Second Wirth cabinet explained

Cabinet Name:Second Cabinet of Joseph Wirth
Cabinet Number:6th
Jurisdiction:Weimar Germany
Flag:Flag of Germany.svg
Incumbent:26 October 1921 – 14 November 1922
(until 22 November 1922 as caretaker government)
Date Dissolved:
Government Head Title:Chancellor
Government Head:Joseph Wirth
Deputy Government Head Title:Vice Chancellor
Deputy Government Head:Gustav Bauer
State Head Title:President
State Head:Friedrich Ebert
Political Parties:Social Democratic Party
Centre Party
German Democratic Party
Legislature Status:Minority Weimar Coalition
Majority Weimar Coalition
Opposition Parties:Independent Social Democratic Party
German National People's Party
German People's Party
Election:1920 federal election
Legislature Term:1st Reichstag of the Weimar Republic
Predecessor:First Wirth cabinet
Successor:Cuno cabinet

The second Wirth cabinet, headed by Joseph Wirth of the Centre Party, was the sixth democratically elected government of the Weimar Republic. It assumed office on 26 October 1921 when it replaced the first Wirth cabinet, which resigned in protest after the industrially important eastern part of Upper Silesia was awarded to Poland even though the majority of its inhabitants had voted in a plebiscite to remain part of Germany.

The cabinet was based initially on a coalition of the Centre Party and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and was later joined by the German Democratic Party (DDP) The three-party grouping was known as the Weimar Coalition.

The Wirth government won an important moratorium on war reparations payments from the Allied powers. In July 1922, Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau was assassinated by right-wing extremists after he had signed the Rapallo Treaty normalizing relations with Soviet Russia. The assassination shocked the nation and led to the passing of a law that prohibited organisations opposed to the republican form of government.

The second Wirth cabinet resigned on 14 November 1922 after it lost a key vote in the Reichstag and then failed in an attempt to restructure the coalition. It was replaced on 22 November by the Cuno cabinet led by Wilhelm Cuno, an independent.

Establishment

Wirth's first government resigned on 22 October 1921 in protest over the partitioning of Upper Silesia by the League of Nations. German President Friedrich Ebert (SPD) asked Joseph Wirth to form a new cabinet on 25 October. Ebert noted that attempts to form a "grand coalition", i.e. including the German Democratic Party (DDP) and/or the German People's Party (DVP) on 23 to 25 October seemed to have failed. Both parties refused to accept the partition of Silesia or to join any coalition that agreed to it. The SPD and Centre Party then decided to form a minority government. On 26 October, Wirth gave a government statement in which he presented his new cabinet as a combination of individuals, not as members of a coalition. Wirth was in charge of the Foreign Office, Andreas Hermes (Centre) became acting Finance minister, and the minister for Reconstruction position remained unfilled. The arrangement left three positions to offer in case of a later increase in the size of the coalition. Otto Gessler (DDP) remained on as Reichswehr minister.[1]

Hopes to add the DVP to the government were disappointed after Wirth angered them by appointing Walther Rathenau of the DDP as foreign minister at the end of January. After Rathenau was assassinated by right-wing extremists on 24 June, Wirth resumed the position at the Foreign Office. After Andreas Hermes became minister of Finance and Anton Fehr of the Bavarian Peasants' League (BB) replaced him at the Ministry of Food and Agriculture in March 1922, only the post of minister for Reconstruction was left as a potential prize for an additional party. It remained vacant.

Members

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

Reparations and the Treaty of Rapallo

Confronted with the 132 billion gold marks in reparations payments demanded by the Allies of World War I, Wirth tried to have the total amount lowered through a policy of "fulfilment". By attempting to meet the payments, he intended to show the Allies that the demands were beyond Germany's economic means. In December 1921, Germany told the Allied Reparation Commission that its economic situation would prevent it from paying the reparations that were due in January and February 1922. The January reparations conference at Cannes agreed to let Germany temporarily suspend payments, and in May the Reparation Commission granted a suspension of payments until the end of the year.[3] In spite of the moratorium, the German mark dropped to 650 marks to the American dollar by July 29.[4]

On 16 April, Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau signed the Treaty of Rapallo with Soviet Russia. The two countries re-established diplomatic relations and renounced territorial and financial claims against one another. Rathenau was assassinated by members of the extreme nationalist and antisemitic Organisation Consul on 24 June. In response to the assassination, the Reichstag enacted the Law for the Protection of the Republic. It increased the punishments for politically motivated acts of violence and banned organisations that opposed the constitutional republican form of government along with their printed material and meetings.[5]

Resignation

In a speech in front of the Reichstag on 25 June 1922, following the assassination of Walther Rathenau, Wirth turned toward the right-wing members and declared, "There stands the enemy who drips his poison into the wounds of a people. There stands the enemy, and there is no doubt about it: The enemy stands on the right!"[6] After the speech, it proved impossible to build a coalition that included parties ranging from the conservative DVP to the socialist SPD, which had gained 83 additional seats on 24 September when it reunited with the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USDP). When Wirth's government lost a key vote on the grain levy and President Ebert asked him to restructure his cabinet, he was unable to do so. Vice-Chancellor Gustav Bauer, speaking for the SPD, rejected being in a coalition with the DVP, as the DDP and Centre wished, and urged the government's resignation. The cabinet agreed on 14 November and, following a short caretaker period, was replaced on 22 November 1922 by the Cuno cabinet, led by the independent Wilhelm Cuno.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Die beiden Kabinette Wirth . The Two Wirth Cabinets . 5 January 2015 . Das Bundesarchiv . de.
  2. Web site: Das Kabinett Wirth II (26. Oktober 1921 – 22. November 1922) . 18 July 2023 . Das Bundesarchiv . de.
  3. Web site: Das Kabinett Wirth II: Erfüllungspolitik . The Second Wirth Cabinet: Fulfillment Policy . 22 August 2023 . Das Bundesarchiv . de.
  4. News: July 29, 1922 . Marks Sink Again; 650 to the Dollar . . 1 .
  5. Web site: Albrecht . Kai-Britt . Eikenberg . Gabriel . Walther . Lutz . 14 September 2014 . Walther Rathenau 1867–1922 . 29 August 2023 . Deutsches Historisches Museum . de.
  6. News: May 2014 . "Der Feind steht rechts!" Reichskanzler Wirth gegen rechts . de . "The enemy stands on the right!" Chancellor Wirth against the Right . Der Spiegel .