DR. FRICK
Reich Minister of the Interior
Reich Minister of the Interior
Germany has been centuries
behind Great Britain and France in achieving her national consolidation; and
many struggles, both internal and external, have been required to attain it. At
a time when the principles of unification had long established themselves in the
governance and administration of other European countries, Germany was still
divided into a huge number of secular and ecclesiastical principalities,
considerably differing in size, whose rulers were eagerly intent-even at the
time when the medieval Empire was at the zenith of its power-upon their own
aggrandisement at the expense of the Emperors. It was of great help to them, in
that connection, that the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation rested on an
elective - as opposed to an hereditary - foundation, which made it all the
easier for them to impose their own will upon the wearers of the Imperial
crown. The Thirty Years War destroyed even the outward semblance of power
wielded by the Emperors. What was left was a "shadow Empire," an
utterly impoverished nation, and an almost innumerable number of rival States
which, in time, became mere pawns in the political game of the non-German
powers. Large tracts of country inhabited by a purely Germanic population,
stretching from the Netherlands to Switzerland, detached themselves from the
Empire, some permanently and some temporarily.
To Germany, the peculiar
tragedy of this development lies in the fact that it coincided with the age of
discovery and with the colonisation of the American continent the West Indies
and Africa. When, therefore, the world was first distributed among the European
countries, the political and national constitution of Germany was such as to
make it impossible for the nation to take an active share in those great
movements. More than two centuries had to pass before the spirit of national
solidarity grew up again. In the course of time, the number of small and very
small States was reduced to workable proportions; but even then a severe
struggle for ascendancy - more particularly between Prussia and Austria-had to
be waged before the Second Reich could be founded as a result of the policy
conducted by Prince Bismarck.
It would be wrong to
assume that the Bismarckian Empire of 1871 was a unitary State. It was, indeed,
composed of 22 federal States, each of which had its own ruler, its own
government, and its own legislative bodies. In addition, some of them had their
own postal and railway administrations, and even their own armies. There were
very important matters of internal organisation in which the authority of the
Central Government in Berlin could only be exercised after innumerable
obstacles had been surmounted, or in which it could not be exercised at all.
There was - above all - a
lack of uniformity in internal administration, in the principles underlying
municipal legislation, and in the police system.
In Great Britain, the
work of political consolidation was started during the Norman period, so that -
during the Elizabethan era - it could be used as the foundation of the world-wide
Empire subsequently acquired by the Insular Kingdom.
In France, the
development from a feudal to a national State dates back to Henry of Navarre
and Louis XIII. By Cardinal Richelieu the administration of the country was
completely centralised, all authority being vested in the king and his
ministers and all legislation originating from Paris. Within a short time, the
spirit of national unity grew so strong that it could successfully withstand
not only the revolution of 1789, but also all the other political crises that
have since occurred in France.
In Germany, events moved
in the opposite direction. The Imperial Prerogative, still fairly considerable
during the Middle Ages, decreased more and more, and after the Thirty Years War
full sovereignty was accorded each of the territorial principalities. The final
goal of that development was decentralisation instead of centralisation; and
the process of political disintegration was accelerated by economic barriers of
all kinds.
Notwithstanding its
shortcomings, however, the Constitution drawn up by Prince Bismarck was a great
improvement upon the preceding state of affairs. By it, the loose confederation
of States previously existing was converted into a far more coherent federated
State, of which Bismarck's North German Confederation was a kind of forerunner,
both politically and economically. During the Franco-German War (1870-1), that
great statesman's far-sighted policy in his dealings with the South German
States resulted in the creation of a federated State which comprised both North
and South Germany.
After the débâcle of 1918, the monarchical
Constitution was superseded by that of the Weimar Republic, but no fundamental
change took place in the relations between the Central Government and the
individual States. The part previously paid by the rulers of the latter was
henceforth taken by their respective parliamentary bodies.
It was therefore not
until the advent of the National Socialist régime under the leadership of Herr
Hitler (1933) that the authority still wielded by the then existing seventeen
federal States was so severely curtailed that it became subordinated to that
exercised by the National Government.
