(Redirected from SAPD)
The 'Socialist Workers' Party of Germany', in
German '''Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands''', SAP / SAPD, was the name of two political parties in
Germany.
The fore-runner of today's SPD
The first, which lasted from
1875 -
1890, was a left-wing
German political party created in
Gotha when
Ferdinand Lassalle's
ADAV merged with the
SDAP formed by
August Bebel and
Wilhelm Liebknecht.
The party congress at which the unification of the
Marxist "
Eisenachers" of the SDAP and the more moderate Lassallians came about took place from
June 22 -
27 1875. The
Gotha programme was finalised at the same time. Three years later, the law banning
socialism passed by
Bismarck pushed the party underground. While its deputies were still allowed seats in parliament, there was a ban on meetings, organisations and news publishing.
In
1877, the SAPD won 500,000 votes in the ''
Reichstag'' elections. In
1890, still before the
Anti-Socialist Laws were overturned, the party won 1.4 million votes, making it the strongest in Germany.
The Anti-Socialist Laws were a result of Bismarck's fear of the socialists; he believed they were responsible for two assassination attempts. They were renewed every three years until he left politics in autumn
1890; immediately, the SAPD renamed itself
Social Democratic Party of Germany or SPD; this is the name it has kept until today.
The splinter group, 1931-45
The second SAPD was a left-wing splinter group which split off from the
SPD in autumn
1931. In
1932 some Communist Party dissenters joined the group, but its numbers remained small. From 1933, the group's members worked illegally against
National Socialism.
In his home town of
Lübeck, the young Herbert Karl Frahm, later known as
Willy Brandt joined the SAPD, against the advice of his mentor
Julius Leber. In his autobiography, Brandt wrote: ''In autumn 1931, Nazis and German nationalists, the
SA and the men in steel helmets joined together to form the "Harzburg Front". ... It was just at this time that the left wing of the social democrats split off, as a result of measures connected to organisation and discipline by the party leaders. A few ''Reichstag'' assemblymen, a number of active party groups - above all in Saxony - and not least a large proportion of young Socialists followed the people who were calling for the founding of a Socialist Workers' Party.''
In
1934 the youth of SAPD took part in the foundation of the
International Bureau of Revolutionary Youth Organizations. The congress, which was held in the
Netherlands, was broken up by Dutch police. Several SAPD delegates were handed over to German authorities. The congress then re-convened in
Lille. Brandt was elected to the Secretariat of the organization, and worked in
Sweden for the Bureau.
The SAPD was affiliated to the
International Revolutionary Marxist Centre, but broke with the main party of that
international, the
Independent Labour Party, over the question of the
united front and
popular front.
During the
Second World War some SAPD members emigrated to
Great Britain and worked for the party there. Many of those became members of the
SPD. Therefore the SAPD was not re-founded anew after the Second World War. Willy Brandt even became leader of the SPD.
See also
★
Social Democratic Party of Germany
★
German history
★
German politics
Bibliography
★
Hanno Drechsler, ''Die Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands (SAPD): Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Deutschen Arbeiterbewegung am Ende der Weimarer Republik'', Meisenheim am Glan: Hain, 1963; Repr. Hannover: Politladen, 1971; 2. Repr. Hamburg: Junius, 1999. (The classic account)
External links
★
Introduction to the Critique of the Gotha Programme, Karl Korsch, 1922 at marxists.org