Second Stresemann cabinet

The second Stresemann cabinet, headed by Chancellor Gustav Stresemann of the German People's Party (DVP), was the ninth democratically elected government of the Weimar Republic. It took office on 6 October 1923 when it replaced the first Stresemann cabinet, which had resigned on 3 October over internal disagreements related to increasing working hours in vital industries above the eight-hour per day norm. The new cabinet was a majority coalition of four parties from the moderate left to centre-right.

Second Cabinet of Gustav Stresemann

9th Cabinet of Weimar Germany
6 October 1923 – 23 November 1923
(until 30 November 1923 as caretaker government)
Chancellor Gustav Stresemann
Date formed6 October 1923 (1923-10-06)
Date dissolved30 November 1923 (1923-11-30)
(1 month and 24 days)
People and organisations
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
ChancellorGustav Stresemann
Member partiesGerman People's Party
Social Democratic Party[c]
Centre Party
German Democratic Party
Status in legislatureMajority coalition government[a]
354 / 459 (77%)

Minority coalition government[b]
168 / 459 (37%)
Opposition partiesCommunist Party of Germany
Social Democratic Party[d]
History
Election1920 federal election
Legislature term1st Reichstag of the Weimar Republic
PredecessorFirst Stresemann cabinet
SuccessorFirst Marx cabinet
Wilhelm Sollmann (SPD), Minister of the Interior
Gustav Radbruch (SPD), Minister of Justice
Otto Gessler (DDP), Reichswehr Minister
Hans Luther (Ind.), Minister of Finance
Rudolf Oeser (DDP), Minister of Transport

During its brief time in office, the cabinet successfully introduced the new currency that ended the disastrous period of hyperinflation. It was confronted with the resumption of war reparations payments following the end of passive resistance to the occupation of the Ruhr and faced down potentially separatist state governments in Saxony, Thuringia and Bavaria.

Stresemann's second cabinet resigned on 23 November 1923 after the Social Democrats (SPD) withdrew from the coalition over the government's handling of the separatist movements. After losing a confidence vote in the Reichstag, the cabinet resigned and after a short caretaker period was replaced on 30 November by the first cabinet of Wilhelm Marx of the Centre Party.

Establishment

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The first Stresemann cabinet resigned late on 3 October 1923 due to disagreement between the political parties over the extent to which the planned enabling act should give the government the power to change the length of the working day by decree. The grand coalition of the German People's Party (DVP), Social Democrats (SPD), Centre Party and German Democratic Party (DDP) was not replaced by a new configuration that included the right-wing German National People's Party (DNVP), which would have been consistent with the earlier decisions taken by the DVP Reichstag members. Since the majority of the DVP wanted to keep Stresemann in office and it proved impossible to form a different coalition under him, the original parties once again tried to form a government. Hans von Raumer (DVP) and Rudolf Hilferding (SPD) did not return, as demanded by the DVP. Raumer had resigned on 2 October, prior to the whole cabinet's resignation the next day. To replace Hilferding at the Ministry of Finance, Stresemann considered the future Reichsbank president Hjalmar Schacht but had to drop the idea after Schacht's actions during the occupation of Belgium during World War I became the subject of criticism. Hans Luther was then switched from Food and Agriculture to Finance. Von Raumer's successor was Joseph Koeth, an independent ex-officer and head of the former Ministry for Economic Demobilization. Johannes Fuchs [de], acting Minister for the Occupied Territories, wanted to resign but was persuaded to remain in office. Finally, on 22 October, Gerhard von Kanitz, another independent who was close to the DVP and to landed interests within the DNVP, was appointed to Food and Agriculture.[1]

Members

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The members of the cabinet were as follows:[2]

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Chancellorship6 October 192330 November 1923 DVP
Vice-Chancellorship
Vacant
 