Seventeen parliamentary
bodies, each of which nullified the will of the German people by creating
artificial antagonisms and fomenting party dissension, were swept away by the
fervour of the National Socialist movement. Before that, the supreme authority
of the Central Government was constantly weakened by its own instability, by its
dependence upon shifting parliamentary majorities, and by the resulting civil
disturbances. These conditions vanished as if by magic as soon as the triumph
of Herr Hitler and the National Socialist movement became a reality. Party
strife and class war came to an end. The menace of a Bolshevist revolution was
overcome at the eleventh hour. Communism was suppressed, and the last traces of
the always smouldering civil war were eradicated. A régime that was shaken by
one crisis after the other, that lacked the confidence of the nation, and
wearily continued its precarious existence from day to day, had to give way to
that of Herr Hitler, which enjoys the support of the great majority of the
German people. Since then, order and security prevail again, and economic
conditions are continually improving.
The Leader and Chancellor
has vigorously taken in hand the great work of political reconstruction. He is
now converting the federated State into a unitary one, whose affairs are
conducted as he directs. Thus, the century-old attempts at unification are at
last within sight of being crowned with success.
Four years have elapsed
since Herr Hitler's assumption of power on January 30th, 1933. Anyone visiting
the country can personally convince himself of the immense improvement wrought
in that short time. Within a few months, supreme power throughout the country
was concentrated in the hands of the Leader. Since then, systematic steps have
been taken to rebuild the State. The measures introduced to that end no longer
depend for their success upon political accidents or the intrigues of political
opponents. Recent elections and plebiscites have shown that not a mere
majority, but actually 99 per cent. of the electorate, support the Government
and endorse its decisions, so that the Reichstag is now more fully
representative of the nation's will than it has ever been before.
The victory of National
Socialism has thus created the political conditions indispensable to the
complete unification of Germany.
The Bismarckian
Constitution succumbed to the onslaughts of Germany's internal enemies during
the World War. It was sabotaged by those political parties which - as early as
19 17 - had endeavoured to exercise a certain influence in connection with the
conduct of the State. The ultimate reason for its failure to withstand these
attacks upon it was that the Second Reich was not a unitary State. The
twenty-two components of that Reich had retained a considerable amount of
political sovereignty, and the authority of the Central Government was
restricted to a few domains. The Constitution was bound to break down when
parliamentary parties took the place of the ruling dynasties, and when its main
pillar - the close connection between the Reich and Prussia in the person of
the monarch - was withdrawn.
The Weimar Constitution
of 1919 did not even restore this connection, which had proved so useful a bond
of union so long as the monarchical Constitution existed. It made it compulsory
for all the federal States - including Prussia - to adopt the parliamentary
Republican régime. Under such a régime, the centre of political gravity must
naturally lie in the parliaments of the federal States and in the Reichstag. In
effect, however, all these bodies were dominated by a legion of political
parties, the percentage representation of which in each State varied exceedingly.
Hence, the Weimar Republic soon presented a picture of so much political
disunion that it was found quite impossible to form a Government really capable
of governing the country.
The Weimar Constitution
is directly responsible for the open breach between the Reich and Prussia in
1932, inasmuch as - under its terms - that dispute was referred to a State
Tribunal, which was by no means qualified to effect a just solution. In
October, 1932, a decision was pronounced by that court: political authority in
Prussia was divided up and an untenable situation was created which lasted
until January 30th, 1933.
Herr Hitler's Government
has turned the party- governed federated State existing prior to his
coming-into-power into a unitary State. Three great measures had to be passed
to bring about this transformation, viz., first, the Acts establishing
uniformity in the political organisations throughout the country (1933);
second, the Act of January 30th, 1934, governing the reform of the Reich
Government, and third, the extension of the authority wielded by the Reich
Governors in the individual States. These fundamental measures were
supplemented by a number of others introduced for the purpose of ensuring
uniformity in the State executive and administration.
