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1920 German federal election

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FieldValue
countryWeimar Republic
typeparliamentary
previous_election1919 German federal election
previous_year1919
election_date
next_electionMay 1924 German federal election
next_yearMay 1924
seats_for_electionAll 459 seats in the Reichstag
majority_seats230
registered35,949,774 ( 2.3%)
turnout79.2% ( 3.8pp)
image1
leader1
party1Social Democratic Party of Germany
last_election137.9%, 165 seats
seats1**103**
seat_change162
popular_vote1**6,179,991**
percentage1**21.9%**
swing116.0pp
image2
leader2
party2Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany
last_election27.6%, 22 seats
seats283
seat_change261
popular_vote24,971,220
percentage217.6%
swing210.0pp
image3
leader3Oskar Hergt
party3German National People's Party
last_election310.3%, 44 seats
seats371
seat_change327
popular_vote34,249,100
percentage315.1%
swing34.8pp
image4
leader4Gustav Stresemann
party4German People's Party
last_election44.4%, 19 seats
seats465
seat_change446
popular_vote43,919,446
percentage413.9%
swing49.5pp
image5
leader5Karl Trimborn
party5Centre Party (Germany)
last_election519.7%, 91 seats
seats564
seat_change527
popular_vote53,845,001
percentage513.6%
swing56.1pp
image6[[File:PetersenCarlWilhelm 3x4.jpg160x160px]]
leader6Carl Wilhelm Petersen
party6German Democratic Party
last_election618.6%, 75 seats
seats639
seat_change636
popular_vote62,333,741
percentage68.3%
swing610.3pp
map_image{{Switcher
titleGovernment
before_electionFirst Müller cabinet
before_partySPD-DDP-Z
posttitleGovernment after election
after_electionFehrenbach cabinet
after_partyZ–DDP–DVP

| [[File:1920 German federal election - Charts.svg|450px]] | Results by electoral constituency | [[File:1920 German federal election by District.svg|450px]] | Results by district and independent city | [[File:1920 German federal election - Choropleth.svg|450px]] | Results for each party

Federal elections were held in Germany on 6 June 1920 to elect the first Reichstag of the Weimar Republic. It succeeded the Weimar National Assembly elected in January 1919, which had drafted and ratified the Weimar Constitution. The election took place during a period of political violence and widespread anger over the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. The voting resulted in substantial losses for the three moderate parties of the Weimar Coalition that had dominated the National Assembly. There were corresponding gains for the parties on the left and right which had not supported the Assembly's aims.

The new Reichstag was unable to form a majority ruling coalition and settled for a centre-right minority government. The Weimar Republic's first election revealed an early loss of faith in democracy among German voters which foreshadowed the parliamentary difficulties that troubled the Republic throughout its short life. Of the 17 additional governments before Adolf Hitler became chancellor in 1933, only two (Stresemann I and Müller II) had majority coalitions in the Reichstag during their full term of office.

Background

The Weimar National Assembly, elected in January 1919, drafted and approved the Weimar Constitution and served as Germany's interim parliament. It was dominated by the Weimar Coalition made up of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), the German Democratic Party (DDP) and the Catholic Centre Party. The Assembly initially planned to hold the election for the first Weimar Reichstag in the fall of 1920, after the plebiscites required by the Treaty of Versailles had been held. They were to determine whether the people in a number of border regions wanted to stay in Germany. The plebiscites affected primarily parts of East Prussia and Upper Silesia which had large Polish-speaking communities, plus Schleswig, on the border with Denmark.

After the failure of the right-wing Kapp Putsch of March 1920, the cabinet of Chancellor Hermann Müller of the SPD, under pressure from the political right, agreed to move the election to 6 June. Due to the territorial plebiscites, the election was not held in Schleswig-Holstein and East Prussia until 20 February 1921, and in Upper Silesia (Oppeln) until 19 November 1922.

Two major factors affected the political climate in Germany in the period leading up to the elections. One was the political violence that had broken out sporadically since late 1918 and the SPD-led government's response to it. The SPD's left wing and the Independent Social Democrats (USPD) were angry at the SPD leadership for its restrained reaction to the Kapp Putsch, especially when compared to its forceful and bloody responses to the 1918 Christmas crisis, the Spartacist uprising of early 1919 and the post-Kapp Ruhr uprising, all of which had left-wing roots. Supporters of the parties of the centre and right, on the other hand, wanted protection from a feared communist revolution and a return to public order.

The second factor was the Treaty of Versailles, which the majority of Germans thought was excessively harsh, punitive and an insult to the country. The USPD, SPD and Centre parties had voted in the National Assembly to accept the treaty, and the parties of the right condemned them for it so. Following the announcement of the treaty's terms in May 1919,the political atmosphere in Germany quickly polarized.

Electoral system

The Reichstag was elected via party list proportional representation. For this purpose, the country was divided into 35 multi-member electoral districts. A party was entitled to a seat for every 60,000 votes won. This 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.

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.

