Communist Party of Germany
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- This article deals with the original KPD. For information on later groups using the same name, see Communist Party of Germany (disambiguation).
The Communist Party of Germany (German Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands – KPD) was a major political party in Germany between 1918 and 1933, and a minor party in West Germany in the postwar period. Founded in the aftermath of the First World War by socialists inspired by the Russian Revolution, the party was committed to Marxism-Leninism, and in the 1930s was completely loyal to the Soviet Union and its leader Joseph Stalin. During the Weimar Republic period, the KPD usually polled between 10 and 15% of the vote and was represented in the Reichstag and in state parliaments. Banned by the Nazi regime of Adolf Hitler, the KPD maintained an underground organisation but suffered heavy losses. The party was revived in postwar Germany and won seats in the first Bundestag elections in 1949, but its support collapsed after the establishment of a Communist state in East Germany. It was banned in West Germany in 1956 and was in effect wound up in 1969, when a new, legal German Communist Party (DKP) was formed.
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Early history
Before the First World War the Social Democratic Party (SPD) was the largest party in Germany and the most successful socialist party in the world. Although still officially a Marxist party, by 1914 it had become in practice a reformist party. In 1914 the SPD members of the Reichstag voted in favour of the war. Left-wing members of the party, led by Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, bitterly opposed the war, and the SPD soon suffered a split, with the lefists forming the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) and the more radical Spartacist League. When the war ended in German defeat in November 1918, revolution broke out across Germany. Inspired by the Russian Revolution, the leftists formed the KPD in December 1918.
In its early years the KPD was committed to an armed workers' revolution in Germany, and during 1919 and 1920 revolutionary disturbances continued. But the majority Social Democrats, who had come to power after the fall of the old regime, hated the revolutionary socialists and brought in the army to suppress them. During the failed Spartacist Uprising in Berlin of January 1919, Liebknecht and Luxemburg were killed. The party then split into two factions, the KPD and the Communist Workers Party of Germany (KAPD), both proclaiming loyalty to the Communist International in Moscow.
Following the split with KAPD, Paul Levi became the KPD leader. Other prominent members included Leo Jogiches, Clara Zetkin, Paul Levi, Paul Frolich, Willi Münzenberg, Franz Mehring and Ernst Meyer. Levi led the party away from the policy of immediate revolution, in an effort to win over SPD and USPD workers. These efforts were rewarded when a substantial section of the USPD joined the KPD, making it a mass party for the first time.
Through the 1920s the KPD was racked by internal conflict between more and less radical factions, partly reflecting the power struggles between Trotsky and Stalin in Moscow. Germany was seen as being of central importance to the struggle for socialism, and the failure of the German revolution was a major setback. Eventually Levi was expelled by the Comintern for "indiscipline." Further leadership changes took place in the early 1920s, and supporters of Trotsky such as Heinrich Brandler and August Thalheimer, set up a splinter Communist Party Opposition.
The Weimar Republic years
In 1923 a new KPD leadership was installed loyal to the rising Stalin faction in Soviet Union. This leadership, headed by Ernst Thälmann, abandoned the goal of immediate revolution, and from 1924 onwards contested Reichstag elections, with some success. Although the KPD advocated a "united front" during this period, it remained deeply hostile to the SPD. In 1928 Stalin launched a new "leftist" policy, which the KPD loyally followed. This so-called Third Period policy held that capitalism was entering a deep crisis and the time for a revolution was approaching fast. The SPD was denounced as "social fascist" and any suggestion of co-operating with it was rejected.
During the years of the Weimar republic the KPD was the largest communist party in Europe, and was seen as the "leading party" of the communist movement outside the Soviet Union. It maintained a solid electoral performance, usually polling more than 10% of the vote, and gaining 100 deputies in the November 1932 elections. In the presidential election of the same year, Thälmann took 13.2% of the vote, compared to Hitler's 30.1%.
However the "social fascism" policy meant that there was no possibility of a united front with the SPD against the rising power of the Nazis. Both the KPD and Stalin disastrously miscalculated the Nazi threat, assuming that the Nazis were no immediate threat and that a Nazi regime would quickly collapse. Many in the KPD thought the fall of the "bourgeois" Weimar Republic would be a good thing and that Hitler would be the "ice-breaker of the revolution." There was even some collaboration between the KPD and the Nazis against the SPD government in Prussia, Germany's largest state.
The Nazi era
Soon after the appointment of Hitler as Chancellor, the Reichstag was set on fire. The Nazis publicly blamed the fire on Communist agitators (though many historians believe that the Nazis themselves set the fire). They used the fire as a pretext to introduce laws enabling suppression of political parties. The Enabling Act, which legally gave Hitler dictatorial control of Germany, was passed by a Reichstag session held after the Communist deputies had been arrested and jailed.
The KPD was thoroughly suppressed by the Nazis. Thousands of Communists were imprisoned, including Thälmann, who died in a concentration camp. The most senior KPD leader to escape was Walter Ulbricht, who went into exile in the Soviet Union. The KPD maintained an underground organisation in Germany throughout the Nazi period, sustained by ideological conviction in the face of Nazi terror, but the loss of many core members severely weakened the party. In 1945 many of the KPD's strongest areas were placed in the Soviet Zone of Occupation, where the behaviour of the occupiers soon alienated many prewar KPD voters.
Postwar history
In East Germany, the KPD (led by Walter Ulbricht) absorbed some elements of the eastern SPD and was renamed the Socialist Unity Party (SED), which became the ruling party in East Germany until 1990. After the KPD was banned in West Germany, the SED planted spies such as Günter Guillaume in the west. A small sister party of the SED, the Socialist Unity Party of West Berlin, operated in the west. After German reunification, reformist elements in the SED won control of the party and refounded it as the Party of Democratic Socialism (PDS).
The KPD reorganised in the western part of Germany, and received 5.7% of the vote in the first Bundestag election in 1949. But the onset of the Cold War and imposition of a communist dictatorship in East Germany soon caused a collapse in the party's support. At the 1953 election the KPD only won 2.2 percent of the total votes and lost all of its seats. The party was banned in 1956 by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. After the party was declared illegal, many of its members continued to function clandestinely but faced government interference. Part of its membership later refounded the party in 1968 as the German Communist Party (DKP), which still exists. Following German reunification, however, many DKP members joined the new PDS.
External links
- Losing the Battle of the Streets, Reflections on the KPD, 1930-33de:Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
ko:독일공산당 cs:Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands fr:Parti communiste d'Allemagne no:Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands zh:德国共产党