Das Volk (1945)


Das Volk was a daily newspaper published from Berlin, Germany. It was the central organ of the Social Democratic Party of Germany. The first issue of Das Volk was published on 7 July 1945. Das Volk was the second working class-newspaper to emerge in Berlin after the Second World War. During its first twenty days of publishing, Das Volk was printed in Berliner format. Das Volk heeded the calls of the Communist Party of Germany for building an anti-fascist democratic Germany, a parliamentary-democratic republic and unity of the working class. The newspaper was controlled by the left-wing tendency inside SPD, and supported merger of the party with KPD.
Otto Meier was the editor-in-chief of the newspaper. At the time of the founding of the newspaper the deputy editor-in-chief was Engelbert Graf, however the Soviet authorities objected to his presence and he was subsequently removed from this post. Max Nierich and Paul Ufermann were later named as deputy editors. In its initial period Das Volk had a circulation of 50,000-100,000 copies. By September 1945 the circulation reached 150,000, and by January 1946 the circulation stood at 250,000.
The editorial offices were located inside the SPD party headquarters on Behrenstrasse in East Berlin. Meier wanted to shift the editorial offices to West Berlin, but this was allegedly blocked by the Soviet authorities.
On 23 April 1946, Das Volk was replaced by Neues Deutschland, founded as a result of the merger of Das Volk with the KPD organ Deutsche Volkszeitung. During the merger talks between SPD and KPD the idea of retaining publication Das Volk had been discussed, but as a local organ of SED in Berlin. On 25 April 1946, the SED leadership named Max Nierich co-editor-in-chief of Neues Deutschland.