The first Marx cabinet, headed by Wilhelm Marx of the Centre Party, was the tenth democratically elected government during the Weimar Republic. It took office on 30 November 1923 when it replaced the Second Stresemann cabinet, which had resigned on 23 November after the Social Democratic Party (SPD) withdrew from the coalition. Marx's new cabinet was a minority coalition of three centre to centre-right parties.

First Cabinet of Wilhelm Marx

10th Cabinet of Weimar Germany
30 November 1923 – 26 May 1924
(until 3 June 1924 as caretaker government)
Wilhelm Marx
Date formed30 November 1923 (1923-11-30)
Date dissolved3 June 1924 (1924-06-03)
(6 months and 4 days)
People and organisations
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
ChancellorWilhelm Marx
Vice ChancellorKarl Jarres
Member partiesCentre Party
German People's Party
German Democratic Party
Status in legislatureMinority coalition government
168 / 459 (37%)
Opposition partiesGerman National People's Party
Communist Party
History
Election1920 federal election
Legislature term1st Reichstag of the Weimar Republic
PredecessorSecond Stresemann cabinet
SuccessorSecond Marx cabinet
Members of the cabinet at a radio broadcast. Marx is at the left, sitting.
Gustav Stresemann (DVP), Foreign Minister
Erich Emminger (BVP), Minister of Justice
Otto Gessler (DDP), Reichswehr Minister
Eduard Hamm (DDP), Minister of Economic Affairs
Hans Luther (Ind.), Minister of Finance
Rudolf Oeser (DDP), Minister of Transport

The government used emergency decrees to handle Germany's deep economic problems caused by hyperinflation and large budget deficits. It gained control over a potentially separatist right-wing government in Bavaria. When the authorization for the economic emergency decrees expired, it faced pressure to repeal many of the measures it had implemented and called for new elections in May 1924. The results left it weakened, and it resigned on 26 May. It was replaced on 3 June by an unchanged second cabinet led by Marx.

Establishment

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On 2 November 1923, the Social Democrats (SPD) withdrew from the second Stresemann cabinet in protest over its ouster of the democratically elected governments in Saxony and Thuringia after they had included the Communist Party in their ruling coalitions. The Stresemann government resigned following its loss in a confidence vote in the Reichstag on 23 November but remained in office in a caretaker capacity. The situation in Germany at the time was too critical to delay the formation of a new government. The major problems included the ongoing occupation of the Ruhr, a military state of emergency in place since 26 September 1923 and the dire state of public finances. Attempts to create a new coalition nevertheless proved to be difficult. A restoration of the grand coalition including the SPD seemed hopeless. The focus was on a new "bourgeois" cabinet based on the Centre Party, German People's Party (DVP), German Democratic Party (DDP) and the national-conservative German National People's Party (DNVP). Although among the coalition parties the DVP was most amenable to inclusion of the DNVP, the other two parties also tacked to the right in the discussions.[1]

Initially, the Centre (including Marx personally) refused to nominate a candidate for chancellor or to take the lead in coalition negotiations. Siegfried von Kardorff of the DVP was recommended by the DDP and Centre on 24 November. Kardorff contacted the DNVP but was rebuffed. Stresemann then suggested to President Friedrich Ebert that he hand the task of forming a cabinet to the DNVP, but their political demands were unacceptable to Ebert. On 25 November, the President asked former Treasury minister Heinrich Albert to form an independent cabinet, but the idea was vetoed by the parties. A possible chancellorship for Karl Jarres (DVP) was dropped due to opposition from the Centre and DDP.[1]

The next attempt was made under Adam Stegerwald of the Centre Party, and on 27 November negotiations with the DNVP started. Although the right-wing DNVP was ready for some concessions, they demanded that members of their party be included not just in the national cabinet but also in the Prussian state government. The other parties refused to end their coalition with the SPD in Prussia as would have been necessary to make it possible.[1]

Stegerwald gave up on 29 November and asked Ebert to find a less controversial person for the job than himself. Ebert chose Wilhelm Marx, chairman of the Centre, who by the next day had managed to put together a DVP, DDP and Centre coalition. The Bavarian People's Party (BVP) sent one of their Reichstag delegates, Erich Emminger, to serve as minister of Justice, but as an independent minister without party affiliation. No formal coalition agreement was made.[1]

The new cabinet showed much continuity with the previous one. The Centre, DVP and DDP agreed that Stresemann should keep the Foreign Office portfolio which he had already held as chancellor. Jarres remained at Interior and also became vice-chancellor. Hans Luther, one of the architects of the currency reform, stayed on as minister of Finance. Otto Gessler and Heinrich Brauns had held their posts since 1920. Rudolf Oeser and Anton Höfle [de] stayed on, with the latter also taking over the Ministry for the Occupied Territories, recently created under Stresemann. Gerhard Graf von Kanitz, a former DNVP member, also remained in the cabinet after Georg Schiele [de] (DNVP) refused the position at Food and Agriculture. The only new ministers were Eduard Hamm, a former Bavarian minister of trade and state secretary at the Reich chancellery of Wilhelm Cuno, and Emminger of the BVP. The latter appointment was intended to build a bridge to the Bavarian state government, at the time in more or less open rebellion against the Berlin government.[1]

Members

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The members of the cabinet were as follows:[2]

Portfolio Minister Took office Left office Party
Chancellorship30 November 19233 June 1924 Centre
Vice-Chancellorship30 November 19233 June 1924 DVP
Foreign Affairs30 November 19233 June 1924 DVP
Interior30 November 19233 June 1924 DVP
Justice30 November 192315 April 1924 BVP
Curt Joël (acting)
15 April 19243 June 1924 Independent
Labour30 November 19233 June 1924 Centre
Reichswehr30 November 19233 June 1924 DDP
Economic Affairs30 November 19233 June 1924 DDP
Finance30 November 19233 June 1924 Independent
Food and Agriculture30 November 19233 June 1924 Independent
Transport30 November 19233 June 1924 DDP
Postal Affairs30 November 19233 June 1924 Centre
Ministry for Reconstruction[b]
Gustav Müller [de] (acting)
30 November 192311 May 1924 Independent
Occupied Territories
Anton Höfle [de] (acting)
30 November 19233 June 1924 Centre
  1. ^ Emminger, although a member of the BVP, served as an independent minister without party affiliation. The BVP was not a formal coalition partner.
  2. ^ The Ministry was dissolved on 11 May 1924.