Foreign Affairs6 October 192330 November 1923 DVP
Interior6 October 19232 November 1923 SPD
11 November 192330 November 1923 DVP
Justice6 October 19232 November 1923 SPD
Vacant
3 November 192330 November 1923 
Labour6 October 192330 November 1923 Centre
Reichswehr6 October 192330 November 1923 DDP
Economic Affairs6 October 192330 November 1923 Independent
Finance6 October 192330 November 1923 Independent
Food and Agriculture22 October 192330 November 1923 Independent
Transport6 October 192330 November 1923 DDP
Postal Affairs6 October 192330 November 1923 Centre
Reconstruction6 October 19232 November 1923 SPD
Vacant
3 November 192330 November 1923 
Occupied Territories6 October 192330 November 1923 Centre

In office

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The enabling act that was originally discussed in the first Stresemann cabinet was passed on 13 October.[3][4] It gave the government the powers to implement by decree the measures it thought necessary to stop the ongoing hyperinflation. The most significant of the measures was the successful replacement of the all but worthless Papiermark with the stable Rentenmark on 15 November 1923. Due to a lack of gold reserves, the new currency was backed by a special forced mortgage placed on all land in Germany used for business or agricultural purposes.[5][6]

The cabinet had to deal with several crucial issues that threatened Germany's integrity. The most pressing was the occupation of the Ruhr, which was closely connected to the issue of war reparations and a major cause of the economic collapse and hyperinflation brought on by the policy of passive resistance against the French and Belgian intervention.[7]

Stresemann had announced the end of the Ruhr resistance on 26 September,[8] but industrial production did not resume immediately. The second Stresemann cabinet was closely involved in negotiations that resulted in the MICUM Accord [de], a series of treaties signed between November 1923 and September 1924 that ended the ruinous period of work stoppages in heavy industry which had resulted from passive resistance. Since the payments to the occupying nations did not reflect just a resumption of reparation payments but also included compensation for the occupation costs, they were seen as marking the failure of passive resistance and, ultimately, a capitulation by Germany to French demands.[7]

During the occupation of the Ruhr, the French actively encouraged separatism in the Rhineland, which resulted in the establishment of two short-lived separatist and pro-French entities, the Rhenish Republic and the Autonomous Palatinate [de]. Since they did not enjoy widespread support among the German population, they soon collapsed. The British government also resolutely opposed France's attempt to extend its sphere of influence permanently to all of Germany west of the Rhine.[9]

Finally, there were regional challenges to the government's authority from the left in Thuringia and Saxony and from the right in Bavaria. On the left, the Social Democrats under Minister Presidents Erich Zeigner in Saxony and August Frölich [de] in Thuringia allied with the Communist Party (KPD) and made use of the economic crisis and the threat of right-wing counter-revolution in Bavaria (see below) to set up armed militia called the Proletarian Hundreds that soon numbered around 100,000 men. It brought on a confrontation with the government in Berlin, which asked President Ebert to declare martial law and set into motion a process of military action called a Reichsexekution against the state governments of Saxony and Thuringia. On 23 October, Otto Gessler ordered the Reichswehr to move into both states. In Thuringia, the militias were disbanded and the communist ministers resigned. In Saxony, however, there was armed resistance, and Zeigner refused to remove the Communist ministers from his cabinet. Stresemann then appointed Rudolf Heinze Reich commissioner for Saxony. Heinze had the state government deposed and arrested.[10][11]

In Bavaria – a hotbed of right-wing opposition against the democratic government in Berlin and home to numerous activists including Erich Ludendorff, Gustav von Kahr and Adolf Hitler – Minister President Eugen von Knilling refused to accept the authority of Stresemann's cabinet and appointed von Kahr as state commissioner, in effect establishing a right-wing dictatorship in Bavaria. It also declared martial law and considered a march on Berlin to depose the government. Local commanders disobeyed orders from Hans von Seeckt, the Reichswehr's commander in chief. Since von Seeckt refused to use military force against the Bavarian government, there was no repeat of the events in Saxony.[12][11]