The first Act
establishing uniformity in the political organisations was passed on March
31st, 1933. It did away with the difficulties arising out of the discrepancy
between the composition of the Reichstag and that of the parliamentary bodies
in the various States. It was provided that party representation must be
uniform in all these parliaments so long as they continued in existence. The
second Act was passed on April 7th, 1933, and empowered the Leader and
Chancellor to appoint Reich Governors in all States. They act as his personal
representatives, and each of them is entrusted with the task of ensuring that
Herr Hitler's political views dominate the policy of the State concerned. The
same Act restored an arrangement wisely introduced by Prince Bismarck years
ago, but thrown overboard by the makers of the Weimar Constitution, namely that
by which the Government of the Reich and that of Prussia (by far the largest of
its constituent parts) are conducted on identical lines. Herr Hitler achieved
this purpose by appointing himself Reich Governor for Prussia.
After the dissolution of
all political parties and the combined plebiscite and Reichstag elections held
on November 12th, 1933, when the new Government secured an overwhelming
majority throughout the country, it became possible for the new Reichstag to
give its unanimous consent to an Act definitely establishing the unitary State,
i.e., that passed on January 30th, 1934, governing the reform of the Reich
Government. The five classical sentences expressing the nation's desire for the
creation of the unitary State read as follows:
The
parliaments of the individual States are abolished. The sovereign rights of the
States are transferred to the Reich. The Reich Governors receive their
instructions from the Reich Minister of the Interior. The Reich Government is
empowered to create new constitutional law.
By abolishing the
separate parliamentary bodies and assigning all sovereign rights to the Reich
Government, this Act - to which the late President Hindenburg appended his
signature on the day it was passed - has removed the ultimate causes to which
Germany's political disunion was attributable. By subjecting the State
governments to the Reich, it has established the unquestioned supremacy of the
latter. By empowering the Reich Minister of the Interior to give instructions
to the Reich Governors, it indicates that these latter will be the future heads
of the various States, which - at a later date - will be transformed into Reich
provinces.
Additional legislation,
more especially the act of January 30th, 1935, by which the authority exercised
by the Reich Governors was further extended, directed these Governors (and
along with them the Governors of the Prussian provinces) to ensure that the
policy of the Leader is also adopted within the areas over which they preside
and which need not be identical with those covered by the States, in so far as
they still exist. To that end, they are authorised to make all the necessary
arrangements in connection with the administrative bodies set up within their
respective districts, including those of the Reich, those of the States, and
all others exercising public functions. They are also entitled - if instructed
by the Leader and Chancellor to do so - to promulgate the laws affecting their
particular districts and to appoint officials in his name. In doing all this,
however, they act as the representatives of the Leader and Chancellor and of
the Reich Government.
The Act passed on January
30th, 1935, contains some clauses that make it possible to establish still
closer collaboration between the executive of the Reich and the States. Thus,
it provides that the Leader and Chancellor may commission any Reich Governor to
conduct the government of the State concerned. Up to now, this provision has
been made use of in respect of Saxony, Hesse, Lippe, and Hamburg. In these
States, therefore, the conditions have already been established that will
prevail throughout Germany when the reform of the Reich Government has been
completed: The Reich Governor solely and directly conducts the State Government
and presides over the State administration so that
the States named are in
effect administrative units subject to the control of Governors appointed by
the Reich.
Thanks to all the
aforenamed measures, the individual States have already been transformed into
constituent parts of the unitary State. This development has made especial
progress in regard to Prussia - a country which comprises three-fifths of the
population and the area of Germany, which can look back upon a long and proud
history, and which therefore forms the main pillar of the constitutional
structure of the Reich. Prior to 1933, the Reich Government exercised but few
administrative functions of major importance, e.g., those in the domain of
national finance. It was thus found convenient to bring about far-reaching
co-operation between itself and the highly developed administrative system of
Prussia. First, the competent Reich Ministers were entrusted with the executive
functions of the corresponding Prussian Ministers; and later on, such
amalgamation was extended throughout their respective spheres of work. To-day,
combined administrations of this type exist in the following departments: home
affairs; justice; science, education: and popular instruction; labour;
transportation; national economy, and forests. Thus, what may be called a
"Greater Prussia" is being more efficiently merged with the"
Greater Reich" than could have been achieved by the' disintegration of
Prussia, and one of Prince Bismarck's) aspirations is nearing its realisation.
