Weiamr Consistution

Cards (16)

  • The council of people's representatives was set up in the immediate aftermath of the abdication of the kaiser but it was only ever supposed to be temporary
  • As soon as it was feasibly possible, the new chancellor of the reichstag frederick ebert announced there would be elections held to choose a new national assembly to represent the people
  • The new national assembly would be responsible for drafting a constitution for the new republic
  • Those eligible to vote, which is everyone male or female over the age of 20, got to cast their first votes in the election held on the 19th of January 1919
  • The elections were a huge success, with 83% of those eligible voting
  • The socialist democratic party won 40% of the vote, the center party won 20%, and the rest was shared mostly between moderate non-extreme parties
  • The first national assembly met in February, but because there was still protests and unrest in Berlin, the assembly was forced to meet in a small town called Weimar
  • As a consequence of this, the new government became known as the Weimar Republic
  • The new constitution was agreed
    On the 31st of July 1919
  • The new makeup of the German political system

    • President
    • Chancellor
    • Parliament
    • Electorate
  • The president
    Head of state, elected every seven years, not to take part in everyday politics, responsible for the army and for choosing the chancellor
  • The chancellor
    Head of the government, responsible for choosing the government ministers and for leading the reichstag
  • The parliament
    Made up of two houses: the reichstag and the reichrat. The reichstag was the most powerful, making decisions about taxation and policy, elected by the people every four years. The reichrat was the representative of each of the German regions, also elected every four years.
  • The electorate
    Unique in Europe, as all men and women over the age of 20 had the vote
  • Strengths of the Weimar constitution
    • Completely democratic, with everyone over 20 having the vote
    • Proportional representation in the reichstag
    • Balanced powers between the president, chancellor, and parliament
    • Local government control of local issues
  • Weaknesses of the Weimar constitution
    • Proportional representation made it unlikely for a single party to have control, leading to coalition governments that often fell apart
    • Difficulty making urgent decisions, leading to reliance on Article 48 which allowed the president to give control to the chancellor in an emergency
    • No one felt the government represented them, made worse by the government using the army to put down riots
    • Extreme parties like communists and nationalists had a say in the reichstag and tried to undermine the parliament