National Party of Germany explained

Native Name:Nationale Partei Deutschlands
Leader:Moritz von Faber (1956-62)
Wolf Ewert (1952-56)[1]
Erwin Mebus (1950-52)
Ideology:Neutralism
National Bolshevism
Headquarters:Kassel
Country:Germany
Abbreviation:NPD
Founder:Erwin Mebus
Native Name Lang:de
Merged:German Peace Union (majority)
Newspaper:Der Freiheitsbote
Position:Left-wing

The National Party of Germany (German: Nationale Partei Deutschlands), short-form: NPD, was a minor neutralist and National Bolshevik political party in West Germany. It was founded on 1 July 1950 in northern Hesse and was primarily active around the cities of Kassel and Marburg. The party was alleged to be the West German offshoot of the East German National Democratic Party of Germany (NDPD),[2] which the NPD's founder and first leader, Erwin Mebus, would confirm after his resignation in 1952.[3]

After the departure of Mebus, the party sought alliances with all kinds of neutralist and far-right movements, including Otto Strasser's Alliance for the Rejuvenation of Germany (German: Bund für Deutschlands Erneuerung, BDE) and German-Social Union. The former of which had cooperated with the NPD to publish some of Strasser's letters under the NPD's name,[4] while the latter had made an unsuccessful attempt at merging with the NPD.

The party never partook in any federal or state elections but supported the All-German People's Party during the 1953 West German federal election for which Wolf Ewert, at the time leader of the NPD, ran in the constituency of Marburg.

Many members of the NPD left by 1960 to join the German Peace Union. The party officially dissolved in 1962.

References

  1. Web site: Wolf Ewert . 2024-07-08 . NS-Täter in Italien . de.
  2. News: Ramspeck . Hasso . Bruno Fricke – ein linker Nationalsozialist . Rosenland - Zeitschrift für lippische Geschichte . 33 . 27 . December 2022.
  3. Stöss, p. 1263
  4. Stöss, p. 1267

Literature