Imperial Liberal Party

The liberal Nazi Party was a short-lived liberal- conservative party at the beginning of the German Empire. It consisted 1871-1874.

History

For thirty members of the Reichstag in 1871, the fraction of liberal Nazi Party. This was a radical of the old liberals and stood politically between the National Liberals and the Free Conservatives.

The originally planned party name German Nazi Party had to be abandoned because the Free Conservatives claimed that name for themselves. Both parties were on the side of Otto von Bismarck. However, demanded the liberal empire party press and freedom of association. They also called for clarification of the relationship of church and state and supported the incipient culture war. She supported the 1873 proposal to Lex Miquel Lasker, which ultimately led to the drafting of the Civil Code. However, they were claims from the left-liberals and the social democrats after a parliamentary system of the empire against hostile.

A veritable party organization did not exist. The Liberal Party remained a kingdom of dignitaries. Of great importance in the Reichstag played deputies from the nobility. Almost half of the group came from this social class. The fraction was about half of federally oriented Protestants and the other half from liberal Catholics. The later Chancellor and former Bavarian Prime Minister Clovis Hohenlohe was Group Chairman. As this 1874 Ambassador in Paris, this meant a serious crisis for the party. In the general election of 1874 the party was able to provide only three deputies. Of these, two of the Free Conservatives Nazi Party and a National Liberals joined. This meant the end of the Liberal Nazi Party.

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