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Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy The German Weimar Republic Peter Caldwell [“Carl”] Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA
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Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Feb 23, 2016

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Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy. The German Weimar Republic Peter Caldwell [“Carl”] Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA. The Revolutionary United States. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The German Weimar Republic

Peter Caldwell [“Carl”]Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA

Page 2: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The Revolutionary United States

Page 3: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy
Page 4: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another...":

Page 5: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

"When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another...":

“The unanimous Declaration of the united States of America…”

Page 6: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

“We the People of the United States of America…”

Page 7: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Representation in the U.S. Constitution

Page 8: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy
Page 9: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy
Page 10: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Abbé Sieyès, “What Is the Third Estate?”

Page 11: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Abbé Sieyès

“The Third Estate is the Nation.”

Page 12: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Abbé Sieyès

“The Third Estate is the Nation.”“In every free nation (and every nation ought to be free) there is only one way to put an end to differences about the constitution. If we lack a constitution, then a constitution must be made, and the Nation alone has the right to do so.”

Page 13: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

King Louis XVI

Page 14: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Abbé Sieyès

“…the privileged orders have shown themselves to be…an enemy of the common order.”

Page 15: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Robespierre

“Louis must die, that the nation may live.”

Page 16: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

French Revolution:Committee of Public Safety

trumps constitution; Terror deemed necessaryto suppress the enemy.

Page 17: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The Russian Revolution

• Disastrous war• Tsar impedes organization for the war,

alienates most of the nation• February Revolution replaces Tsar with a new

Provisional Government• Task: to complete the war, and then to devise

a new constitution

Page 18: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Dual Power

Page 19: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Lenin, State and Revolution

Page 20: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Lenin, State and Revolution

Revolution carried out by classes—in this case, “the proletariat organized as the ruling class,” to suppress “the exploiting class, the bourgeoisie.”

Page 21: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Lenin, State and Revolution

“Marxism educates the vanguard of the proletariat, which is capable of assuming power and of leading the whole people to socialism…”

Page 22: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Trotsky on the Red Terror

The Red Terror is a weapon utilized against a class, doomed to destruction, which does not wish to perish.

Page 23: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

American Revolution

French Revolution Bolshevik Revolution

Revolution 1776: directed against British in name of national liberation; acts of terror against British sympathizers during Revolutionary War

1789: starts with aristocratic revolt; spreads to revolt of commoners against aristocrats; spreads to revolt against King and enemies; 1793-94, turns against many revolutionaries, during the Terror

1917: breaks with the February Revolution in the name of direct rule by the Proletariat; exclusion of other parties; civil war and Red Terror; consolidation of institutions of direct rule and Red Terror over the 1920s

Constitution First constitution too weak; second constitution (1787) stabilizes authority by creating new power—but states remain

Multiple attempts to create constitution from 1790 on; constitutions trumped by emergency action against enemy, the “terror”

Party claims position above law, as motive force of revolution; constitution can be suspended by Party in interest of the revolution

Representation (who is the people? Or: What is democracy?)

Complex form of representation at federal level; tension between states and federal government

National Assembly at first; Committee of Public Safety, speaking in the name of the entire Nation

Party, speaking in the name of the Proletariat, which claims to embody the entire Nation

Page 24: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy
Page 25: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Monarch------------------------Army and Bureaucracy

Assembly-----------------------------Budget/Taxes

“Kommandogewalt”

“Budgetrecht”

Page 26: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Unified Germany

Page 27: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

“The Proclamation of the German Empire on January 18, 1871, in the Hall of Mirrors at Versailles”

Page 28: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The political system of the Empire

Individual states’ monarchs or assemblies

Bundesrat

Reichstag

All German men 25 years or older

Kaiser

ChancellorPrussian Minister-President

Legislation, budget, information

Army

=

Page 29: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

Otto von Bismarck

“If it has to be revolution, then we would rather make it ourselves than suffer it.”

Page 30: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The political system of the Empire

Individual states’ monarchs or assemblies

Bundesrat

Reichstag

All German men 25 years or older

Kaiser

ChancellorPrussian Minister-President

Legislation, budget, information

Army

=

Page 31: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

The Kulturkampf

Page 32: Revolution, Constitutionalism, and Democracy

German Reichstag Elections, 1871-1893