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Political Experiments of the 1920s

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Political Experiments of the 1920s Demands for Revision After Versailles Negotiating over reparations with Germany Border disputes over new boundary lines Allies felt ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Political Experiments of the 1920s


1
Political Experiments of the 1920s
2
(No Transcript)
3
Demands for Revision
  • After Versailles
  • Negotiating over reparations with Germany
  • Border disputes over new boundary lines
  • Allies felt Treaty was not being enforced
    effectively
  • Series of calls to revise the whole series of
    Versailles treaties

4
Postwar Economic Problems
  • Europe loses status as financial and credit
    center
  • Europe in debt to each other and the US
  • The Bolsheviks had cancelled Russian war debts to
    France
  • Germany could not pay war debts
  • US did not demand reparations from Germany, but
    did demand the repayment of debts from other
    Allies
  • Europes infrastructure, (bridges, roads,
    factories, hospitals), had been damaged or
    destroyed by the war.
  • US became less dependent of European production
    and was a major competitor.
  • Slow postwar economic growth and an overall
    decline of economic activity lowered
    international demand for European goods.

5
New Roles for Government and Labor
  • Prominence of labor during the war gave unions a
    greater role in national government.
  • Government could not ignore labor
  • Wages fell after the War, but workers generally
    were paid better than pre-war conditions
  • Collective bargaining agreements would remain
  • Middle classes became more conservative and more
    concerned about Communism

6
The Soviet Experiment Begins
  • The creation of the Soviet Union was the most
    important transforming event in post-WWI Europe.
  • Existed from 1917 until 1991
  • The Communists were neither a mass party or
    nationalists (less than 1 early on)

7
War Communism
  • The Bolsheviks rapidly developed authoritarian
    policies in response to internal and foreign
    military opposition
  • Controlled by Leon Trotsky and the Red Army
  • formed the Cheka, a new secret police
  • political and economic administration became
    highly centralized.
  • Economic policy of war communism,
  • Took control of all the major industries that
    included financial and transportation.
  • Seized grain for the Red Army and city workers
  • War Communism aided the victory of the Red Army
    over their rivals
  • Created domestic opposition
  • Strikes occurred in 1920 and 1921
  • Baltic fleet mutinied

8
New Economic Policy
  • Lenins strategic attempt to regain control
  • Private property tolerated- peasants could grow
    food for profit
  • NEP made the economy more stable
  • No consumer goods
  • Caused disagreements in the Politburo (governing
    body of the communist government)

9
Stalin vs. Trotsky
  • Lenin dies in 1924
  • two factions emerged in struggles for leadership
    of the party
  • Leon Trotsky and Joseph Stalin were on opposite
    sides
  • Trotsky
  • The left wing
  • Urging agricultural collectivism, rapid
    industrialization, and new revolutions in other
    nations.

10
  • Stalin
  • A right-wing faction
  • Nikolai Bukharin as its representative and Stalin
    manipulating the group that called for
    continuation of Lenins NEP and slow
    industrialization.
  • Stalin began to gain power
  • Mid-1920s, he supported Bukharin and denounced
    Trotsky for his vision of international
    revolution, endorsing the doctrine of socialism
    in one country.
  • Stalin defeated Trotsky and controlled the Soviet
    state.

11
Third International
  • In 1919, the Soviet Communists founded the Third
    International of the European Socialist movement,
    known as the Comintern.
  • In 1920, the Comintern imposed the Twenty-one
    Conditions on any Socialist party that wanted to
    join it.
  • Effort to destroy democratic socialism
  • Split every major European Socialist party
  • Divided the political left, and created a vacuum
    of power, (no political voice) for right-wing
    politicians
  • led to the rise of Fascists and Nazis.

12
Women and Family in the Soviet Union.
  • Traditional family connected with middle class
    capitalism
  • Alexandra Kollontai tried to replace the
    traditional family with a system based on love
    and comradeship
  • Few agreed, but her ideas became one of the views
    of the Soviet Union by the outside world.

13
The Fascist Experiment in Italy
  • Fascist, a term used to describe right-wing
    dictators that took power between World War I and
    World War II.
  • These governments claimed to halt Bolshevism
  • anti-democratic, anti-Marxist, antiparliamentary,
    and most often anti-Semitic.
  • Fascist movements were super-nationalistic.

