian social teaching throughout his political career.

He was named chancellor in May 1921 when Germany was facing difficult negotiations with theAllies of World War I overGerman war reparations. Wirth accepted the Allies' conditions and began a policy of fulfilment – an attempt to show that Germany was unable to afford the reparations payments by making the effort to meet them. He resigned after less than six months in protest against thepartition of Upper Silesia by theLeague of Nations and formed a second, minority cabinet a few days later. Following the assassination of Foreign MinisterWalther Rathenau by members of a right-wing terrorist group in April 1922, his government attempted to confront political violence with theLaw for the Protection of the Republic. Wirth's second government resigned after just over a year when it was unable to expand its political base.

After his two terms as chancellor, Wirth continued to fight right-wing political forces as aReichstag member and government minister. During theNazi era he went into exile and worked with several anti-Nazi groups. Following the end ofWorld War II, he opposedKonrad Adenauer's policy of integration with the West. Although he lived inWest Germany, he had contacts with theSoviet Union andEast Germany, the latter of which awarded him two prestigious honours. He died in his hometown ofFreiburg in 1956.

Early life

[edit]

Karl Joseph Wirth was born on 6 September 1879 inFreiburg im Breisgau in what was then theGrand Duchy of Baden, a federal state of theGerman Empire. He was the son of Karl Wirth, a master machinist at a printing company,[1] and his wife Agathe (née Zeller). The involvement of his parents, who were Catholic, in Christian and social causes had a strong influence on him throughout his life.[2]

From 1899 to 1906, he studied mathematics, natural sciences and economics at theUniversity of Freiburg. He obtained his doctorate in mathematics in 1906 with the thesis "On the elementary divisors of a linear homogeneous substitution".[1] From 1906 to 1913, he taught mathematics at aRealgymnasium (secondary school) in Freiburg. In 1909, he was a co-founder and first president of theAkademische Vinzenzkonferenz (Society of Saint Vincent de Paul), a charity run by laymen for the poor.[2] Social issues were consistently his main concern after he entered politics.[3]

Start of political career

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In 1911 Wirth was elected to the Freiburg city council for the CatholicCentre Party. From 1913 to 1921, he was a member of the BadenLandtag, the lower house of parliament of the Grand Duchy (after 1918 theRepublic) of Baden.[2] In 1914 he became a member of the ImperialReichstag following a difficult campaign against aNational Liberal candidate who was in part responsible for Wirth's life-long dislike of the "parties of property and education".[4]

At the start ofWorld War I, Wirth volunteered for military service but for health reasons was deemed unfit. He then volunteered with theRed Cross and served on both the Western and Eastern Fronts until 1917, when he left after contracting pneumonia.[2]

Wirth voted for the July 1917Reichstag Peace Resolution, which was sponsored byMatthias Erzberger, also of the Centre Party, and called for a negotiated peace without annexations.[2] In the final year of the war, Wirth increasingly often criticized the policies of the imperial government and pushed for internal reforms.[4]

Revolution and Weimar Republic

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In the first days of theGerman revolution of 1918–1919, after Baden's provisional government had replaced theGrand Duke's ministers, Wirth became Finance minister of Baden. The peaceful course of the revolution there made it possible for the Centre Party to work with the moderateMajority Social Democratic Party (MSPD). Wirth engaged with Catholic workers to keep them from becoming radicalised and spoke in favour of a leading role for the Centre Party in building a democratic Germany. His position reflected his beliefs in Catholicism's social teaching and in Christian democracy.[4]

In January 1919, Wirth was elected to both the Baden Constituent Assembly and theWeimar National Assembly, which wrote the new constitutions for theRepublic of Baden and theWeimar Republic.[1] After theKapp Putsch of March 1920, when ChancellorGustav Bauer of the MSPD resigned and was replaced byHermann Müller (MSPD), Wirth became Germany's minister of Finance. He continued to hold the portfolio in the subsequentcabinet of Constantin Fehrenbach (Centre Party).[2]

As Finance minister, Wirth continued the policies of his predecessor,Matthias Erzberger (Centre). They included the centralisation at the national level of the authority to tax and spend and the redistribution of taxes to lighten the burden on those with low to moderate incomes. Through ties with military leadership, he also saw that funds were provided to help begin secretly rearming Germany in contravention of the restrictions imposed by theTreaty of Versailles.[4]

