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Bavarian People's Party

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(Redirected fromBayerische Volkspartei)
Former Bavarian political party

Bavarian People's Party
Bayerische Volkspartei
President(s)Karl Speck (1918–1929)
Fritz Schäffer (1929–1933)
FoundedNovember 1918; 107 years ago (1918-11)
Dissolved4 July 1933; 92 years ago (1933-07-04)
Split fromCentre Party
Succeeded byChristian Social Union in Bavaria,Bavaria Party
(not legal successors)
HeadquartersMunich,Germany
Paramilitary wingBayernwacht
IdeologyPolitical Catholicism
Bavarianregionalism
Christian democracy
Conservatism (German)[1]
Corporatism
Political positionCentre-right[2] toright-wing
ReligionRoman Catholicism
European affiliationWhite International (attendee)
Green International (attendee)
Colours  Cyan  White
Party flag

TheBavarian People's Party (German:Bayerische Volkspartei;BVP) was a principally Catholicchristian democratic political party inBavaria during theWeimar Republic. After the collapse of theGerman Empire in 1918, it split away from the federalCentre Party and formed the BVP in order to pursue a conservative andregionalist stance.[3] Itdominated in state politics; all Ministers-President from 1920 onwards were from the BVP. In the nationalReichstag it remained a minor player with only about three percent of total votes in all elections. The BVP disbanded shortly after theNazi seizure of power in early 1933. It was not reformed after the war; much of its electorate was absorbed by the new centre-right regionalistChristian Social Union in Bavaria.

Founding

[edit]

There had been a Bavarian wing of the Centre Party throughout the years of the German Empire. After Germany's defeat inWorld War I and the outbreak of theGerman Revolution of 1918–1919, leading Bavarian members of the Centre Party aroundGeorg Heim [de] founded the Bavarian People's Party inRegensburg on 12 November 1918 as the Catholic political agent in Bavaria.[4] Two main factors drove the split from the Centre Party. The first was the Bavarian representatives' strongfederalism, in contrast to the national Centre Party underMatthias Erzberger, which tended towards centralization. The second factor was the Bavarians' more conservative stance and negative assessment of the then-proceedingrevolution guided (at least initially) by theSocial Democratic Party (SPD).[3] The founding members of the BVP included the party's agrarian wing and, despite initial skepticism, the workers' representatives.[5] The BVP's programme called for a decentralized federal parliamentary system, the abolition of "Prussian supremacy", women's suffrage and the introduction of plebiscites. At the party level it strove for acorporative structure, with a "farmers' chamber" (Bauernkammer) as the first step. Half of all committee members and parliamentary candidates at both the national and local level had to be members of BVP-affiliated professional organizations. Party leadership was drawn mostly from clerics, the former nobility and the middle class.[5]

Electoral results

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The BVP, with about 55,000 members and 2,500 local chapters,[3] was the most widely elected party in all five Bavarian state elections during the Weimar Republic and was represented in all state governments. Most were coalitions with theBavarian Peasants' League (Bauernbund) and the Protestant Bavarian Middle Party (Bayerischen Mittelpartei),[5] which after 1920 was the Bavarian branch of the strongly nationalistGerman National People's Party (DNVP). The BVP provided the minister president four times:Gustav Ritter von Kahr[6] (1920–1921),Hugo Graf von Lerchenfeld (1921–1922),Eugen von Knilling (1922–1924) andHeinrich Held (1924–1933). Kahr and Lerchenfeld had only loose ties to party.[5]

Bavarian state elections (in pct): parties winning more than 1 seat[7]
(blank = did not participate; dash = won 0 or 1 seat)
Party19191920192419281932
Bavarian People's Party (BVP)35.039.432.831.632.6
Social Democratic Party (SPD)33.016.417.224.215.5
German Democratic Party (DDP)14.08.13.2
Bavarian Peasants' League (BB)9.17.97.111.56.5
German People's Party (DVP)5.813.59.7[a]3.3
Independent Social Democratic Party (USPD)2.512.9
Communist Party of Germany (KPD)1.78.33.86.6
Völkischer Block (VSB)17.1
German National People's Party (DNVP)see DVP9.33.3
Nazi Party (NSDAP)6.132.5
  1. ^Combined German National People's Party and German People's Party

At the national level, the BVP and the Centre formed an electoral alliance for theJanuary 1919 election to theWeimar National Assembly that drew up theWeimar Constitution and served as Germany's interim parliament until the new constitution went into effect. The two parties also had a joint parliamentary group until 1920. After that the relationship between the sister parties deteriorated and led to competitive candidacies in some elections, although from 1927 on there was again a rapprochement.[3]

The BVP participated in various national governments and provided ministers in the cabinets ofWilhelm Cuno,Wilhelm Marx (first),third andfourth cabinets),Hans Luther (first) andsecond cabinets),Hermann Müller (second cabinet), andHeinrich Brüning (first) andsecond cabinets).Erich Emminger was the highest ranking, serving as the Reich minister of justice in 1923–1924.