Such gradual merger will be the outcome of the "liquidation of the
States," which Herr Hitler described in 1933 as the goal of the plans for
the reform of the Reich Government. It will be further accelerated by the fact
that the Governors of the Prussian provinces (each of which covers an area
about equal to the average area covered by the other States) have been given
authority - as already stated - similar to that granted to the Reich Governors.
Like them, they are directly subject to the Reich Ministers, and represent the
Reich within the districts over which they preside.
The unification of
Germany has not only been brought about in regard to the political and administrative
functions formerly reserved to the competent organs of the States and Prussian
provinces, but also finds expression in the political status of the inhabitants
and in the form of the national symbols. Under the Weimar Constitution, there
was no German citizenship. Every German was a citizen of some particular State.
All this has been abolished, and all Germans are now citizens, or nationals, of
the Reich. Citizenship can be conferred by the States only if the Reich
Minister of the Interior gives his consent. By his famous decree of March 12th,
1933, President Hindenburg made the swastika flag - the emblem of the
victorious National Socialist movement - the national symbol of the Third Reich
along side with the black-and-white-and-red flag of the Bismarckian Reich; and
by the Act passed September 15th, 1935, the swastika flag showing the national
colours - black, white, and red - was made the principal symbol of Germany's
political unity and is now representative of the Reich, the nation, and the country's
commerce.
The progress of
unification has made itself felt in many respects. More particularly, the Reich
is now the sole competent authority in matters concerning legislation,
administration and justice. The States can only pass new legislation within the
authorisation granted them by the Reich and with the co-operation of the Reich
Governors.
The administrative
sovereignty of the States, which formed the backbone of their political life
under the Weimar Constitution, has passed over to the Reich; and their
administrative functions are now performed in pursuance of the authority vested
in them by the latter. The decree issued by the Leader and Chancellor on June
17th, 1936, subjected the important domain of police administration to the
uniform control of the Head of the German Police. By the decree governing
municipal administration (January 30th, 1935), genuine self government was
restored to the municipalities, and their legal status was uniformly
determined. Public officials - whose importance to the unitary State was
specially emphasised when the new Act governing their status (January 26th,
1937) was passed - are to-day one of the main pillars of that State. All of
them are the direct servants of the Leader and Chancellor and swear allegiance
to him upon their appointment. He is responsible, in principle, for their
appointment and dismissal.
The administration of law
and justice is the exclusive domain of the Reich, by which the whole of the
legal system with all its accessories was taken over in pursuance of the Act
passed January 24th, 1935. Accordingly, all courts of law are now Reich
institutions. They administer justice in the name of the German people. The
granting of pardons is solely vested in the Leader and Chancellor.
The reorganisation of the
political structure of the Reich, as foreshadowed by the Act of January 30th,
1934, will be definitely completed when a number of internal territorial
changes have been effected. The present distribution of territory - quite
comprehensible in view of the country's past history - is largely due to purely
accidental occurrences; and it will be necessary to remove existing anomalies
and to make arrangements by which regions with a homogeneous population and
with identical economic interests are amalgamated with one another, thus
preparing the future division of the whole country into Reich provinces. The
first step in connection with this difficult measure - difficult because so
many traditions have to be respected - was made when the Act of January 26th,
1937, was passed. It deals with the future status of Greater Hamburg and a few
similar matters. It provides that Prussia, Oldenburg, and Mecklenburg will make
certain territorial adjustments among themselves, that the Hanseatic city of
Lübeck will be incorporated with Prussia, and that the Prussian towns and rural
districts closely adjoining Hamburg will be absorbed by the latter, with which
they will henceforth form one administrative unit. By this Act the conditions
have been created that are indispensable for the territorial reorganisation of
North-Western Germany.
The National Socialist
Government is well aware of its duty to preserve the special cultural features
characteristic of each part of the country and to do everything that will
encourage their growth and further development. Care will be taken to render
this easily possible notwithstanding the unifying measures introduced in public
administration, legislation and internal government. For that reason some of
the great organisations of the German people have been closely associated with
certain towns and cities. Munich is "the capital of the National Socialist
movement," Nuremberg "the city of the National Socialist party
rallies," Goslar "the city of the Reich Food Corporation,"
Frankfort "the city of German handicraft," and Hamburg will be
"the Hanseatic city" entrusted with some tasks of nation-wide
importance.
