* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Political Forces in the 1920s
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Political Forces in the 1920s: The Weimar Republic Fascism in Italy Interwar period • Period of great contradictions – Period of artistic experimentation, foundations of modernity in art and architecture – Brief era of prosperity followed by deep depression – Period in which some of 20th centuries most horrendous regimes established Germany: the Weimar Republic • A Republic without Republicans? • Besieged with economic problems, fragile political support – • challenges from revolutionaries on left, nationalists on right • At best contingent support from key groups in German society • Interplay between international issues (Reparations, the peace settlement and domestic politics) Origins • Collapse of German War effort in 1918 • Republic proclaimed following Kaiser’s abdication • Constitution drafted in 1919 in east German city of Weimar Political forces • Extreme left: – Communists committed to violent revolution • Left: – Social Democrats, committed to economic change, redistribution of wealth – increasingly part of system • Centre: – Christian Democrats, • Right: – Liberals – Conservatives – Nationalists • Extreme right: opponents of liberal democracy Bases of support • Pro-system: the ‘Weimar parties:’ – Social Democrats (SPD) – Catholics (Centre Party) – Liberals (DVP, DP) • Republic opposed or at best tolerated by – – – – military civil service Judiciary upper classes Changes over time • Initially, ‘Weimar parties’ enjoy strong support; – But challenged from left and right: revolutionaries, free corps, militias…. • Support narrows as early as 1920 – Communists and independent Socialists gain on the left (20%) – Nationalists gain on the right (33%) • Further narrowing in 1925 – Hindenburg elected president Three periods: • 1918-1923 -- Shaky start • 1924-1929 -- Normalcy • 1929-1933 -- Great Depression and demise 1918-1923 • Problems of revolts from right and left – Eventual suppression • 1923 Ruhr crisis: – France & Belgium occupy in order to extract reparations – Workers strike – with approval of German government • Inflation and hyper-inflation: money printed to cover costs Reparations conundrum • Dawes plan (1924): – Rescheduling of reparations payments – make them manageable – U.S. loans to Germany • Enable Germany to make payments to France • Enabling France to repay U.S. 1924-1929 • Stabilization of currency • Attempts to make Weimar work: – Broader coalition: centre-right parties such as DVP join • Period of relative success: – Political stabilization – Accommodations reached with neighboring countries (Locarno Pact) 1929-1933 • US Stock Market Crash • German dependence on American loans results in shutdowns, mass unemployment • Extreme parties – right and left – gain support • Inability to sustain cabinets – successive elections – presidential intervention – growth of support for Nazism Fascism in Italy Origins • Short term: – Italian disappointments in the peace settlements, especially failure to obtain Fiume, Dalmatian coast • Longer term: – Class, religious, regional divisions – Incompleteness of Italian unification in 1860s, 1870s – Weakness & ineffectiveness of the regime Mussolini • Former socialist • Breaks with his party over support for World War I • Demagogic speaker • Leader of squadristi – squads of thugs, blackshirts Coming to power • Ongoing government crisis, widespread social unrest, weak government during World War I • 1921: fascists elected to parliament • 1922: March on Rome: – Indecisive King, fearing army unreliable, invites Mussolini to form of government Consolidating the regime: • Mussolini uses control of government to establish dictatorship – Modification of electoral law – Successive elimination of opponents – Suppression of independent forces Building support: • Mussolini builds support by modifying positions, accommodating key groups – Gains support of business by restricting unions – Gains support of Church by • abandoning anti-clerical positions • embracing Catholicism, • concluding Lateran pacts The Fascist Regime • Evolving type • Glorification of nation/ leader • Ostensible dispersion of power to ‘independent’ corporations running different segments of the economy • Emphasis both on resolving conflicts and use of terror to marginalize opponents