History
3/12/15 Hitler’s rise to power So why did the German’s let a madman lead them? The weakness of the Weimer republic was a start. It started out with struggles from left and right wing rebellions but it still stayed alive. After the Wall Street crash in 1929, the Weimer Republic ended. The new government (Reichstag) had 29 parties and the Nazi (National Socialist German Worker’s Party) was one. Hitler’s rise to power was based on long term ideas known as his programme which promised everyone a little something.
Hitler’s programme pleased the nationalists and the socialists. On page 17 source C, it lists the demands of the Nazi party and their goals. For a nationalist, they loved the idea of only …show more content…
From the graph on page 18, the number of seats of the Nazi party skyrocketed; it went from 12 measly seats to 107 seats. This just kept increasing over the time period to 288 at last. Hitler believed that the best way to get the support the masses was by th appealing to their feelings rather than by argument. On March 5 1933 Hitler held an election to
appeal the Germans, but it did not make the Nazi party in charge yet. So he arrested 81 communists which gave him the majority of the Reichstag.
Now Hitler is in control of the government. With this power he got his party to pass the
Enabling Act (3 on page 20) , which gave him the power to create his own laws, in other words made him the dictator of Germany. With all this power he forgot how he came to power, the programme, which was supported by the people. He started to make the people mad. He stopped
Unions and put the German Labour Front, which reduced workers’ pay. He also took over the police force and were killing people of small crimes. It doesn’t stop there when the president died in 1934 he took over the army and made them swear that they would die for him. Now