Reichstag elections – BVP results (in pct)
19191920May
1924
Dec
1924
19281930Jul
1932
Nov
1932
Mar
1933
4.23.23.73.13.03.23.12.7

Political activity

[edit]
Gustav Ritter von Kahr

BVP Minister President Kahr was responsible for the idea of establishing Bavaria as anOrdnungszelle (cell of order) within the "Marxist chaos" and completely "Judaized" Weimar Republic.[3] He also fostered the growth of the Civil Guard (Einwohnerwehr), which was similar to theFreikorps. Kahr resigned as minister president in 1921 when the Law for the Protection of the Republic forced the Civil Guards to disarm.[8] In 1923 Minister President Knilling appointed Kahr state commissioner general (Generalstaatskommissar) with dictatorial powers. After Kahr immediately imposed a state of emergency in Bavaria, the government in Berlin did the same for all of Germany.[9] Kahr then stopped enforcing theLaw for the Protection of the Republic, which increased the punishments for politically motivated acts of violence and banned organizations that opposed the "constitutional republican form of government" along with their printed matter and meetings.[10] In spite of his right-wing stances, he helped put down Adolf Hitler's November 1923Beer Hall Putsch.[4] Under pressure from Berlin, Kahr was forced to resign as state commissioner general two months later.[11]

TheBayernwacht (Bavaria Watch), the uniformed paramilitary unit of the Bavarian People's Party, was formed in 1925. It disbanded itself in April 1933.[12]

Heinrich Held

After the stabilization of the political situation in Germany, the BVP pursued a more moderate course under the leadership of Minister PresidentHeinrich Held (1924–1933) and party presidentFritz Schäffer. Under Held, the Bavarian conflicts with the Reich government ended, the economy stabilized, the state administration was reformed and infrastructure expanded.[5] At the national level, the BVP voted in 1925 against Centre Party Reich presidential candidate Wilhelm Marx and forPaul von Hindenburg since it feared socialist-driven centralization.[4]

Rise of the Nazi Party and end of the BVP

[edit]

The strong upsurge of theNazi Party (NSDAP) that began in 1930 did not affect the BVP to the same extent as other middle class parties – theGerman National People's Party (DNVP),German People's Party (DVP) and theGerman Democratic Party (DDP; later DStP) – since it had a rural Catholic core electorate with solid local structures that proved largely resistant to the emerging National Socialist movement.[citation needed]Heinrich Himmler, who had been a member since 1919, resigned from the BVP in 1923.[13]

After the Nazi Party seized power in January 1933, all 19 BVP deputies in the Reichstag voted for theEnabling Act of 1933 that gave Hitler as chancellor the power to make and enforce laws without involving the Reichstag. The Bavarian government underwentGleichschaltung (lit.'coordination') – essentially Nazification – on 10 April 1933. On the same day, Reich Interior MinisterWilhem Frick named GeneralFranz Ritter von Epp asReichsstatthalter (Reich governor) of Bavaria, and Minister President Held was forced out of office.[4] The BVP, many of whose members had been arrested, saw itself as deprived of any possibility of action and dissolved itself on 4 July 1933. All of its arrested politicians were then released.[3]

Successor parties

[edit]
Part ofa series on
Conservatism in Germany

TheChristian Social Union (CSU) and theBavaria Party were founded after theSecond World War. In programmatic terms they can be seen in part as successor organizations to the BVP, but the CSU is not a legal continuation or successor party to the BVP. From 1945 it absorbed most of the German nationalist camp in Bavaria: theBayerische Mittelpartei (Bavarian Middle Party), which in the Weimar Republic was the Bavarian offshoot of the nationalist German National People's Party (DNVP), parts of the Bavarian Peasants' League and of the urban liberal middle classes. The same was true of the Bavaria Party, whose supporters came partly from the BVP camp and partly from the Peasants' League.[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Stibbe, Matthew (2010).Germany, 1914–1933: Politics, Society and Culture. Pearson Education. p. 79.
  2. ^Stibbe, Matthew (2010).Germany, 1914-1933: Politics, Society and Culture. Pearson Education. p. 59.
  3. ^abcdef"Bayerische Volkspartei (BVP)".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). 17 September 2014. Retrieved17 January 2023.
  4. ^abcdBecker, Winfried."Geschichte der CDU: Bayerische Volkspartei (BVP)".Konrad Adenauer Stiftung (in German). Archived fromthe original on 24 June 2022. Retrieved17 January 2023.
  5. ^abcdeFriemberger, Claudia (8 June 2022)."Bayerische Volkspartei (BVP)".Das Staatslexicon (in German) (Version Staatslexikon8 online ed.). Retrieved17 January 2023.
  6. ^"Geschichte des bayerischen Parlaments seit 1819: Kahr, Gustav Ritter von".Bavariathek (in German). Retrieved17 January 2023.
  7. ^"Der Freistaat Bayern Landtagswahlen 1919–1933" [The Free State of Bavaria Parliamentary Elections 1919–1933].gonschior.de (in German). Retrieved17 January 2023.
  8. ^"Gustav Ritter von Kahr 1862–1934".Deutsches Historisches Museum (in German). Retrieved17 January 2023.
  9. ^Winkler, Heinrich August (1993).Weimar 1918–1933. Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie [Weimar 1918–1933. The History of the First German Democracy] (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. pp. 210–211.ISBN 3-406-37646-0.
  10. ^"[Erstes] Gesetz zum Schutze der Republik. Vom 21. Juli 1922" [[First] Law for the Protection of the Republic].documentArchiv.de (in German). Retrieved25 January 2023.
  11. ^Stehkämper, Hugo (2016). "Marx, Wilhelm".Neue Deutsche Biographie [Online-Version] (in German). Vol. 26. p. 57.
  12. ^Altendorfer, Otto (3 July 2006)."Bayernwacht, 1924–1933".Historisches Lexikon Bayerns (in German). Retrieved17 January 2023.
  13. ^"Heinrich Himmler".Spartacus Educational. Retrieved17 January 2023.
Political parties in Germany in the Weimar Republic (1918–1933)
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