Results

The parties of the Weimar Coalition suffered major losses to opposing parties on the left and right and together won just 44% of the vote. The Independent Social Democrats emerged as the second-largest party behind the SPD. The right-wing nationalist German National People's Party (DNVP) and conservative German People's Party (DVP) placed third and fourth, ahead of the Centre and DDP. A total of ten parties won seats, including the Bavarian People's Party (BVP), which had split from the Centre Party and took a more right-wing course, and the Communist Party of Germany (KPD), which remained marginal with 2% of the vote and 4 seats. Voter turnout was 79.2%, down four percentage points from January 1919.{{Election results

East Prussia and Schleswig-Holstein

The 1919 election results were amended by the voting in the East Prussia and Schleswig-Holstein constituencies on 20 February 1921.

PartyEast PrussiaSchleswig-HolsteinSeats+/–Votes%Votes%
Social Democratic Party of Germany}}Social Democratic Party228,87223.88257,83937.33108–5
Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany}}Independent Social Democratic Party53,1185.5420,7013.0083+2
German National People's Party}}German National People's Party296,22930.91141,41020.4865+5
German People's Party}}German People's Party144,25415.05127,34618.4465+5
Centre Party (Germany)}}Centre Party91,4399.545,5720.8168+1
German Democratic Party}}German Democratic Party53,8615.6265,0629.4240–4
Communist Party of Germany}}Communist Party68,4507.1441,8396.064+2
Polish People's Party12,6631.320
Schleswig-Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy}}Schleswig-Holstein State Party25,9073.750
German Middle-Class Party9,3460.980
Schleswig Club4,9660.720
**Total****958,232****100.00****690,642****100.00****469****+3**
Blank/invalid31,0783.1438,6875.30
**Total votes****989,310****100.00****729,329****100.00**
Registered voters/turnout1,251,16179.07931,78778.27

Upper Silesia

The results of the previous elections were again amended by the voting in the Oppeln electoral district of Upper Silesia on 19 November 1922.

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Social Democratic Party of Germany}}Social Democratic Party75,59314.78103
German National People's Party}}German National People's Party70,84113.8565
German People's Party}}German People's Party36,5607.1565
Centre Party (Germany)}}Centre Party205,23740.1264
German Democratic Party}}German Democratic Party11,8742.3239
Communist Party of Germany}}Communist Party37,1207.264
Polish Catholic Party of Upper Silesia51,43710.050
German Social Party (Weimar Republic)}}German Social Party22,9584.490
**Total****511,620****100.00****459****–10**
Blank/invalid3,4930.68
**Total votes****515,113****100.00**
Registered voters/turnout742,07169.42

Analysis

Most of the voters that the SPD lost went to the USPD; the DDP's losses were primarily to the DVP. The SPD suffered especially in the large cities, although a considerable number of East Prussian agricultural labourers who had voted for the SPD in 1919 flipped to the DNVP in the delayed 1921 election. Many 1919 DDP voters moved to the DVP in 1920, viewing it as insurance against a potential socialist division of property. The DVP's slogan in the election had been "Only the DVP will free us from red chains". Historian Heinrich August Winkler summed up the election in the following words: The essence of what the first Reichstag election made visible was a shift to the left among the workers and a shift to the right among the middle class. Politically, the forces that had not supported the class compromise on which Weimar was based were rewarded. The moderates on both sides were punished for what they had or had not achieved since the beginning of 1919: on the left, the governments of the Weimar coalition were blamed for allowing the forces of reaction to regain strength; on the right, the previous majority was blamed for everything that had violated national honour and affected property interests.

Aftermath

There was not a majority in the Reichstag among either the parties of the right or the left. President Friedrich Ebert first asked Chancellor Hermann Müller of the SPD to form a new cabinet, and when he was unsuccessful turned to the DVP, which was also unable to put together a coalition. On 14 June Ebert asked the Centre Party to make the attempt. It reached an agreement with the DDP and DVP to form a three-party minority government that the SPD was willing to tolerate. On 25 June, Constatin Fehrenbach of the Centre Party formally became the new chancellor of Germany and announced his cabinet. Like many in the Centre Party, Fehrenbach had accepted the new republic as a fact but had little enthusiasm for it. The epithet "a republic without republicans" was first used during his term of office, which lasted only ten and a half months. Even so, it stayed in office longer than the average of the twenty cabinets considered part of the Weimar Republic. That was 239 days, or just under eight months.

References

References

  1. Baum, Andreas. (6 June 2005). "Verhängnisvolle Wahlen".
  2. Winkler, Heinrich August. (1993). "Weimar 1918–1933. Die Geschichte der ersten deutschen Demokratie". C.H. Beck.
  3. (11 January 2022). "Plebiscites in post-Versailles Europe".
  4. (2010). "Elections in Europe: A Data Handbook". Nomos.
  5. Kellerhoff, Sven-Felix. (5 June 2020). "Schon 1920 stimmten die Deutschen gegen die Demokratie".
  6. Schwabe, Klaus. (2015). "Versailles, Treaty of". Brill.
  7. (21 February 2013). "Power distribution in the Weimar Reichstag in 1919–1933". [[Annals of Operations Research]].
  8. "Reichswahlgesetz. Vom 27. April 1920".
  9. (29 May 2020). "Vor 100 Jahren: Erste Wahl zum Reichstag der Weimarer Republik".
  10. "Das Kabinett Fehrenbach – Wahlergebnis und Regierungsbildung".
  11. Evans, Richard J.. (2005). ["The Coming of the Third Reich"]({{Google books). Penguin.
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