14
The Rise of Mussolini
  • Italian Fascists founded in 1919 (Fasci di
    Combattimento)
  • Largely Italian WWI veterans who were angry about
    the treatment of Italy at Versailles
  • Feared the spread of socialism and the effects of
    the poor economy on Italy.
  • Founded by Benito Mussolini
  • Newspaper editor
  • Supported Italys entry into WWI
  • Extreme Nationalist

15
Postwar Italian Political Turmoil
  • During the war- the Italian parliament was
    useless
  • Italy mistreated as a great power after the War.
  • Gabriele DAnnumzio, anti-government agitator,
    seized Fiume
  • Gave Fascists an example of how to take over
  • Between 1919-1921- political turmoil
  • Strikes common
  • Peasants seize farmlands
  • Socialists gain a larger foothold in Parliament
  • Catholic Popular Party also gained power
  • Caused a stalemate in parliament

16
Early Fascist organizations
  • Fascists created local terrorist groups
  • intimidated socialist groups,
  • pleasing many conservatives, (especially
    business interests).
  • Local police officials ignore the crimes of
    fascist squads
  • By 1922, fascist groups were intimidating local
    officials through arson, beatings and murder.
    Controlled local government of northern Italy.

17
March on Rome
  • In October, 1922, Fascists marched on Rome,
  • the Black Shirt March
  • the king of Italy asked Mussolini to form a new
    government.
  • Mussolinis becoming Prime Minister.

18
The Fascists in Power
  • Mussolini created a legal revolution that left
    Italy a one-party state.
  • Fascists use terror, the promise of security,
    effective propaganda,
  • dominated Italys political structure on every
    level.
  • agreement with the Catholic Church to keep the
    fascist regime in power.
  • The Lateran Accord of February 1929
  • Catholic Church and Italy declare official peace
  • Pope declared temporal ruler of Vatican City
  • Catholicism made official religion of Italy

19
Motherhood in Fascist Italy
  • Fascist policy encouraged Italian women to have
    more children and to remain at home
  • Passed policies to help large families
  • Outlawed abortion and contraception
  • Mothers were expected to send their children to
    Fascist schools
  • Women discouraged from working outside of the
    home
  • Laws passed limiting number of women who could
    work.

20
Joyless Victors
21
France
  • After WWI- a new conservative government is
    elected
  • Clemenceau loses bid for president
  • Versailles seen as too lenient
  • Clemenceau did not establish a separate Rhineland
    state
  • New government wanted to security against Germany
    and Russian Communism
  • Few domestic reforms
  • Many changes in ministers

22
New Alliances
  • In 1920 1921, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and
    Yugoslavia formed the Little Entente,
  • alliance designed to prevent the revision of the
    Paris Peace Treaty of World War I.
  • France makes an alliance with the Little Entente
    and Poland
  • 1922- the Germans and Russians signed the Rapallo
    treaty
  • Established economic and diplomatic relations
  • No secret political or military clauses
  • Germans did train Russian army and practiced
    using their tanks and planes.

23
Quest for Reparations
  • French PM Raymond Poincare
  • Sent troops into the Ruhr in 1923 in gain German
    reparations
  • Germans order passive resistance- General strike
    in Industrial center of Germany
  • France sent French civilians to run the mines and
    factories.
  • Ruhr invasion actually hurt France
  • Caused increased distrust by Britain
  • Increased French inflation
  • Poincare replaced from 1924-1926 with a
    pro-Socialist government
  • Recognized the Soviets
  • Conciliatory policy toward Germany
  • Aristide Briand- pro- League of Nations,

24
Great Britain
25
Economic Confusion
  • 1918- British electorate expanded to all men
    above 21 and women above 30
  • Disagreements between PM Herbert Asquith and
    David Lloyd George split the Liberal Party
  • George maintained a coalition between Labour and
    the Liberal Parties
  • British economy remained depressed in the 1920s
  • High unemployment
  • Government expanded insurance to unemployed
    workers, widows and orphans
  • Did not create new jobs

26
The First Labour Government
  • In 1922, the first Labour government in Britain
    was headed by Ramsay MacDonald.
  • The Labour party was socialistic in its beliefs
    but democratic and non-revolutionary,
  • its rise in English politics caused the decline
    of the English Liberal party.
  • Macdonald had been against WWI
  • Macdonalds plan for reform
  • Social reform
  • Established the Labour party as a viable party

27
The General Strike of 1926
  • Stanley Baldwin returned as Conservative PM
  • Government returned to the gold standard
  • Hoped to stabilize the monetary system
  • Set rate too high, raised price of British goods
  • In attempt to lower prices- cut wages
  • Coal industry most directly effected
  • 1926 went on strike
  • Sympathetic workers from other industries joined
    them
  • Workers lost argument, high unemployment made
    unions weak
  • Government attempted to help workers with new
    housing and reforming poor laws.

