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The Weimar Republic Was Doomed from the Start

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Weimar was doomed from the start

The Weimar Republic failed due to a popular distrust in democracy that was reinforced by severe economic crises and aggravated by the ‘Chains of Versailles’ and the actions of the right wing. Hyperinflation in the early 1920s and then the Great Depression from 1929 meant that the Weimar Republic never really prospered, and caused social upheaval in the form of a crime wave, as well as being tainted from the start by its association with the embarrassing Treaty of Versailles. As such, the German people, under the influence of the right wing and the army, turned back to the traditional, militarist nationalist views they had held since Bismarck. The failings of the Weimar constitution facilitated this, and …show more content…

When ordered to defend Berlin from the mutiny, the de facto leader of the German Army (Reichswehr) General Hans von Seeckt refused, saying ‘Reichswehr does not fire on Reichswehr.’ The putsch soon failed due to opposition from the working class, which called a general strike, but the military’s refusal to respond to a threat against the Republic is remarkable. As Gordon A. Craig points out, this contrasts markedly with the response to a threat from the political left – there was at the same time in the Ruhr industrial region an uprising of socialist workers, forming themselves into a 50,000 strong Red Army. The response was brutal, as over 1000 workers were killed, mostly by units of Freikorps (ex-soldiers). The army had little patience for a democratic system based on compromise, and accepted it only to avoid degeneration to socialism. The right wing consistently did whatever possible in order to return to a more authoritarian system of government, and eventually got their wish in the form of the Nazi Party, who had their own paramilitary force, the SA, which was four times the size of the German Army.

The Great Depression proved the ultimate downfall of German democracy, as it the economic and social stresses it placed upon the populace and its government were simply too

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