Eduard David was born on 11 June 1863 in Ediger/Mosel as the son of Johann Heinrich David, a Prussian civil servant, and his wife Wilhelmine Elisabeth. After completing a four-year commercial apprenticeship, David studied at the university at Giessen where he was introduced to socialist ideals. He worked as a teacher at a gymnasium and establishing a newspaper, the Mitteldeutsche Sonntagszeitung, in 1893. David's support for the Social Democratic Party of Germany led to his dismissal from the civil service in 1894. David was married twice. In 1896, he married Gertrud Swiderski and in 1911 Hermine Schmidt.
Political career
In the 1890s, David became a proponent of agricultural policies favouring small holdings, arguing for their viability in a series of articles in the Sozialdemokrat in August and September 1894. David argued against the traditional Marxist idea that small landholdings would increasingly be replaced by large estates, marking David as among the first Revisionists in his party. This journalism on the agrarian question would later expanded into his major book-length work, Sozialismus und Landwirtschaft, in 1903. From 1896, David was a member of the Landtag of Hesse and after 1903 a member of the Reichstag for the SPD. He was one of the leading politicians of the "Majority" SPD when the party split during the First World War and was instrumental in framing his party's policy stand on the war.
Government ministry
In October 1918, when the SPD became part of the Imperial governmentfor the first time under the new chancellor Max von Baden, David became Under Secretary at the Foreign Office. In February 1919, David was elected president of the new National Assembly, but as part of a deal establishing the first democratically elected government, the Scheidemann cabinet. He relinquished that post in favour of Constantin Fehrenbach and became Minister without Portfolio under the new Ministerpräsident, Philipp Scheidemann. After Scheidemann's cabinet resigned in June 1919 in protest over the stipulations of the Treaty of Versailles, a new government was formed by Gustav Bauer and David became Reichsminister des Innern, a position he held from 21 June to 4 October 1919. In early October, the German Democratic Party which had left the coalition government in June rejoined, thus reestablishing the Weimar Coalition of SPD, DDP and Zentrum. Erich Koch-Weser took over as Minister of the Interior and David once again was Minister without Portfolio. He retained this position in the first cabinet of Hermann Müller, who formed the new government when the Cabinet Bauer resigned in March 1920.
Later activities
In 1922, David was appointed Reichsbevollmächtigter in Hesse and from 1923 to 1927 he taught political sciences at what was then the Technische Hochschule Darmstadt. He died on 24 December 1930 in Berlin.
Death and legacy
Eduard David died in Berlin on December 24, 1930. David is today considered a key figure in the history of the political labour movement in Germany as he influenced the development of the SPD in the pre-World War I period as one of the leading advocates of reformist policies.
Works
Zweck und Mittel einer einheitlichen Organisation der derutschen Studentenschaft, 1888
Sozialismus und Landwirtschaft, 1903
Referentenführer, 1907
Sozialdemokratie und Vaterlandsverteidigung, 1915
Die Sozialdemokratie im Weltkrieg, 1915
Wer trägt die Schuld am Krieg?, 1917
Die Siedlungsgesetzgebung, 1921
Um die Fahne der Deutschen Republik, 1921
Die Befriedung Europas, 1926
Aus Deutschlands schwerster Zeit, Schriften und Reden aus den Jahren 1914-19, 1927.