Free Conservative Party Freikonservative Partei | |
|---|---|
| Founders | Carl Ferdinand von Stumm-Halberg Wilhelm von Kardorff |
| Founded | 28 July 1866 (1866-07-28) |
| Dissolved | 13 December 1918 (1918-12-13) |
| Split from | Prussian Conservative Party |
| Succeeded by | DNVP(right-wing factions) DVP(moderate factions) |
| Headquarters | Berlin,Prussia |
| Newspaper | Die Post |
| Ideology | Liberal conservatism[1][2] Progressive conservatism Political Protestantism East Elbiaregionalism German nationalism Agrarianism Conservatism[3] Moderate conservatism[4] Anti-socialism[5] Anti-reactionarism[6] Constitutional monarchism[7] Protectionism[8] |
| Political position | Centre tocentre-right |
| Colors | Sky blue |
TheFree Conservative Party (German:Freikonservative Partei, FKP) was aliberal-conservative[1][2] political party inPrussia and theGerman Empire which ran as theGerman Reich Party (German:Deutsche Reichspartei, DRP) in the federal elections to theReichstag beginning in 1871.
The party was formed when it split from thePrussian Conservative Party in 1866. It was a minimally organized "party of notables" whose members came largely from the wealthier upper classes. Politically, the Free Conservatives stood between theGerman Conservative Party and theNational Liberal Party. During the chancellorship ofOtto von Bismarck, it generally gave him its strong support, and many of its members were ministers and diplomats. AfterWilhelm II became emperor in 1888, the party lost a significant portion of its earlier strength. It took a staunchly nationalist stance during World War I and disbanded in 1918 during the early weeks of theGerman revolution. The majority of its members then joined the right-wingGerman National People's Party.

The Free Conservative Party split from thePrussian Conservative Party in 1866 as a result of disagreements over ChancellorOtto von Bismarck's policies in the wake of theAustro-Prussian War. Unlike the original party, the Free Conservatives supported the territorial annexations that led to the founding of theNorth German Confederation under Prussia's leadership.[9] They also favoured the advancement of commerce and industry and trusted that Bismarck would incorporate elements of modernity into Prussia's tradition of authoritarian rule.[10] On 28 July 1866, along with some members of theOld Liberals, they formed the Free Conservative Association, which within the year renamed itself the Free Conservative Party.[11] After the founding of the German Empire in 1871, the party ran in theReichstag elections as the German Reich Party (Deutsche Reichspartei).[9]
The party was poorly organised internally and consisted of little more than the party contingents in the Reichstag and thePrussianLandtag. To establish a connection between the two, a national committee was formed in 1870, but it was not particularly active. Its office in Berlin was staffed by only one person. Before 1890 there was no official party leader, and the first party conference did not take place until 1906. Beginning in 1907, the official party structure consisted of an electoral association which was led by an executive board and committee. In the party's later phase, regional associations were established as well.[12]
The party newspaper wasDie Post, which switched allegiance to the anti-governmentPan-German camp in 1910.[13]
The Free Conservatives had no fixed party program until 1906;[9] before then its founding manifesto, presented on 27 October 1867, served in place of one. The manifesto expressed only high-level political tenets. It saw the North German Confederation as an "extension of the Prussian monarchy" and praised its accomplishments as an absolute monarchical power, but then went on to say that absolutism's time had ended. The Confederation's people needed to have a part in determining their own destiny, and "the monarchy itself requires the cooperation of the people in order to fulfil its lofty mission". The party believed in a constitution but opposed theseparation of powers:[14]
We honour the state constitution as a source of strength for the monarchy, as an unfolding of popular customs and traditions, as the guarantor of the freedom of the church, of the equality of confessions, of the separation of political rights from religious faith. We also fight the antiquated doctrine of separation of powers; we counter that notion confidently with the principle of the communal exercise of unified state authority.
