Liberal Union (Germany)

The Liberal Union (German: Liberale Vereinigung) was a short-lived liberal party in the German Empire. It originated in 1880 as a break-away from the National Liberal Party and is therefore also called Secession[1] and merged with the left liberal German Progress Party to form the German Free-minded Party (German: Deutsche Freisinnige Partei, DFP) in 1884.

Liberal Union

Liberale Vereinigung
LeaderEduard Lasker
Founded1880 (1880)
Dissolved1884 (1884)
Split fromNational Liberal Party
Merged intoGerman Free-minded Party
IdeologyLiberalism
Parliamentarism
Economic liberalism
Conservative liberalism
Political positionCentre
Colours     Yellow

The leftist faction of the National Liberal Party expressed discontent with the party leadership's support for Otto von Bismarck's conservative government.[2] Most importantly, they supported free trade[1] whereas National Liberal leaders Rudolf von Bennigsen and Johann von Miquel sustained Bismarck's prohibitive tariffs strategy (Schutzzollpolitik). Other contentious points included the Anti-Socialist Laws (Sozialistengesetze),[3] the Kulturkampf against the Catholic Church and the septennial military budget (Septennat).

Eduard Lasker led the Secession.[2] Other notable members included Ludwig Bamberger, Berlin's mayor Max von Forckenbeck,[2] historian and future Nobel laureate Theodor Mommsen,[3] Friedrich Kapp, Theodor Barth, Heinrich Edwin Rickert[4] and Georg von Siemens.[3] The Liberal Union was a notables' party (Honoratiorenpartei), having its electorate mainly amongst the North and East German upper classes, wholesale merchants and intellectuals. The organisational structure was rather loose. Nevertheless, the new grouping was initially successful, gaining 46 seats of the Reichstag in the 1881 federal election—as many as the preceding National liberals.[3]

Ultimately, the Secessionists planned to merge all German liberals into a single whole liberal party—hence the name Liberal Union, with liberal and parliamentary monarchist positions, modelled after the British Liberal Party and ideally to govern under a future Emperor Frederick III.[5] However, the National Liberals made clear they would not leave the majority loyal to Bismarck, therefore Secessionist representative Franz von Stauffenberg negotiated with Eugen Richter, the leader of the left liberal German Progress Party in early 1884. As early as in March 1884, both parties' legislators formed a joint parliamentary group with together 100 seats. Timely to the federal election in October, the German Free-minded Party was formed.[3] Subsequently, the parliamentary representation diminished to only 64 members of the Reichstag.

See also

References

  1. Eley, Geoff (1992), "Bismarckian Germany", Modern Germany Reconsidered: 1870-1945, Routledge, p. 17.
  2. Harris, James F. (1984), A Study in the Theory and Practice of German Liberalism: Eduard Lasker, 1829-1884, University Press of America, p. 38.
  3. "Archived copy". LeMO: Lebendiges Museum Online. Deutsches Historisches Museum. Archived from the original on 16 August 2014. Retrieved 16 August 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link).
  4. Killy, Walther; Vierhaus, Rudolf (2005). Dictionary of German Biography, vol. 8. München. p. 306. ISBN 3-598-23298-5.
  5. Nipperdey, Thomas (1995), Deutsche Geschichte 1866-1918, II, C.H. Beck, p. 327.
Preceded by
National Liberal Party (Germany)
liberal German parties
1880-1884
Succeeded by
German Free-minded Party
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.