28
Empire
  • WWI gave British colonies the increased idea of
    independence and self determination
  • India
  • Self determination movement started by Mohandas
    Gandhi,
  • Started discussion with British government
  • Gained right to impose tariffs to protect its own
    industry.

29
Ireland
  • 1914- Irish Home Rule bill had passed Parliament
  • Postponed until after the War
  • Easter Monday 1916- Nationalist Uprising in
    Dublin
  • British government stopped rebellion by executing
    the rebel leaders
  • Rebels became national martyrs, Irish politics
    shifted to the Sein Fein party
  • 1918- Sein Gein created an Irish Parliament
  • January 21 1919- declared independence
  • Guerrilla war broke out between the IRA and the
    British
  • 1921- Ireland becomes Irish Free State, part of
    the Commonwealth.
  • Civil war broke out between moderates and diehards

30
Trials of Successor States in Eastern Europe
  • Successor states of Austria-Hungary supposed to
    embody self-determination and buffer spread of
    Bolshevism
  • In trouble from the start
  • In Germany, Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia and
    other states, challenge lay in making new, stable
    parliamentary governments how long would
    conserves cooperate with liberals?

31
Economic and Ethnic Pressures
  • No successor states had strong economies
  • political independence slowed trade between them
  • Dependant on foreign loans rural people in
    industrialized world
  • Ethnic groups sought power unchecked by politics
  • minorities in each state wanted independence
  • interwar economic/nationalistic problems would
    rise again in 1990s
  • breakup of Habsburg Empire similar to breakup of
    Soviet Union, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia

32
Poland Democracy to Military Rule
  • Poland was restored in 1919,
  • nationalism couldnt stop disagreements from
    different classes/regions/economic interests
  • Different regions formerly ruled by Austria,
    Germany, and Russia fought each other in the new
    Polish Parliament
  • executive power was weak
  • Marshal Josef Pilsudski carried out a military
    coup
  • ruled personally until his death
  • govt passed to group of his military followers

33
Czechoslovakia A Viable Democratic Experiment
  • Czechoslovakia escaped authoritarian govt
  • started with strong industrial base
  • solid middle class with liberal traditions
    Czechs/Slovaks worked together in WWI withAllies,
  • learned to trust each other
  • After the war, new govt broke up estates into
    peasant holdings, Thomas Masaryk led w/integrity,
    had chance of becoming nation-state

34
  • Tensions still existed between Czechs and
    Slovaks(poorer, rural)
  • Other national groups were discontented Poles,
    Magyars, Germans in Sudentenland
  • Germans looked to Hitler in 1938,
  • great powers divided up Czechoslovakia as
    appeasement
  • Hitler occupied entire country/manipulated Slovak
    puppet state

35
Hungary Turmoil and Authoritarianism
  • Hungary(defeated power in WWI) separated from
    Austria at high political/economic price
  • Bela Kun made short-lived communist Hungarian
    Soviet Republic in 1919 with support from
    socialists
  • Allies authorized Romanian invasion to remove
    communist danger
  • established Admiral Miklos Horthy as regent
  • When Kuns govt fell, 1000s of Hungarians
    killed/imprisoned
  • Resentment lingered over lost territory in Paris
    settlement
  • effective ruler of Hungary during 1920s was Count
    Stephen Bethlen with aristocratic govt
  • Replaced by General Julius Goemboes who rigged
    elections
  • used anti-Semitic policies
  • after his death, anti-Semitism still lingered

36
Austria Political Turmoil and Nazi Conquest
  • Situation bad in Austria
  • many Austrians lived in Vienna
  • Economic life almost impossible,
  • Paris settlement forbade union with Germany
  • in 1920s, Social Democrats and Christian
    Socialists struggled for power
  • both used small armies to impress/terrorize

