Communist Party of Germany
The Communist Party of Germany (in German, Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands – KPD) was formed in December of 1918 from the Spartacist League, which was itself a radical revolutionary socialist offshoot of the more democratic Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany. The KPD was brutally suppressed by the Nazis, with known Communists sent to concentration camps and systematically killed during the Holocaust. After World War II, Soviet occupation authorities forced the KPD to merge with the Social Democrats into the Socialist Unity Party (German Sozialistiche Einheitspartei Deutschlands, or SED), which became the sole governing power in East Germany. After German reunification, the SED became the Party of Democratic Socialism.
The faction was first led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, though large portions of the membership opposed their views. Some even formed a splinter organization, the Communist Workers Party. The failed Spartacist Uprising in Berlin was carried out one month after the KPD's formation, in January of 1919, against the specific instructions of Luxemburg and Liebknecht. The right wing Freikorps militias joined with the remnants of the German army and the Social Democrats to suppress the revolt. Liebknecht and Luxemburg were captured, tortured, killed, and dumped into a canal.
This left the party in the hands of Karl Levi, who sought to win over social democratic workers. These efforts were rewarded when a substantial section of the Independent Social Democratic Party joined the KPD making it a mass party for the first time.
Other prominent members included Leo Jogiches, Clara Zetkin, Paul Levi, Franz Mehring and Ernst Meyer.
However the leadership was never stable and Levi was expelled by the Comintern for indiscipline, despite Lenin's argument that his position was correct. Further leadership changes took place in the early 1920s, until after 1923, a leadership was installed loyal to the rising Stalin faction in Russia. In 1928, this leadership, headed by Ernst ThÃÂälmann, supported the so called Third Period conception that the Social Democrats were a greater enemy than the National Socialists or Nazis.
In the Weimar republic era, the KPD pursued (on direction from Moscow) the disastrous policy of concentrating on the Social Democrats first, assuming that this would lead to a Nazi regime that would soon collapse and be replaced with socialism. During this period, they maintained a solid electoral performance, gaining 100 deputies in the November 1932 elections. In the presidential election in 1932, ThÃÂälmann took 13.2% of the vote, compared to 30.1% that Hitler got.
Soon after the appointment of Hitler as Chancellor, the Reichstag was set on fire. The Nazis publicly blamed the fire on Communist agitators (though many historians believe that the Nazis themselves may have set the fire), and used as a pretext to introduce laws enabling suppression of political parties. The Enabling Act, which legally gave Hitler dictatorial control of Germany, was passed by a Reichstag session held after the Communist deputies had been arrested and jailed.
During World War II, many German Communists ended up dead (Ernst ThÃÂälmann, Werner Seelenbinder), in exile (Walter Ulbricht), or were imprisoned (Erich Honecker). As part of the Holocaust, known Communists were shipped to concentration camps and killed.
In West Germany, the party was banned in 1956 by the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany. It was later legalised as the German Communist Party (DKP), which still exists.