The German word Gleichschaltung (literally "synchronising", synchronization) is used in a political sense to describe
the process by which the Nazi regime successively established a system of totalitarian
control over the individual,
and tight coordination over all aspects of society and commerce. The term itself is a typical Nazi euphemism.
The Nazi party's desire for total control required the elimination of all other forms of influence. The period from 1933
to around 1937 was characterized by the systematic elimination of non-Nazi organizations that could potentially influence
people, such as trade unions and political parties. The regime also assailed the influence of the churches, for example
by instituting the Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs under Hanns Kerrl. Organizations that the administration could not
eliminate, such as the schools, came under its direct control.
Specific measures
In a more specific sense, Gleichschaltung refers to the legal measures taken by the government during the first months
after Adolf Hitler became
Chancellor of Germany. In this sense, the term was used by the Nazis themselves.
- One day after the Reichstag Fire on 27. February 1933, the increasingly senile
President of Germany Paul von Hindenburg,
acting at Hitler's request, issued the Reichstag Fire Decree. This decree suspended
most human rights provided for by the 1919 constitution of the Weimar Republic
and thus allowed for the arrest of political adversaries, mostly Communists, and for general terrorizing by the SA to intimidate
the voters before the upcoming elections.
- In this atmosphere the Reichstag general elections of 3. March 1933 took place. These yielded only a slim majority
for Hitler's coalition government and no majority for Hitler's own Nazi party.
- When the newly-elected Reichstag first convened on 23. March 1933, (not including the Communist delegates, since
their party had already been banned by that time) it passed the Enabling Act (Ermächtigungsgesetz), transferring all
legislative powers to the Nazi government and, in effect, abolishing the remainder of the Weimar constitution as a whole.
Soon afterwards the government banned the Social Democratic party which had voted against the Act, while the other
parties chose to dissolve themselves to avoid arrests and concentration camp imprisonment.
- The "First Gleichschaltung Law" (Erstes Gleichschaltungsgesetz) (31. March 1933) gave the governments of the Länder
the same legislative powers that the Reich government had received through the Enabling Act.
- A "Second Gleichschaltung Law" (Zweites Gleichschaltungsgesetz) (7. April 1933) deployed one Reichsstatthalter
(proconsul) in each state apart from Prussia, which had already been under Nazi control since the Preußenschlag of 20. July 1932.
These officers were supposed to act as local presidents in each state, appointing the governments. For Prussia, which
comprised the vast majority of Germany anyway, Hitler reserved these rights for himself.
- The trade Union association ADGB (Allgemeiner Deutscher Gewerkschaftsbund) was shattered on 2. May 1933 (the day after Labor Day),
when SA and NSBO (Nationalsozialistische Betriebszellenorganisation) units occupied union facilities and ADGB
leaders were imprisoned. Other important associations were forced to merge with the German Labor Front
(Deutsche Arbeitsfront (DAF)) in the following months.
- The Gesetz gegen die Neubildung von Parteien ("Law against the establishment of political parties") (14. July 1933)
forbid any creation of new political parties.
- The Gesetz über den Neuaufbau des Reiches ("Law concerning the reconstruction of the Reich") (30. January 1934) abandoned
the concept of a federal republic. Instead, the political institutions of the Länder were practically abolished altogether,
passing all powers to the central government. Consequentially, another law dating 14. February 1934 dissolved the Reichsrat,
the representation of the Länder at the federal level.
- In the summer of 1934, Hitler instructed the SS to kill Ernst Röhm and other leaders of the Nazi party's SA, former
Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher and several aides to former Chancellor Franz von Papen in the so-called
Night of the Long Knives (30. June 1934). These measures actually received
retrospective sanction in a special one-article Law Regarding
Measures of State Self-Defense (Gesetz über Maßnahmen der Staatsnotwehr) (3. July 1934).
- At nine o'clock in the morning of 2. August 1934, Reichspräsident Paul von Hindenburg
died at the age of 86. Three hours before, the government had issued a law to take effect the day of his death, This
prescribed that the office of the Reichspräsident should be united with that of the Reichskanzler and that the competencies
of the former should be transferred to the "Führer und Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler", as the law stated. Hitler
henceforth demanded the use of that title. Thus the last separation of powers were abolished.
Please have a look at some banknotes from the World War II.
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