On 8/9 November, Hitler launched his Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, but von Kahr failed to side with him and had the attempted government takeover put down by local troops and police.[12]

Resignation

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On 2 November, the Social Democrats decided to withdraw from the cabinet, thereby ending the grand coalition. The cause was the toppling and arrest in late October of the Social Democratic-Communist state government of Saxony, which had been executed by former vice-chancellor and minister of justice Rudolf Heinze of the DVP. The SPD resented the use of a member of the DVP to carry out the removal of the elected government. SPD Chairman Hermann Müller was willing to accept it on the condition that the Berlin government take similar drastic steps to deal with the right-wing state government of Bavaria. This became the official position of the SPD Reichstag membership on 31 October. The SPD also demanded the end of the state of emergency in Saxony. The latter demand was refused by the DDP and DVP ministers. In a stormy cabinet meeting on 2 November, the issue came to a head and the SPD ministers resigned the next day.[11]

With the move of the SPD into opposition to the cabinet in early November, the government's period in office was limited to the time before the Reichstag was next in session. The president of the chamber scheduled a session for 20 November. Motions of no confidence against the cabinet were to be expected on that day. Stresemann decided to go on the offensive, and the DDP and DVP introduced a motion of confidence. It was voted down on 23 November by 231 to 151 with 7 abstentions. Since it was not a vote of no confidence in the sense of Article 54 of the Weimar Constitution, there was no legal obligation for the cabinet to resign. Due to the parliamentary realities, the second Stresemann cabinet resigned the same day. It remained in office as an acting government until the formation of the Marx cabinet on 30 November.[13]

Notes

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  1. ^ Until the Social Democrats withdrew from the coalition effective 3 November
  2. ^ From 3 November
  3. ^ Withdrew from the coalition effective 3 November
  4. ^ After withdrawing from the coalition effective 3 November

References

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  1. ^ "Das erste Kabinett der Großen Koalition und sein Scheitern an der Frage der Arbeitszeit(German)". Bundesarchiv. Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  2. ^ "Das Kabinett Stresemann II (6. Oktober – 30. November 1923)". Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  3. ^ Huber, Ernst Rudolf (1981). Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte seit 1789. Band VI: Die Weimarer Reichsverfassung [German Constitutional History since 1789. Volume VI: The Weimar Reich Constitution] (in German). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag. pp. 439, 441.
  4. ^ Huber, Ernst Rudolf (1984). Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte seit 1789. Band VII: Ausbau, Schutz und Untergang der Weimarer Republik [German Constitutional History since 1789. Volume VII: The Building, Protecting and Fall of the Weimar Republic] (in German). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag. pp. 363, 387.
  5. ^ Born, Karl Erich (1987). "Hans Luther". Neue Deutsche Biographie 15. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
  6. ^ "Finanzpolitik und Stabilisierung der Währung" [Fiscal Policy and Stabilisation of the Currency]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  7. ^ a b "Abbruch des passiven Widerstandes und Micum-Verträge" [Termination of Passive Resistance and Micum Treaties]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  8. ^ Dederke, Karlheinz (1996). Reich und Republik, Deutschland 1917–1933 [Reich und Republic, Germany 1917–1933] (in German). Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta. p. 70. ISBN 3-608-91802-7.
  9. ^ "Rheinlandpolitik" [Rhineland Policy]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  10. ^ Dederke 1996, pp. 72–74.
  11. ^ a b c "Das zweite Kabinett der Großen Koalition und sein Scheitern an den Konflikten des Reiches mit Bayern und Sachsen" [The Second Cabinet of the Grand Coalition and its Failure due to the Reich's Conflicts with Bavaria and Saxony]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 1 April 2015.
  12. ^ a b Dederke 1996, pp. 72, 74–75.
  13. ^ "Das Rumpfkabinett Stresemann" [Stresemann's Rump Cabinet]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 1 April 2015.