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Early political career Chairman of theCommunist Party of Germany | ||
TheWittorf affair (German:Wittorf-Affäre) was apolitical scandal that occurred in theCommunist Party of Germany (KPD) during theWeimar Republic in 1928. ChairmanErnst Thälmann was ousted from the KPDCentral Committee when his close friend John Wittorf hadembezzled from a partycampaign fund and Thälmann tried to cover up the embezzlement.Joseph Stalin had Thälmann reinstated as KPD Chairman using the influence ofComintern, completing theStalinization of the KPD and beginning apurge of moderates from the party.[1][2]

John Friedrich Wittorf (1894–1981), a member of the KPD'scentral committee,[3] was caught havingembezzled around 1,500 to 3,000Reichsmarks from the KPD'scampaign fund during the1928 German federal election. KPD chairmanErnst Thälmann, who was a close friend and sponsor of Wittorf, knew about the embezzlement but, due to the upcoming election, concealed it for tactical reasons.[1] At first, responsibility was blamed on Hugo Dehmel, a districttreasurer not involved in the embezzlement. On 26 September 1928, after rumors of the embezzlement had been leaked to the press, the KPD central committee expelled Wittorf and three otherHamburg officials from the KPD. Thälmann was accused of covering up Wittorf's actions and relieved of his party responsibilities during a party investigation, effectively removing him as KPD Chairman.[4][2]
Joseph Stalin, the leader of theSoviet Union, used his influence in the communist world to have Thälmann reinstated as KPD Chairman despite the scandal. Stalin had been looking to strengthen Thälmann, whom he viewed as an ally and loyal supporter for the left turn recently adopted at theSixth World Congress of the Comintern.[2] Stalin felt he could count on Thälmann to purge the KPD of both its right and moderate left wings. Stalin askedVyacheslav Molotov for advice in handling the problem of Thälmann's ouster.[2] In a telegraph to Molotov on 1 October 1928, Stalin acknowledged that Thälmann had made a huge mistake in covering up the embezzlement, but defended his motives, calling them "unselfish". He said Thälmann had been trying to spare the party a scandal,[2] in contrast to the motives ofArthur Ewert andGerhart Eisler, KPD central committee members who were in theConciliator faction. Stalin felt they had placed their own interests over those of the party and the Comintern and saw in their actions "absolutely no mitigating circumstances".
Stalin then intervened: On 6 October 1928, theExecutive Committee of the Comintern passed a resolution expressing "complete political trust" in Thälmann, reversing the KPD's 26 September decision and calling on the KPD to "liquidate all factions within the party".[2] Despite stubborn resistance from several prominent officials, the central committee of the KPD reinstated Thälmann as party chairman on 20 October 1928. This signaled the beginning of the KPD's purge[3] of its right-wing and the moderate Conciliator faction.[2]
The Wittorf affair was the final step of theStalinization of the KPD.[2] It made Thälmann servile with respect to Stalin, pinned the KPD to thegeneral line of the SovietAll-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks), and destroyed internaldemocracy within the KPD. It guaranteed Thälmann's and the KPD's commitment to defaming theSocial Democratic Party of Germany (with whom the KPD was often a reluctant ally) associal fascists.[2] Stalin used the affair to turn the Comintern into his tool to influence foreign communist parties; he showed his support for loyalty and ambition and neutralized both real and perceived political opponents. The discussion in the Comintern over the ousting of Thälmann had wide-reaching consequences for other Communist Parties, including theCommunist Party of Italy.
Following the establishment of theGerman Democratic Republic in 1949, Thälmann was treated as afounding father despite the fact that he had been executed at theNazi concentration camp atBuchenwald in 1944.[4] The Wittorf affair was distorted beyond recognition or simply not discussed in the German Democratic Republic.[2] After thedissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the archives of the Comintern and the central committee of the Communist Party became available to Western historians, revealing much about the Wittorf affair and the extent to which Stalin manipulated the Comintern and the KPD.[2]