Saturday, October 12, 2019
Why Hitler Was Invited to Become Chancellor :: Papers
 Why Hitler Was Invited to Become Chancellor       In 1932 the weaknesses of the Weimar Constitution were clear to all.     Due to its careful balance of power and proportional representation,     no political leader was strong enough to rule. During this period     Germany was effectively being run by 84 year old President Hindenburg.     Policy was being set by a tiny group of rich, conservative     industrialists and army leaders. The Reichstag offered very little     leadership.       The heart of the problem was that the Nazis were the largest party.     Normally the leader of such a party would become Chancellor, but the     other parties in the Reichstag would not work with Hitler. The     constitution gave President Hindenburg the right to appoint Chancellor     and he did not want Hitler as Chancellor.       So month after month there were arguments and back-room deals as     different politicians struggled to assemble a workable government. The     weakness of the Reichstag would have been a problem even if things had     been going well in Germany. But when faced with the chronic problems     of the Depression it was disastrous.       In the July elections of 1932 the Nazis got their best ever result     with 37.3% of the vote (230 seats.) They were now by far the largest     party. Hitler demanded to be appointed Chancellor. Hindenburg despised     Hitler, but he could see the value of trying to use the Nazis for his     own ends. Hindenburg appointed Franz von Papen as his Chancellor. Von     Papen had no support in the Reichstag but he hoped he could create a     right-wing coalition government with the support of the Nazis and the     other right-wing parties in the Reichstag. Hitler refused to     co-operate, so Hindenburg called another election.       This was a bad election for the Nazis. Apathy was settling in.       In Northeim the Nazis were in financial trouble and made a public     appeal for party funds. In an attempt to regain support, the SA and     leading Nazis went to church en masse and got a Protestant minister to     speak for them. They placed advertisements in the local papers and    					    
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