Liberalism in Germany
This article aims to give a historical outline of liberalism in Germany. The liberal parties dealt with in the timeline below are, largely, those which received sufficient support at one time or another to have been represented in parliament. Not all parties so included, however, necessarily labeled themselves "liberal". The sign ⇒ denotes another party in that scheme.
Background
The early high points of liberalism in Germany were the Hambacher Fest and the Revolutions of 1848 in the German states.In the National Assembly in the Frankfurt Paulskirche, the bourgeois liberal factions Casino and Württemberger Hof were the majority. They favored a constitutional monarchy, popular sovereignty, and parliamentary rule.
Organized liberalism developed in the 1860s, combining the previous liberal and democratic currents. Between 1867 and 1933 liberalism was divided into progressive liberal and national liberal factions. Since 1945 only one liberal party has been significant in politics at the national level: The Free Democratic Party, ELDR.
History
From German Progress Party to German State Party
- 1861: Liberals united in the German Progress Party
- 1867: The moderate faction seceded as the ⇒ National Liberal Party
- 1868: A radical South German faction seceded as the ⇒ Democratic People's Party
- 1884: The party merged with the ⇒ Liberal Union into the German Freeminded Party
- 1893: The party split in the Freeminded People's Party and the ⇒ Freeminded Union
- 1910: The FVP merged with the ⇒ Freeminded Union and the ⇒ German People's Party into the Progressive People's Party
- 1918: The party is reorganised into the German Democratic Party, incorporating parts of the ⇒ National Liberal Party
- 1930: The DDP in an attempt to survive reorganised itself into the German State Party
- 1933: The party is forced to dissolve itself
German People's Party (1868)
- 1868: A radical faction of the ⇒ German Progress Party formed the German People's Party
- 1910: The DVP merged into the ⇒ Progressive People's Party
National Liberal Party / German People's Party (1918)
- 1867: A right-wing faction of the ⇒ German Progress Party formed the National Liberal Party
- 1871: A conservative faction of NLP formed the Imperial Liberal Party
- 1880: A left-wing faction seceded as the ⇒ Liberal Union
- 1918: The NLP is reorganised into the German People's Party, part of the party joined the German Democratic Party
- 1933: The party is dissolved
Liberal Union
- 1880: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ National Liberal Party formed the Liberal Union
- 1884: The party merged with the ⇒ German Progress Party into the ⇒ German Freeminded Party
Freeminded Union
- 1893: The ⇒ German Freeminded Party split into the Freeminded Union and the ⇒ Freeminded People's Party
- 1903: The ⇒ National Social Union joined the Freeminded Union
- 1908: A left-wing faction seceded as the ⇒ Democratic Union
- 1910: The party merged into the ⇒ Progressive People's Party
National Social Union
- 1896: The National Social Union is formed
- 1903: The party is dissolved and members joined the ⇒ Freeminded Union
Democratic Union
- 1908: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ Freeminded Union formed the Democratic Union
- 1918: The remnants of the Union joined the German Democratic Party
From Liberal Democratic Party of Germany to Alliance of Free Democrats (GDR)
- 1945: Liberals in East Germany re-organised themselves into the Liberal Democratic Party of Germany. Since 1949 the party is under control of the communist dictatorship
- 1990: The LDPD regained its liberal profile and shortened its name in February into Liberal Democratic Party. The same month it joined the newly founded Free Democratic Party and the German Forum Party into Association of Free Democrats. In March the Association of Free Democrats absorbed the National Democratic Party of Germany, and finally in August it merged into present-day ⇒ Free Democratic Party
Free Democratic Party
- 1945-1946: Liberals in West Germany re-organised themselves in regional parties
- 1948: The regional liberal parties merged into the Free Democratic Party
- 1956: A conservative faction seceded and formed the Free People's Party
- 1982: A left-wing faction seceded as the ⇒ Liberal Democrats
- 1990: The FDP incorporated the ⇒ Association of Free Democrats
Liberal Democrats
- 1982: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ Free Democratic Party formed the present-day Liberal Democrats, without success
New Liberals
- 2014: A left-wing faction of the ⇒ Free Democratic Party formed the present-day New Liberals, contested in Hamburg state election 2015
Liberal leaders
- Liberals before 1918: Eduard Lasker ; Rudolf von Bennigsen - Hans Victor von Unruh - Eugen Richter
- Freisinn: Theodor Barth - Friedrich Naumann - Max Weber
- Deutsche Demokratische Partei: Walther Rathenau - Theodor Heuss
- Deutsche Volkspartei: Gustav Stresemann
- LDPD : Waldemar Koch, Wilhelm Külz, Manfred Gerlach
- Freie Demokratische Partei: Ralf Dahrendorf - Karl-Hermann Flach - Hans-Dietrich Genscher - Otto Graf Lambsdorff - Walter Scheel - Guido Westerwelle - Christian Lindner
Liberal thinkers
- Immanuel Kant
- August Ludwig von Schlözer
- Wilhelm von Humboldt
- Ludwig Joseph Brentano
- Friedrich Naumann
- Max Weber
- Walther Rathenau
- Adolf von Harnack
- Wilhelm Röpke
- Ralf Dahrendorf