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1930 German federal election

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1930 German federal election

← 1928 14 September 1930 (1930-09-14) Jul 1932 →

All 577 seats in the Reichstag
289 seats needed for a majority
Registered42,982,912 (Increase 4.3%)
Turnout82.0% (Increase6.4pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
SPD 1930 leadership.jpg
Adolf Hitler 1932 (cropped).jpg
Ernst Thälmann 1932.jpg
Leader Otto Wels &
Arthur Crispien
Adolf Hitler Ernst Thälmann
Party SPD NSDAP KPD
Last election 29.8%, 153 seats 2.6%, 12 seats 10.6%, 54 seats
Seats won 143 107 77
Seat change Decrease 10 Increase 95 Increase 23
Popular vote 8,575,244 6,379,672 4,590,160
Percentage 24.5% 18.3% 13.1%
Swing Decrease5.3 pp Increase15.7 pp Increase2.5 pp

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Ludwig Kaas, by Erich Salomon, 1930.jpg
AlfredHugenberg1933 (cropped).jpeg
Scholz LCCN2014711328 (cropped).jpg
Leader Ludwig Kaas Alfred Hugenberg Ernst Scholz
Party Centre DNVP DVP
Last election 12.1%, 61 seats 14.2%, 73 seats 8.7%, 45 seats
Seats won 68 41 30
Seat change Increase 7 Decrease 32 Decrease 15
Popular vote 4,127,000 2,457,686 1,577,365
Percentage 11.8% 7.0% 4.5%
Swing Decrease0.3 pp Decrease7.2 pp Decrease4.2 pp


Government before election

First Brüning cabinet
ZDDPDVPWPBVPKVP

Government after election

First Brüning cabinet
ZDDPDVPWPBVPKVP

A federal election was held in Germany on 14 September 1930 to elect the fifth Reichstag of the Weimar Republic.[1] Despite losing ten seats, the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) remained the largest party in the Reichstag, winning 143 of the 577 seats, while the Nazi Party (NSDAP) dramatically increased its number of seats from 12 to 107.[2] The Communists also increased their parliamentary representation, gaining 23 seats and becoming the third-largest party in the Reichstag.

The government of Chancellor Heinrich Brüning of the Centre Party lost its majority in the Reichstag as a result of the election. With President Paul von Hindenburg's support, his new cabinet became the first of the three presidential cabinets that governed through presidential emergency decrees rather than the pariliament.[3]

Background

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After the 1928 German federal election, a five-party grand coalition was formed under Hermann Müller of the Social Democratic Party (SPD). Following the collapse of the coalition on 27 March 1930, President Hindenburg appointed Centre Party politician Heinrich Brüning as chancellor. He formed a seven-party coalition government that was two seats short of a majority and did not include the SPD, the party with the most seats in the Reichstag.[4]

Brüning's government was confronted with the economic crisis caused by the Great Depression. He sought to balance the budget and stimulate exports through a policy of deflation which would require an unpopular policy of tight credit and a rollback of wage and salary increases (an internal devaluation).[5] The Reichstag rejected Brüning's budgetary measures in July. With the backing of President Paul von Hindenburg, the bill was enacted using emergency powers allowed under the Weimar Constitution. The Reichstag then overturned the emergency decree 236 to 222, with the yes votes coming from the Social Democrats, Communists, Nazis and a minority of the German National People's Party.[6] At Brüning's request, Hindenburg dissolved the Reichstag on 18 July 1930.[7] The new election was held on 14 September 1930.

Electoral system

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The Reichstag was elected via party list proportional representation. For the purpose, the country was divided into 35 multi-member electoral districts. A party was entitled to a seat for every 60,000 votes won. It was calculated via a three-step process on the constituency level, an intermediate level which combined multiple constituencies, and finally nationwide, where all parties' excess votes were combined. In the third nationwide step, parties could not be awarded more seats than they had already won on the two lower constituency levels. Due to the fixed number of votes per seat, the size of the Reichstag fluctuated between elections based on the number of voters.[8]

The voting age was 20 years. People who were incapacitated according to the Civil Code, who were under guardianship or provisional guardianship, or who had lost their civil rights after a criminal court ruling were not eligible to vote.[9]

The president was directly elected every seven years. He was head of the armed forces and had significant powers to dissolve the Reichstag, nominate a chancellor and invoke emergency powers through Article 48 of the Weimar Constitution.[10][11]

In 1930, Germany was formally a multi-party parliamentary democracy, with President Paul von Hindenburg (1925–1934) the head of state. However, beginning in March 1930, Hindenburg appointed governments without a parliamentary majority which systematically governed by emergency decrees, circumventing the democratically elected Reichstag.