37
  • In 1933, Christian Socialist Engelbert Dollfuss
    became chancellor,
  • 1934 outlawed all political parties except
    Christian Socialists/agrarians/paramilitary
    groups(used groups against Social Democrats)
  • Dollfuss was shot in unsuccessful nazi coup
  • Kurt von Schuschnigg presided until Hitlers
    annexation in 1938

38
Southeastern Europe Royal Dictatorships
  • SE Europe, Paris settlement less relevant, but
    parliamentary govt still failed
  • Yugoslavia founded by Corfu Agreement of 1917,
    known as Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes

39
  • Serbs controlled govt because they had their own
    country prior to WWI but clashed with Croats
  • Croats considered educated/Roman Catholic
  • Serbs considered Orthodox/less educated, each had
    their own areas/enclaves
  • Slovenes/ Muslims/other national groups played
    Serbs/Croats against each other
  • clash of nationalities led to royal dictatorship
    in 1929 under King Alexander I, a Serb
  • outlawed political parties,
  • assassinated 1934/succeeded by son

40
Other Royal Dictatorships
  • Romania by King Carol II,
  • Bulgaria by King Boris III
  • considered themselves right by repressing more
    violent/extreme groups
  • Greece,
  • parliamentary monarchy failed
  • General John Metaxas instituted dictatorship that
    ended parliamentary life in Greece

41
The Weimar Republic
  • German government formed after the defeat of the
    Hohenzollerns.
  • Accepted the Versailles treaty
  • Associated with national disgrace, and the
    economic burdens of the treaty.
  • Forced to follow the military and economic
    conditions of the treaty
  • Nationalists used the treaty to blame the
    republic for the surrender and the results
    themselves
  • All political groups wanted to revise the treaty

42
Constitutional Flaws
  • Weimar Republic
  • Guaranteed civil liberties and direct elections
  • Universal suffrage of the Reichstag (Parliament)
    and the President.
  • Provided for proportional representation for all
    elections, easy for small parties to gain seats.
  • Provisions allowed the President to rule by
    decree in an emergency- allowed temporary
    dictatorship

43
Lack of Support
  • Weimar Republic had no social structure for its
    support
  • Large groups advocated constitutional monarchy
  • Army distrustful of government and resentful of
    military provisions of Versailles
  • March 1920- Kapp Putsch (Armed Insurrection)
  • Attempted coup against the government
  • General strike followed
  • As reparations increased, assassination attempts
    increased as well

44
Invasion of the Ruhr and Inflation
  • Value of German mark fell
  • 64 to 1 vs in 1914
  • 800,000,000 in 1 vs in 1923
  • Caused people to lose their life savings
  • Insurance policies were wiped out
  • Bartering became popular
  • Caused increasing desire for order and security

45
Hitlers Early career
  • Ok Minion. . . Your turn. . . Add Herr
    Schicklegruber to your notes.

46
Some help
  • Hitler was a part of the Christian Social party
    in Vienna and embraced its radical German
    nationalism and anti-Semitic beliefs.
  • Moved to Munich
  • became involved with a small, nationalistic,
    anti-Semitic party known as the National
    Socialist German Workers party, also known as
    the Nazis.
  • Hitler, head of the Nazis, tried to topple the
    Weimar regime.
  • 1923 coup in Munich, the beer hall Putsch, was
    easily put down,
  • Hitler gained in popularity from the incident and
    became a national figure.
  • While in prison he wrote Mein Kampf, which
    outlined his political and social reform plans
    for Germany

47
Stressmann Years
  • Gustav Stressmann- Chancellor (Aug 1923-Nov 1929)
  • Reconstructed the republic
  • Introduced new currency
  • Supported the crushing of Hitlers putsch
  • 1924- Dawes Plan
  • Lowered reparations depending on German economy
  • 1925- Paul von Hindenburg elected President
  • More conservative
  • Economy improved, foreign investing in industries
  • Accepted some of the western Versailles
    settlements, but wanted to reclaim some Eastern
    territories

48
Locarno
  • 1925- Locarno Agreements
  • Established official German/French border
  • Britain and Italy agreed to intervene if either
    side broke agreement
  • German signed treaties of arbitration with Poland
    and the Czechs
  • France supported Germany in League of Nations
  • Caused spirit of optimism
  • 1928- Kellogg- Briand Pact- renouncing war as an
    instrument of national policy
  • Locarno left many major international issues
    unresolved.
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