In office

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Economic policy

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The enabling act of 8 December 1923[3] gave the cabinet wide-ranging powers that made it possible for Marx to complete the currency reform begun under Stresemann's chancellorship with the introduction of the Rentenmark. It required massive adjustments to the public fiscal balance. Earlier large deficits financed by printing money had been a major cause of hyperinflation. Among the measures introduced by the cabinet were a 25% cut in the number of civil servants and various significant tax hikes. With the help of these unpopular decrees, the Marx government achieved the stabilisation of the currency through the "Miracle of the Rentenmark".[4]

Domestic security

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Marx followed a cautious course in dealing with rebellious state governments. He secretly met Eugen von Knilling, Minister President of Bavaria, on 18 January 1924 and convinced him to drop Gustav von Kahr and Otto von Lossow, two key figures in the right-wing movement in the state. Knilling also agreed to disband the illegal people's courts and to give up control of the railway, which was to be reorganised as the German National Railway. In compensation, Marx ordered that in the future the high command of the Reichswehr appoint and dismiss the state commander (Landeskommandant) for Bavaria in consultation with the state government.[4]

In the Rhineland, Marx helped to defuse the situation by promising additional subsidies to the occupied territories on 6 December 1923. The improving economic circumstances soon boosted industrial output and resulted in falling unemployment in the region.[4]

The first Marx cabinet maintained the unity of the nation by dealing with Bavaria, the occupied territories and the left-wing uprisings in Thuringia and Saxony.[4] As Marx said in his government statement of 4 December 1923 when he asked the German people for understanding and the willingness to make additional sacrifices, the question was one of the very survival of the nation as a whole.[5]

Resignation

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On 15 February 1924, the enabling act lapsed and there was no prospect of the Reichstag granting an extension. The parliament met on 20 February, and several draft laws were presented aimed at undoing some of the government's decrees, notably on taxes, working hours and cuts to the public workforce. The government decided to fight to keep the laws in place, since it saw them as cornerstones of its economic and fiscal policies. The opposition parties refused to withdraw their motions. Chancellor Marx then asked for the Reichstag to be dissolved on 13 March, arguing that vital decrees would otherwise be revoked. The elections of 4 May weakened the parties of the political centre and strengthened the extremes of the spectrum. The DDP and DVP in particular lost votes. The DNVP in conjunction with the Agricultural League had the largest parliamentary group (105 seats versus the SPD's 100), and demanded to be included in the government in a leading role.[6]

Since the implementation of the Dawes Plan, which was intended to resolve the problems surrounding Germany's World War I reparations, required a government able to act with decision, the cabinet wished to stay on until the new Reichstag assembled. This resulted in criticism both from the DNVP, which called for the cabinet's resignation on 15 May, and from within the coalition parties. Coalition talks started on 21 May, but the DNVP refused to agree to the Dawes Plan, which they had labelled a "second Versailles" during the election campaign. Moreover, their preferred candidate for the chancellorship, former Grand Admiral Alfred von Tirpitz, proved very controversial.[6]

On 26 May, the DVP forced the cabinet to resign. President Friedrich Ebert asked Marx to again form a new government. The DNVP demanded a change in foreign policy, the dismissal of Gustav Stresemann as foreign minister and a firm pledge regarding a change in the Prussian state government to include the DNVP. On 3 June, Marx broke off the negotiations and on the same day all the existing ministers were confirmed in their posts. The Centre Party, DDP and DVP again formed the coalition on which the second Marx cabinet was based.[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "Die Bildung des ersten Kabinetts Marx" [The Formation of the First Marx Cabinet]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 15 July 2015.
  2. ^ "Die Kabinette Marx I und II: 30. November 1923 – 3. Juni 1924; 3. Juni 1924 – 15. Januar 1925" [The First and Second Marx Cabinets]. Das Bundesarchiv (in German). Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  3. ^ "Ermächtigungsgesetz. Vom 8. Dezember 1923" [Enabling Act. From 8 December 1923. (Full text)]. German Wikisource (in German). Retrieved 15 August 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d Stehkämper, Hugo (1990). "Marx, Wilhelm". Neue Deutsche Biographie 16 (in German). Retrieved 13 July 2015.
  5. ^ Luttenberger, Julia Alexandra (2013). Verwaltung für den Sozialstaat - Sozialstaat durch Verwaltung? die Arbeits- und Sozialverwaltung als politisches Problemlösungsinstrument in der Weimarer Republik [Administration for the Welfare State – Welfare State through Administration? Labour and Social Administration as a Political Problem Solving Instrument in the Weimar Republic] (in German). Münster: Lit Verlag. p. 224. ISBN 978-3643120656.
  6. ^ a b c "Innenpolitische Entwicklung vom ersten zum zweiten Kabinett Marx (German)". Bundesarchiv. Retrieved 15 July 2015.