The manifesto stated that the party would support both federal and state governments when their policies placed the national interest first but would, "with true loyalty to king and Fatherland", uphold free conservative principles when a government's policies parted from them.[14]
The Free Conservative Party was a "party of notables" (Honoratiorenpartei), a party whose members came largely from the wealthy upper class andBildungsbürgertum (educated middle class) and were able to participate in politics because of their financial independence. Many were high-ranking civil servants, military men, university professors and representatives of trade and industry. Because its members filled a large number of posts as ministers and state undersecretaries, it was sometimes referred to as the party of "ministers and diplomats". Rather than exercising policy influence through a party apparatus, it did so through personal contacts, including many at the imperial court.[10][15] In the 1867 Reichstag it was represented by three princes, two dukes, nine counts and eleven barons. Its leading members were the landownerWilhelm von Kardorff and mining industrialistCarl Ferdinand von Stumm. Geographically it had particular strengths inSilesia and Prussia'sRhine Province.[16] The party had close ties to the nationalistPan-German League (founded in 1891) and theGerman Agrarian League (1893).[9]
Politically, the Free Conservatives stood between theNational Liberals and theGerman Conservative Party. As a decidedly pro-government party, they supported Bismarck's anti-CatholicKulturkampf and, as the party of the elites, hisAnti-Socialist Laws.[9] In 1878 it was the driving force behind the shift towards a protective tariff policy.[17] With support from some members of the German Conservative Party, the Free Conservatives opposed Bismarck when he ended theKulturkampf and began to introduce social reforms such as health insurance for workers. They wanted to see the Anti-Socialist Laws strengthened and advocated a stronger military and more colonisation.[18] From 1887 to 1890 (the final years of Bismarck's chancellorship), it was one of the cartel parties – an electoral alliance of the Free Conservatives, the German Conservative Party and the National Liberals – which Bismarck saw as his only reliable source of support.[19] With the cartel in the majority following the1887 Reichstag election, it was able to push through the second seven-year military budget (septennate) that Bismarck wanted.[20]
At the beginning of theWilhelmine era (1890–1918), the party lost 22 seats in the1890 Reichstag election, dropping from 41 to 19. It never recovered its former strength; the greatest number of seats it was able to achieve afterwards was 28 in the1893 election.[21] The party continued to oppose moves towards parliamentarisation but was open to changes in thePrussian three-class franchise, which weighted votes by the amount of taxes paid, as long as they did not lead to an equal, universal manhood voting system such as was used in elections to the national Reichstag.[9]
During the First World War, the party advocated annexationist war aims, opposed the Reichstag's1917 peace resolution and supported the militaristicGerman Fatherland Party after it was founded in 1917.[9] On 13 December 1918, during the early weeks of theGerman revolution, the executive board of the Free Conservatives advised party members to join the right-wingGerman National People's Party (DNVP), effectively disbanding the 52-year-old party.[22]
| Date | Votes | Seats | Rank | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | % | ± pct | No. | ± | ||
| February 1867 | 348,537 | 9.33 | New | 39 / 297 | New | 4th |
| August 1867 | 205,792 | 8.95 | 36 / 297 | |||
| 1871 | 343,098 | 8.83 | 37 / 382 | |||
| 1874 | 388,840 | 7.49 | 32 / 397 | |||
| 1877 | 424,228 | 7.85 | 38 / 397 | |||
| 1878 | 785,631 | 13.64 | 57 / 397 | |||
| 1881 | 382,149 | 7.50 | 27 / 397 | |||
| 1884 | 387,637 | 6.85 | 28 / 397 | |||
| 1887 | 736,389 | 9.77 | 41 / 397 | |||
| 1890 | 461,307 | 6.38 | 19 / 397 | |||
| 1893 | 437,972 | 5.71 | 28 / 397 | |||
| 1898 | 337,601 | 4.35 | 22 / 397 | |||
| 1903 | 336,617 | 3.54 | 21 / 397 | |||
| 1907 | 471,863 | 4.19 | 24 / 397 | |||
| 1912 | 396,948 | 3.25 | 14 / 397 | |||
The liberal conservatism of the parliamentary group around Bethmann–Hollweg would later appear in the FreiKonservative Partei.
... FK: Freikonservative Partei (Liberal Conservative Party); FrVp: Freisinnige Volkspartei (Liberal People's Party); K: Konservative Partei (Conservative Party); Linke (Left); Linkes Zentrum (Left Centre); ...