Campaign

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The Centre Party shifted to the right after Ludwig Kaas became its leader.[12]

The Nazi Party had increased their share of the vote in state elections since the 1928 federal election.[13] In spring 1930, Adolf Hitler appointed Joseph Goebbels head of the party's Propaganda Division, and he oversaw the party's Reichstag campaign.[14] Nazi Party membership rose from 108,717 in 1928 to 293,000 by September 1930. Another 100,000 people joined the party between the election and end of the year. The party had forty-nine newspapers, six of which were daily.[15]

The SPD designated the "bourgeois block" of centrist parties and the Nazis as their enemies and, with the KPD, held rallies in Berlin on 1 August 1930 under the motto "Never again war". Some 30,000 people participated in the SPD rally in the Lustgarten and 15,000 in the KPD demonstration at the Winterfeldtplatz. On 23 August, KPD members attacked a Nazi event in Bunzlau. Three people were killed and two seriously injured in fighting with the police. The KPD election campaign climaxed with a rally in the Berlin Sportpalast on 12 September.[citation needed]

Election poster of the Centre Party The text reads: "Elect the leaders of the German Centre Party, the men of action, of truth and responsibility; the guarantors of reconstruction, the opponents of slogans and of the radical incitement of the people! Elect List 3."

Results

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The election had a voter turnout of 82%, the highest since the 1919 election.[16] The Nazis increased their number of seats from 12 to 107.[17] The Social Democrats (SPD) remained the strongest party with 143 seats, a loss of 10 seats from the 1928 election. The only other major party to significantly increase its seats was the Communist Party, which won 13% of the vote, securing 77 seats, 23 more than in the previous election. The Centre Party increased their seat count by seven to 68 but dropped to fourth from third place in both seat count and popular vote when compared with the 1928 election.

The German National People's Party's (DNVP) support plummeted. They lost 32 of their previous 73 seats and dropped to fifth from second, chiefly due to the fragmentation of the party under Alfred Hugenberg's leadership.[18] Due to his more hardline positions, moderate voters moved to the newly formed Christian Social People's Service (CSVD), Conservative People's Party (KVP), and Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party (CNBL).[19] The DNVP received 13% of the vote in rural areas, twice as much as it received in urban areas.[20]

The German People's Party (DVP) continued to haemorrhage seats, losing 15 and only attaining 4.5% of the popular vote. They ceased to be a notable political force after the July 1932 elections. The 28 other political parties shared the remainder of the votes.

The German National Association of Commercial Employees reported that half of its members voted for the Nazis.[21]

184 of the seats in the Reichstag were held by parties that refused to participate in any coalition government.[22]

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Social Democratic Party8,575,24424.53−5.23143−10
Nazi Party6,379,67218.25+15.62107+95
Communist Party of Germany4,590,16013.13+2.5177+23
Centre Party4,127,00011.81−0.2668+7
German National People's Party2,457,6867.03−7.2241−32
German People's Party1,577,3654.51−4.2030−15
Reich Party of the German Middle Class1,361,7623.90−0.61230
German State Party1,322,0343.78−1.0320−5
Christian-National Peasants' and Farmers' Party1,108,0433.17+1.3119+10
Bavarian People's Party1,058,6373.03−0.0419+2
Christian Social People's Service868,2692.48New14New
German Farmers' Party339,4340.97−0.596−2
Conservative People's Party290,5790.83New4New
Reich Party for Civil Rights and Deflation–Christian Social Reich Party271,2910.78−0.880−2
Agricultural League193,9260.55−0.1030
German-Hanoverian Party144,2860.41−0.233−1
Christian Social Peoples Community81,5500.23New0New
Polish People's Party72,9130.210.0000
Schmalix Greater German List26,7070.08New0New
German House and Property Owners' Party25,5300.07−0.0500
Conservative People's PartyGerman-Hanoverian Party22,2180.06New0New
Independent Social Democratic Party11,6900.03−0.0400
Free Association of Craftsmen, Retailers, and Tradesmen9,5310.03New0New
Radical German State Party8,8410.03New0New
German Unity Party for the True National Economy6,9150.02New0New
Disabled Veterans and Survivors of the German Side, Including the Found6,7040.02New0New
German Cultural Party of Intellectual Professions, Employees and Officials6,1810.02New0New
Tradesmen, Craftsmen, Home Owners3,6440.01New0New
Schleswig Club1,7850.010.0000
Humanity Party and the New Community1,6260.00New0New
Evangelical voters1,3260.00New0New
Party Against Alcohol1,1710.00New0New
Workers Party for Creative Workers9070.00New0New
Prussian-Lithunanian People's Party6660.00New0New
Renter and People's Reich Party6530.00New0New
People's Party of the Lusatian Sorbs2880.00New0New
Friesland2370.000.0000
Total34,956,471100.00577+86
Valid votes34,956,47199.24
Invalid/blank votes268,0280.76
Total votes35,224,499100.00
Registered voters/turnout42,982,91281.95
Source: Gonschior.de

