1 A Profile of the German Center Party, 1897–1906

Keyword(s):  
1982 ◽  
Vol 87 (5) ◽  
pp. 1411
Author(s):  
David Blackbourn ◽  
Ellen Lovell Evans

1977 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 127
Author(s):  
James C. Hunt ◽  
John K. Zeender
Keyword(s):  

1977 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 220-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl H. E. Zangerl

Surveying the German political situation in the spring of 1913, the chairman of the National Liberal Party in Baden, Edmund Rebmann, could only see “black,” the adjective commonly used to describe the Catholic Center Party. The Center was systematically tightening its grip on the states of south Germany: Bavaria had already fallen under its domination; Württemberg and Alsace-Lorraine were wavering; even Baden, the last stronghold of liberalism south of the Main, was threatened. Rebmann was deeply concerned. “A united south Germany with purely black governments,” he warned a meeting of National Liberal leaders in Karlsruhe, Baden's capital, “would be an enormous prize for the Center” and might ultimately undermine the unity of the German empire. His assessment was shared by other political observers who had witnessed at first hand the way in which the Center Party had insinuated itself into a virtually impregnable position in German politics. While there is no evidence of a conspiracy to break up the empire, the Center, with its solid block of votes in the Reichstag, its growing representation in the Landtage of south Germany, and its famous tactical flexibility, was able to exert considerable influence over government policy both nationally and regionally in the decade before World War I. The party once designated by Bismarck as an enemy of the Reich had become a conservative friend of the status quo.


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