Chancellorships

[edit]

The Fehrenbach cabinet resigned on 4 May when it was unable to reach a decision on whether to accept theLondon Schedule of Payments, which set German war reparations at 132 billion gold marks.[5] TheLondon ultimatum issued on 5 May threatened an Allied occupation of theRuhr if Germany did not accept the terms within six days.[6] The Centre and SPD were in favour of accepting the London Schedule in spite of the anger it had aroused in the German public. Since Wirth was the only candidate for chancellor whom the SPD would accept, and no government could be built without them, Wirth and the Centre Party formed a coalition on 10 May with the SPD and theGerman Democratic Party (DDP).[4] Wirth remained Finance minister in his new cabinet.

First term

[edit]
See also:First Wirth cabinet
Joseph Wirth in 1922

The Reichstag ratified the London Schedule the following day, 11 May, and Wirth began his "fulfilment policy" (Erfüllungspolitik). By attempting to comply with the Allied demands – and thus prevent them from occupying the Ruhr – Wirth wanted to show that the annual payments of three billion gold marks were beyond Germany's means.[6] On 31 August 1921, after considerable effort, Germany was able to pay the first half-yearly instalment. During the period of relaxed diplomatic relations that surrounded the payment, theU.S.–German Peace Treaty was signed,[7] andWalther Rathenau, thenminister of Reconstruction, concluded a comprehensive agreement with France for paying reparations in kind for the reconstruction of the devastated regions of the country.[8] The fulfilment policy was quickly broken off due to the problems of financing it. In December 1921 Germany had to request a postponement of the next payment.[7] The extreme Right reacted to Wirth's reparations policy by calling for his assassination.[2]

Two members of the right-wing terrorist groupOrganisation Consul assassinated Matthias Erzberger on 26 August 1921 for his role in signing theArmistice of 11 November. At about the same time, the conflict between the Berlin government and theBavarian government ofGustav Ritter von Kahr came to a head when PresidentFriedrich Ebert placed Bavaria under a state of emergency. The Reich government was then able to disarm the paramilitary BavarianCitizens' Defense groups (Einwohnerwehr), and Kahr, without their armed support, stepped down as Bavarian minister president.[9]

The strife which arose out of the crisis in Bavaria had only just abated when in mid-October theLeague of Nations' announcement of the partition ofUpper Silesia between Germany andPoland aroused considerable anger throughout Germany. Almost sixty percent of the vote in theMarch 1921 plebiscite in ethnically mixed Upper Silesia was in favour of staying part of Germany, but the heavily industrialised eastern part of the region was nevertheless awarded to Poland.[10] Wirth believed that its severance from Germany would fatally affect Germany's capacity to pay its reparations.[citation needed]

On 22 October 1921, he resigned in protest over the partition. Three days later, President Friedrich Ebert once again asked him to form a government, which Wirth did on 26 October with thesecond Wirth cabinet.[2] Because the DDP andGerman People's Party (DVP) had refused to accept the partition of Silesia or join any coalition that agreed to it, the SPD and Centre Party formed a minority government. On 26 October, Wirth gave a government statement in which he presented his new cabinet as a combination of trusted individuals, not as members of a coalition.[11]

Second term

[edit]
See also:Second Wirth cabinet
Walther Rathenau, minister of Finance in the second Wirth cabinet, was assassinated by far-right extremists on 24 June 1922.

On 16 April 1922, Wirth and Walther Rathenau signed theTreaty of Rapallo, under which Germany andSoviet Russia renounced all war-related territorial and financial claims against each other and opened friendly diplomatic relations, a move which ended Germany's post-war foreign policy isolation.[2] After Rathenau was assassinated by far-right extremists of theOrganisation Consul on 24 June 1922, Wirth gave a speech in front of the Reichstag in which he warned that "we are experiencing in Germany a political brutalisation" that was characterized by "an atmosphere of murder, of rancour, of poison,"[12] and famously proclaimed:[13]

There stands the enemy, who drips his poison into the wounds of a people. There stands the enemy, and about it there is no doubt: the enemy is on the Right!

