Social Sciences, asked by aiman52, 4 months ago

Who was the President of Germany when power was handed over to Hitler's Nazi Party​

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Answered by Anonymous
3

Question:

Who was the President of Germany when power was handed over to Hitler's Nazi Party

Answer:

Paul von Hindenburg

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Answered by sagarkaushik9050
0

Answer:

1932 German presidential election

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The 1932 German presidential election was held on 13 March, with a runoff on 10 April.[1] Independent incumbent Paul von Hindenburg won a second seven year term against Adolf Hitler of the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). Communist Party (KPD) leader Ernst Thälmann also ran and received more than ten percent of the vote in the runoff. Theodor Duesterberg, the deputy leader of the World War I veterans' organization Der Stahlhelm, ran in the first round but dropped out of the runoff. This was the second and final direct election to the office of President of the Reich (Reichspräsident), Germany's head of state under the Weimar Republic.

1932 German presidential election

← 1925 13 March 1932 (first round)

10 April 1932 (second round) 1949 (West) →

1949 (East) →

Bundesarchiv Bild 183-C06886, Paul v. Hindenburg.jpg A black-haired man with a toothbrush mustache wearing a suit with a double-breasted jacket viewed 3/4 from his right. A determined-looking man wearing a black newsboy cap viewed 3/4 from his left.

Nominee Paul von Hindenburg Adolf Hitler Ernst Thälmann

Party Independent

(DZ–SPD endorsement) NSDAP KPD

Popular vote 19,359,983 13,418,517 3,706,759

Percentage 53.0% 36.8% 10.2%

A map of the 1932 German presidential election results by constituency, with Hindenburg's vote depicted in hues of gray and Hitler's vote depicted in hues of orange/brown. Hitler primarily won the north and east, while Hindenburg was strongest in the south and west.

Vote by constituency

Hindenburg: 40–50% 50–60% 60–70% 70+%

Hitler: 40–50% 50–60%

President before election

Paul von Hindenburg

Independent

President-Elect

Paul von Hindenburg

Independent

Under the Weimar Republic, which had arisen from Germany's defeat in World War I, the presidency was a powerful office. Although the Weimar Constitution had provided for a semi-presidential republic, structural weaknesses had resulted in a paralyzed Reichstag and this combined with the Great Depression resulted in a government that had governed exclusively via presidential decrees since March 1930, giving the President much power. Hindenburg had been elected to the office in 1925 with the support of a coalition of several parties on the right who hoped that he would overturn the Weimar Republic, which was never particularly popular.

The NSDAP, whose members were known as "Nazis", had risen from being a fringe group to the second-largest party in the Reichstag. Led by Hitler, who exercised sole control over its policy and direction, its ideology combined extreme hostility towards the Weimar Republic with fervent antisemitism and German nationalism. The threat of Hitler caused many on the left to support Hindenburg; at the same time, Hindenburg's failure to overturn the Weimar Republic had disappointed many of those who had supported him in 1925. The combined effect of these two influences resulted in a reversal of those who supported Hindenburg between the two elections. Some on the left were still lukewarm towards Hindenburg; the Communists exploited this by running Thälmann and promoting him as "the only left candidate". Hindenburg failed to receive the requisite majority of votes in the first round, but was able to win reelection in the runoff.

Hindenburg's reelection failed to prevent the NSDAP from assuming power. Two successive federal elections later that year left it as the largest party in the Reichstag and anti-republic parties in the majority. Under this political climate, Hindenburg appointed Hitler as Chancellor of Germany in January 1933. Upon Hindenburg's death in 1934 Hitler de facto assumed the presidency, which he combined with the chancellorship to become the Führer und Reichskanzler. This would be the last presidential election in what would become West Germany until 1949. It remains, until today, the last direct election of the German President

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