National Socialist
Germany, however, is not merely a unitary State: it is also a unitary nation,
and its governance is based on the principle of leadership. The nation
constitutes the concrete substance of the National Socialist movement, and the
State is merely a means for the realisation of its political aims. The National
Socialist party is acknowledged to be the organisation with which by far the
greater part of the German people have identified themselves. It is therefore
best qualified to represent the nation, and the ultimate object must be to
establish the complete unity of the party and the State. Hence, leadership must
be vested in the party, and positive tasks must be entrusted to it. It is the
embodiment of the German political idea and determines Germany's political
activities. Its organisation is the supreme organisation of the German people.
The State apparatus serves the purpose of giving effect to the political
principles laid down by the party. It attends to all matters of administration
through the instrumentality of the public authorities and public officials. Its
only task is to be of service to the nation; but it is not fit for the exercise
of leadership, Similar conditions have existed in all periods of Germany's
national history. Leadership has always been the preserve of persons or groups
of persons not directly connected with the machinery of State, such as the
German kings and emperors, the Church, the estates of the realm, the princely
houses, and - in our own days - the parliamentary bodies. In all these
instances, the State apparatus was only a means employed by the ruling powers.
In National Socialist
Germany, leadership is in the hands of an organised community, the National
Socialist party; and as the latter represents the will of the nation the policy
adopted by it in harmony with the vital interests of the nation is at the same
time the policy adopted by the country.
The necessary unity of
the party and the State is the subject of the Act passed December 1st, 1933, by
which the National Socialist party is specifically described as the leading and
moving force within the State. It doe not follow, however, that the State as
such has ceased to, exist or that it is intended to merge it with the party The
National Socialist party is the only political party in Germany and therefore
the true representative of the people. It incorporates the German idea of the
State and is indissolubly associated with the State.
The unity of the party
and the State finds its highest realisation in the person of the Leader and
Chancellor who - under the terms of the Act passed August 1st 1934 - combines
the offices of President and Chancellor. He is the leader of the National
Socialist party, the political head of the State, and the supreme commander of
the defence forces. In this way, the authority of the party as being the
highest political organisation in the country has received recognition.
Whenever the proclamation of a new leader of the party takes place, the person
thus nominated is at the same time the head of the State and the supreme
commander of the defence forces.
Other means by which
effect has been given to the unity of the party and the State are the
following: the provision that the Leader's deputy is a member of the Government
and that he takes part in legislative and administrative matters; the personal
identity of Reich Ministers with Reich leaders of the party, and of Reich
Governors and of Governors of Prussian provinces with district leaders of the
party; the fact that party functionaries are also members of State and
municipal councils and the appointment of party members in connection with the
practical application of the Code of Municipal Law.
All the organisational
measures, however, that have been introduced in order to ensure the unity of
the party and the State, are dominated by the unity of the German idea of the
State as embodied in the Leader. It has created the party, has brought about
its accession to power, and will continue to inspire its actions, whilst it is
the function of the State to give reality to that idea in accordance with the
will expressed by the National Socialist party.
The German people are
aware that the principal task before them in the domain of domestic policy is
the further development of the unitary State on a national basis. I believe
that I cannot close this account more fitly than by quoting the concluding
sentences of the broadcast speech which I addressed to the nation on January
31st, 1934, immediately after the passing of the Act governing the reform of
the Reich Government.
Our
generation has been called upon to create the national unitary State. We are to
succeed where our fathers failed and to bequeath to future generations the
result of our endeavours. Let us rejoice that Fate has found us worthy of so
huge a task. Let us also realise that this day is a turning-point in the
history of our country, and that its importance can only be properly estimated
by posterity. I ask everyone of you to contribute your share to this splendid
achievement. Let the past be past, and – always conscious of your duty -
envisage the future with confidence.
Pride
yourselves on being privileged to witness so tremendous a change and to
collaborate in the work of moulding our country's destiny. Everyone is needed
for that noble purpose. And all those who love Germany must serve her to the
limit of their power, so that the great work may be completed for the benefit
of the whole nation.
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