On 21 July 1922, the Reichstag passed theLaw for the Protection of the Republic on the initiative of the Wirth government.[2] It increased the penalties for political assassinations and banned organisations opposed to the "constitutional republican form of government" along with their printed matter and meetings.

Wirth tried to extend his government's minority coalition to the right to include the DVP, but even his own Centre Party was becoming increasingly unhappy at having to work with the SPD, which had reunited with the more radicalIndependent Social Democrats (USPD) in September 1922. After the government lost a key vote on the grain levy in November, the government resigned. On 22 November,Wilhelm Cuno, a political independent, replaced Wirth as chancellor.[11]

Post-chancellorship

[edit]

In 1924 Wirth joined theReichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold, a paramilitary organization formed by the SPD, Centre and DDP for the non-violent protection of the Republic from the enemies of democracy. Wirth used its rallies to speak in opposition to the Centre Party's drift to the right.[4] When it joined the government of the independentHans Luther in January 1925, Wirth criticized it for working with the nationalistGerman National People's Party (DNVP) in theLuther cabinet. He left the Centre's Reichstag contingent in protest against the party's social policies In August 1925[2] but returned in July 1926. In August of that year, Wirth,Paul Löbe of the SPD and Ludwig Haas of the Baden DDP formed a Republican Union as a way to maintain cooperation between representatives of the working class and those of the progressive middle class. The Centre Party then removed Wirth's name from the list of candidates for the 1928 Reichstag election. Wirth had to submit to a number of conditions before his name was restored.[4]

In April 1929, Wirth becameminister for the Occupied Territories (theRhineland region occupied by the Allies) in thesecond Müller cabinet. After the government's resignation in late March 1930, Wirth became minister of the Interior in thecabinet ofHeinrich Brüning, the first of thepresidential cabinets. Wirth's main task at the Interior Ministry was to try to hold back the growing power of the Nazis. He was highly popular with the Social Democrats and acted as mediator between them and the new government. In October 1931, he was pushed out of office and replaced byWilhelm Groener on the personal initiative of PresidentPaul von Hindenburg, who regarded Wirth as a leftist.[2][4]

Nazi era

[edit]

In March 1933, two months afterAdolf Hitler was appointed chancellor by Hindenburg, Wirth spoke passionately in the Reichstag against the Nazi-sponsoredEnabling Act, which gave Hitler dictatorial powers. Bowing to the pressure of party unity, he nevertheless voted in favour of the Act with the rest of the Centre parliamentary contingent on 24 March. After its passage, Wirth emigrated to Switzerland, settling inLucerne and purchasing a villa there. He communicated with leading statesmen in Britain and France about the dangers of Nazism and travelled to the US, where he met with the exiled former chancellorHeinrich Brüning and gave lectures on the Nazi regime atHarvard University andPrinceton University. Wirth lived in Paris from 1935 to 1939, after which he returned to Lucerne. In the early days ofWorld War II, he worked with the British government and an anti-Nazi group around AdmiralWilhelm Canaris on a possible coup and peace settlement, but the talks ended when Germany invaded France in 1940.[2] Subsequently, he made efforts to inform theVatican about the threat of Nazi Germany's anti-Jewish policies, and during World War II, he secretly kept in touch with anti-NaziSolf Circle andKreisau Circle in Germany.[14] He was also one of the founders of "Democratic Germany" (Das Demokratische Deutschland), a working group with SPD members in exile. It drew up guidelines for the re-establishment of a democratic Germany that they hoped would avoid the mistakes that had brought down the Weimar Republic.[4]

Wirth's grave in Freiburg

Later life

[edit]

Wirth returned from exile to Freiburg in 1948. He opposedKonrad Adenauer's policy of integration with the West for fear of making the division of Germany permanent. Together withWilhelm Elfes [de], he founded the neutralist "Alliance of Germans, Party for Unity, Peace and Freedom" (BdD) in 1953. The party was supported by theSED, the ruling communist party inEast Germany. Although Wirth did not approve ofStalin's policies, he believed in a compromise with Soviet Russia in line with theRapallo Treaty.[2] In 1951, Wirth visited Moscow for political talks.

