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How popular was the Nazi regime in the years 1933-39?

Explore the popularity and consent of the Nazi regime in Germany from 1933 to 1939, examining various factors such as the removal of the Communist threat, propaganda, the Fuhrer cult, opposition, and economic recovery.

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How popular was the Nazi regime in the years 1933-39?

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  1. How popular was the Nazi regime in the years 1933-39? Who liked the Nazi regimes, or just did not out rightly oppose it. The extent to which consent based on terror and repression.

  2. Removal of the Communist threat • In the 2 elections of 1932, the Communist party the KPD, had seen its share of the vote rise from 14.3% in July to 16.9% in November. • Red Front Fighters league fighting with the SA. • Hitler in speeches said he would crush the Communists. After the Reichstag fire in 1934, he did this.

  3. Passed Laws to stop freedoms. Emergency law Feb 1933 -Suspended Civil rights - Gave secret police power to hold people in protective custody. • Repress the KPD Enabling Act March 1933 - Hitler could pass decrees without parliament or the President.

  4. Gleichschaltung- - Allowed Hitler control under a cloak of respectability. Political and cultural- the Nazification of Germany. Institutions disbanded and reformed under the Nazi banner. Many want to be identified with the new regime, others were fearful. -Civil Servants/Women’s groups. Reich corporation of German industry Nazi lawyers association in 1933 May 1933 Burning of books

  5. Propaganda - Used to denigrate opponents, to indoctrinate and enforce conformity. • March 1933 Reich Ministry of Popular Enlightenment, with Goebbels at the head. • Posters/Cinema/Radio/Music. • Editors Law of October 1933- limited what editors could print, and all communist, Jewish, journalists sacked. Fuhrer Cult • Loyalty to the regime and Hitler. • To link Hitler to the success of the regime, economy, reduction of unemployment, restoration of law and order, end o0f the Versailles Treaty.

  6. Opposition from the Left - Divisions between the Communists and the Socialists. • Communists thought the Hitler would soon fall from power, a mistake as crushed after the Reichstag fire. • Difficult to oppose the Nazi as many arrested, and denounced. Many left in Germany kept their heads down. • Often compliance of workers, and trade unions destroyed so difficult to organise opposition.

  7. Operation Hummingbird (Night of Long Knives June 1934) - Leader of SA Rohm a potential opponent killed, and some other leading members of the SA. • Other leading conservatives Von Schleicher killed, and Papen was put under house arrest. • About 200 people killed. • Law concentrating Measures for the defence of the state, this made legal any action by the state as long as in ‘self defence’.

  8. The army -Removal of the SA took away a threat from the army. • August 1934 Defence Minister Blomberg and advisor Colonel Von Reichenau, ordered every member of the army to take an oath of loyalty to the Fuhrer., rather than to the constitution. • August 89.9% of Germans voted Yes to Hitler becoming Fuhrer. • By 1937 Hitler clear about his Lebenraum plans. Some in the army sceptical of his plans. • Jan- War minister Von Blomberg attended his wedding then sacked him as his new wife had been a prostitute. • Head of the army Colonel General Fritsch had been rumoured to have been involved with a rent boy, he was sent for a military trial. • 27th Jan1938 Hitler took over leadership of the army. • Feb removed from their posts those not totally supportive, including 12 generals.

  9. Terror State • Gestapo secret state police to try to find opponents or Jewish people. • Gestapo law 1936- could arrest anyone and execute them with no trial. • Over 100 crimes- punishment was death. • SS were Hitler’s protection squad and ran the concentration and death camps. • Denunciations • All Culture had to be German-music/literature other forms banned. 1933- book burning.

  10. Resistance • Opposition-Active resistance to the regime • Wearing make up/listening to Jazz/grumbling. • Indifferent to the regime- ‘Resistenz’ by Martin Brozat an historian, he thinks this limited the authority and impact of the regime. It shows the Nazi regime unable to control peoples lives totally. • ‘Loyal reluctance’- by historians Gerhard Paul and Klaus Michael-Mallmann, people unhappy but this did not cause rebellions. People interested in day to day economic issues.

  11. Economic recovery • June 1933 Law tor educe unemployment- Work schemes- new roads • Reich Entailed Farm Land. • 1935 Conscription-unemployment declined. • More training schemes for school leavers in apprenticeships. • Created 6 million jobs • Schacht- President of the Reichsbank 1933 and in 1934 Economics minister. He increased state control of foreign trade

  12. State Paternalism • Nov 1933 Beauty of Labour-to improve working conditions in factories. • Strength through Joy-to reward loyal workers with theatre tickets, holidays. By 1938 180,000workers been on a cruise through this. • Cheap housing and mass producing consumer goods, peoples radio and car.

  13. Church -Protestant and Catholics alienated from the Weimar Republic by secular liberalism, feared Communism so some saw him as a saviour. -Saw accommodating Hitler would secure more benefits than open confrontation. The Concodat signed in June 1933. - Confessional Church led by Pastor Martin Niemoller and Karl Barth, shows there was opposition.

  14. Young & Women • Hitler Youth, it became compulsory to join in 1936. • 1937 Elite system of schools • Nazi organisations for teachers. By 1937 97% of teachers had joined. • Opponents- Edelweiss pirates/White Rosé groups/Swing Movement • Many of the young remained loyal • -Women should be confined to a domestic role- Kinde/Kirche/Kuche.. By 1939 7% 0f all doctors women. By 1936 5.63 million women were employed and by 1939 7.41 million. • Medals for having over children- gold cross for having 8 or more children. • Marriage loan , newly weds a loan of 1000 marks. • Banned from marrying Jews- 1935

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