Submitted by DaslolligeLol t3_1045lx5 in history
Historical background:
Officially founded in 1919 the Weimar Republic (at the time called German Reich) was the first german parliamentary republic. The Foundation was overshadowed by the First World War that just ended and the treaty of Versailles, which was seen as a adhesion contract by many germans. This led to a very tight political situation: the German Reich had 12 differnent chancellors in the years from 1919 to 1933, not counting Adolf Hitler. Multiple times the german economy almost broke down due to the huge reparations Germany had to pay to the allies. These circumstances made the population very open for groups like the Nationalsocialists, who took power in 1933, leading to the "Third Reich".
Putting this inner instabilitiy aside, many people refer to the so called " suspectibility of the constitution". Actually the constitution of the Weimar Republic was not much different from a modern democracy except for one point: the "Reichspräsident" (president) could enact "emergency decrees" without permission of the parliament or chancellor, he was even able to completely dissolve the Reichstag (the parliament). Reichspräsident Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934; president of the German Reich 1925-1934) made use of this power from 1930 on. In this time the chancellors wheren't elected by the germans, they were appointed by Hindenburg. The so called presidential dictatorship finally led to the takeover of power by the Nazis.
Now this seems pretty clear: the Weimar Republic had pretty much the same problem that ended the democracy in ancient Rome, so it had to fail. But I think that it's not so easy. The thesis that the first german republic was doomed to fail was mainly expressed by german historians of the first years after the fall of the Nazi-Regime. This was a time where many Germans tried to process as little as possible, mostly because they weren't innocent in the years from 1933 to 1945 either. I think that telling the Weimar Republic was unstable (not because of the constant riots but because of the constitution) is just a (maybe even unconscious) try to reject the own fault. A try that was carried out into the whole world by German historians and is now accepted by most people.
I got no one to discuss this with, that's why I'm posting this.
(Please excuse possible mistakes in my language, I'm no native speaker)
ConsitutionalHistory t1_j341pp0 wrote
The Weimar was against the odds from the beginning. Germany was previously just a group of principalities followed by a short term monarchy. The Weimar was foisted upon the German people by the winners of WWI so it wasn't even a government of their own choosing. Still...it may have been successful had it not be for war reparations and the Great Depression. France in particular was still exacting their pound of flesh which made life difficult, manageable but difficult. But then the Depression more or less doomed the country and made German society ripe for extremism. An extremist, in the form of Hitler, who played on age long bigotries against jews...telling the German people what's wrong and who to blame for their lot in life. Mainly...the former allies holding back German nationalism and the 'jewish problem' which was rotting German society from within.