UnlikeWest Germany, East Germany paid Wirth a small amount of financial aid. In 1954 he was awarded the East German "Peace Medal" and received theStalin Peace Prize in 1955.[15] TheCIA file "The background of Joseph Wirth" states that Wirth was a Soviet agent.[14] According to a CIA document, Wirth claimed that he met withLavrentiy Beria, chief of theSoviet secret police, in Berlin in December 1952. Wirth said Beria asked him to join the East German government.[16]

Wirth died of heart failure in 1956, aged 76, in his hometown of Freiburg and was buried in the city's main cemetery.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcWirth, Günther."Kanzler des Zentrums. Der Politiker Joseph Wirth (1879–1956)" [Chancellor of the Centre Party. The Politician Joseph Wirth (1879–1956)].berlin-geschichte.de (in German). Retrieved11 May 2024.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnScriba, Arnulf (14 September 2014)."Joseph Wirth 1879–1956".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved10 May 2024.
  3. ^"Joseph Wirth (1879–1956) Badischer Demokrat und Reichskanzler" [Joseph Wirth (1879–1956) Democrat and Reich Chancellor of Baden].Haus auf der Alb (in German). Retrieved11 May 2024.
  4. ^abcdefghiKnapp, Thomas A. (1982)."Wirth, Joseph Karl".Landeskunde Baden-Württemberg (in German). Retrieved11 May 2024.
  5. ^Eikenberg, Gabriel (14 September 2014)."Konstantin Fehrenbach 1852–1926".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved13 May 2024.
  6. ^abScriba, Arnulf (14 September 2014)."Londoner Ultimatum".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved13 May 2024.
  7. ^abPacelli, Eugenio."Erfüllungspolitik".Kritische Online-Edition der Nuntiaturberichte (1917–1929) (in German). Retrieved3 June 2024.
  8. ^"How Germany Will Pay France".Current History (1916–1940).15 (1): 154. October 1921.JSTOR 45329214.
  9. ^Mühle, Alexander; Scriba, Arnulf (28 September 2022)."Gustav Ritter von Kahr 1862–1934".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved16 May 2024.
  10. ^Scriba, Arnulf (2 September 2014)."Die Teilung Oberschlesiens" [The Partition of Upper Silesia].Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved17 May 2024.
  11. ^ab"Die beiden Kabinette Wirth" [The Two Wirth Cabinets].Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved18 May 2024.
  12. ^Schlie, Ulrich (1998). "Altreichskanzler Joseph Wirth im Luzerner Exil (1939–1948)" [Former Chancellor Joseph Wirth in Exile in Lucerne (1939–1948)]. In Krohn, Claus-Dieter; Paul, Gerhard (eds.).Exil und Widerstand [Exile and Resistance] (in German). Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 180–199.ISBN 978-3-883-77560-9.
  13. ^Bendikowski, Tillmann (15 July 2013)."Der Feind steht rechts" [The Enemy Stands on the Right].Deutsche Welle (in German). Retrieved19 May 2014.
  14. ^abSchlie, Ulrich (29 November 1997). "Diener vieler Herren. Die verschlungenen Pfade des Reichskanzlers Joseph Wirth im Exil" [Servant of many masters. The winding paths of Chancellor Joseph Wirth in exile].Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (in German).
  15. ^Kellerhoff, Sven Felix (19 June 2019)."Kein Zweifel: Dieser Feind steht rechts!" [Without Doubt: This Enemy Stands on the Right!].Die Welt (in German). Retrieved24 May 2024.
  16. ^CIA (7 July 1953)."Meeting Between Wirth and Beria".Internet archive. Retrieved24 May 2024.

Sources

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toJoseph Wirth.

External links

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Political offices
Preceded byChancellor of Germany
10 May 1921 – 14 November 1922
Succeeded by
Preceded byMinister of Foreign Affairs (acting)
26 October 1921 – 31 January 1922
Succeeded by
Preceded byMinister of Foreign Affairs (acting)
24 June 1922 – 14 November 1922
Succeeded by
Preceded byMinister of the Interior
30 March 1930 – 7 October 1931
Succeeded by
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