Aftermath

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The 1930 election left the Social Democrats and KPD with almost 40 percent of the seats in the Reichstag between them. In November 1931, the SPD suggested that the two parties work together, but KPD leader Ernst Thälmann rejected the offer, with the KPD newspaper Die Rote Fahne calling for an “intensification of the fight against Social Democracy”. Addressing the Nazi electoral breakthrough in the 1930 elections, Thälmann insisted that if Hitler came to power he was sure to fail and drive Nazi voters into the arms of the KPD. As late as February 1932, Thälmann was arguing that “Hitler must come to power first, then the requirements for a revolutionary crisis [will] arrive more quickly”.[23]

As a result of the election, Brüning lost his majority in the Reichstag and continued to rule by decree, implementing harsh austerity measures that brought little economic improvement and were extremely unpopular.[24] Governance by decree became the new norm and paved the way for authoritarian forms of government.[25] Following the 1932 presidential election, the newly re-elected Hindenburg refused to sign any more decrees, and Brüning resigned.[26] A new cabinet was formed under the leadership of Franz von Papen (derisively labelled the "cabinet of barons"[27]), but he was unable to form a majority in the Reichstag, receiving support only from the German National People's Party (DNVP) and the German People's Party (DVP); after a few months of ineffectual leadership, Hindenburg called a snap election.[28]

References

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  1. ^ Nohlen & Stöver 2010, p. 762.
  2. ^ Nohlen & Stöver 2010, p. 790.
  3. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (2000). Der Lange Weg Nach Westen [The Long Road to the West] (in German). Vol. 1. Munich: C. H. Beck. pp. 488 ff. ISBN 978-3-406-66049-8.
  4. ^ "Heinrich Brüning". Internet-Portal "Westfälische Geschichte" (in German). 26 October 2010. Retrieved 30 May 2025.
  5. ^ Patch, William L. (2018). Christian Democratic Workers and the Forging of German Democracy. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-1-108-42411-0.
  6. ^ Winkler, Heinrich August (1993). Weimar 1918–1933. Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie [Weimar 1918–1933. The History of the First German Democracy] (in German). Munich: C.H. Beck. p. 387. ISBN 3-406-37646-0.
  7. ^ "Timeline of the Weimar Republic: July 1930". The Weimar Republic - Germany’s first democracy. Retrieved 30 May 2025.
  8. ^ Aleskerov, F.; Holler, M.J.; Kamalova, R. (21 February 2013). "Power distribution in the Weimar Reichstag in 1919–1933". Annals of Operations Research. 215 (April 2014): 25–37. doi:10.1007/s10479-013-1325-4.
  9. ^ "Reichswahlgesetz. Vom 27. April 1920" [Reich Electoral Law of 27 April 1920]. document Archiv (in German). Retrieved 16 February 2025.
  10. ^ "The Weimar Republic (1918–1933)". Deutscher Bundestag. Retrieved 24 May 2025.
  11. ^ Weimar constitution  – via Wikisource.
  12. ^ Childers 1983, p. 189–190.
  13. ^ Childers 1983, p. 131–132.
  14. ^ Childers 1983, p. 138.
  15. ^ Childers 1983, p. 194.
  16. ^ Childers 1983, p. 140.
  17. ^ Pollock 1930, p. 993.
  18. ^ Beck, Hermann (2009). The Fateful Alliance: German Conservatives and Nazis in 1933. Oxford: Berghahn Books. pp. 50–51. ISBN 978-1845456801.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link)
  19. ^ Bessel, Richard; Feuchtwanger, E.J. (1981). Social Change and Political Development in Weimar Germany. Croom Helm. pp. 147, 148, 277. ISBN 085664921X.
  20. ^ Childers 1983, p. 158.
  21. ^ Childers 1983, p. 173.
  22. ^ Pollock 1930, p. 991.
  23. ^ Winner, David. "How the left enabled fascism". New Statesman.
  24. ^ Halperin, Samuel William (1965). Germany tried democracy; a political history of the Reich from 1918 to 1933. Internet Archive. New York, W.W. Norton. p. 449. ISBN 978-0-393-00280-5.
  25. ^ Halperin, Samuel William (1965). Germany tried democracy; a political history of the Reich from 1918 to 1933. Internet Archive. New York, W.W. Norton. p. 403. ISBN 978-0-393-00280-5.
  26. ^ Strauss, Franz Josef. Die Erinnerungen (1987 ed.). p. 27.
  27. ^ "GERMANY: Hitler Into Chancellor". Time. 6 February 1933. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  28. ^ Henry Ashby Turner (1996). Hitler's thirty days to power. Internet Archive. Addison-Wesley. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-201-40714-3.

Works cited

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