Richard Kunze | |
Birth Date: | 5 February 1872 |
Birth Place: | Sagan, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire |
Disappeared Date: | May 1945 (age 73) |
Disappeared Place: | Berlin |
Disappeared Status: | presumed dead |
Nationality: | German |
Other Names: | Knüpple Kunze |
Occupation: | Political organiser |
Years Active: | 1914–1945 |
Known For: | Anti-Semitic politician |
Member of the Reichstag | |
Term: | 1933 - 1945 |
Party: | German Conservative Party Fatherland Party Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund Deutschvölkischen Arbeitsring Berlin German National People's Party German Social Party Nazi Party |
Richard Kunze (5 February 1872 in Sagan – May 1945) was a German right-wing politician known for his anti-Semitism.
Kunze's political career began around 1914 when he was employed by the German Conservative Party along with fellow rightist Wilhelm Kube.[1] Serving the party as general secretary he earned 12,000 marks per month for a role that largely involved travelling Germany drumming up support.[2] Near the end of the war he became involved with the Fatherland Party where he gained the nickname Knüppel-Kunze (Cudgel Kunze) because of strong attacks on the Jews.[3]
After the war Kunze was associated with the Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund and in 1920 he joined with Reinhold Wulle and Arnold Ruge to form the Deutschvölkischen Arbeitsring Berlin, a short-lived successor group.[4] The group was absorbed by the joined German National People's Party (DNVP) in June 1920 and Kunze joined the DNVP and became the party's chief publicist.[3] However Kunze split from the party in 1921, feeling that it did not match his own hard-line stance on the Jews.[5]
In 1921 Kunze established his own anti-Semitic party in north Germany known as the German Social Party, an early rival to the Nazi Party on the far right.[6] The new party rejected the monarchism of the DNVP, arguing that Jewish influence had been just as pronounced in the German empire as in the new Weimar Republic.[5] The party became noted for provocative street activities, with Kunze himself becoming a well-known demagogue.[7] However support was lost as Kunze also gained a reputation for using the party as a way to make money for himself, diverting funds into his own pockets and after a number of defections he wound the party up in 1929.[8]
In 1930 Kunze joined his old rivals as a member of the Nazi Party.[9] Kunze was elected to the Preußischer Landtag as a Nazi delegate in 1932, and in November 1933 he was elected to the Reichstag, serving in what by then, had become a perfunctory institution until 1945.[8]
Kunze was arrested after the Battle of Berlin, but went missing in May 1945 and was presumed dead.[10]