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- <text id=93HT1278>
- <link 93XV0060>
- <link 93XP0433>
- <link 93XP0421>
- <title>
- Hitler: Hitler Into Chancellor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Hitler Portrait
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- February 6, 1933
- Hitler Into Chancellor
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Except for beer, which few Germans consider alcoholic, Adolf
- Hitler touches no alcoholic tipple. Neither does he smoke. Hot
- water he calls "effeminate." Last week, on the biggest morning of
- his life, this pudgy, stoop-shouldered, toothbrush-mustached but
- magnetic little man bounded out of bed after four hours sleep,
- soaped his soft flesh with cold water, shaved with cold water,
- put on his always neat but never smart clothes and braced himself
- for the third of his historic encounters with Paul von
- Heneckendorf und von Hindenburg, Der Reichsprasident.
- </p>
- <p> At their first meeting last August, upstart Hitler was not
- so much as invited to sit down, despite the fact that he
- represented 230 Reichstag Deputies, by far the largest party in
- the Fatherland.
- </p>
- <p> "With what power, Herr Hitler," growled Old Paul, "do you
- seek to be made Chancellor?"
- </p>
- <p> "Precisely the same power that Mussolini exercised after his
- March on Rome!" chirped cheeky Adolf. (One scowling bust of Il
- Duce, two portraits of Frederick the Great adorn Herr Hitler's
- office.)
- </p>
- <p> "So!" bristled Der Reichsprasident with the air of a
- Prussian schoolmaster about to squelch an urchin. "Let me tell
- you, Herr Hitler, if you don't behave, I'll rap your fingers!"
- </p>
- <p> Thus a complete break last August--at which time Adolf
- Hitler had been called in only to be asked by the President
- whether he would enter and support the "Cabinet of Monocles"
- headed by Lieut. Colonel Franz von Papen. With dejected, hangdog
- mien Der Osaf left Der Reichsprasident.
- </p>
- <p> In November things were different. On the one hand losses in
- Germany's general election shrank the Hitler Party, still
- largest, from 230 to 195 Reichstag seats. On the other hand,
- popular hatred and unrest at the reactionary policies of the
- "Cabinet of Monocles" forced Chancellor von Papen to resign.
- When Der Osaf (as Signor Mussolini is the"Honorary Corporal
- (Supreme Commander) of the Fascist Militia,"so Herr Hitler is the
- Oberste Sturmabteilungenfuhrer or Supreme Leader of his
- brown-shirted Storm Troops) was summoned a second time to the
- Presidential Palace he was bidden to sit down by Der
- Reichsprasident for what Germans call a "conference of four eyes"--i.e. not even a secretary was present. Called in for a moment,
- State Secretary Dr. Otto Meissner emerged to gasp, "Extraordinary
- cordiality!"
- </p>
- <p> All the same, Herr Hitler was not given carte blanche to
- form a Cabinet. The President attached seven complex and, as
- events proved, impossible conditions. After 14 days of Cabinet
- crisis there emerged as Chancellor, out of a welter of intrigue,
- "His Field Grey Eminence," suave, sly Defense Minister General
- Kurt von Schleicher. By his friends the General's adroit scheming
- is said to have "made and broken" as Chancellor both fashionable,
- aristocratic Franz von Papen and his predecessor, pious, ascetic
- Dr. Henrich Bruning.
- </p>
- <p> Papen-Hitler Plot. First sign that the von Schleicher
- Cabinet might be cracked by the same sort of intrigue that made
- it, came when Hitler & von Papen, both smarting in eclipse, met
- at Cologne for a night conference (TIME, Jan. 16). Soon afterward
- they were joined by "The Hearst of Germany," small, cyclonic
- Nationalist Party Leader Dr. Alfred Hugenberg and, reputedly, by
- Dr. Hjalmar Schacht, famed during his six years as president of
- the Reichsbank.
- </p>
- <p> Only President von Hindenburg could oust General von
- Schleicher as Chancellor and to do so he had only to refuse to
- sign a decree giving von Schleicher power to dissolve the
- Reichstag. Such power the President had given to all his
- Chancellors since enough Hitler Deputies began to be elected to
- make it impossible for a Cabinet opposed by Der Osaf to get a
- vote of confidence. Last week General von Schleicher, knowing
- that the Reichstag was about to meet this week, called on
- President von Hindenburg to ask for what had become "the usual
- powers of dissolution."
- </p>
- <p> They were refused. The interview was as short as that of
- Hindenburg and Hitler last August. In effect Old Paul kicked out
- General von Schleicher & Cabinet, accepted their resignations.
- Why?
- </p>
- <p> Straightforward and outspoken, President von Hindenburg has
- never concealed his preference for Franz von Papen as Chancellor.
- "With a heavy heart," he declared amid the Cabinet crisis last
- fall, "I have repressed my own personal inclination to re-appoint
- Colonel von Papen and I have commissioned Defense Minister
- General von Schleicher to form a new Cabinet." Next day, ousted
- von Papen received a photograph of Der Reichsprasident inscribed
- in Old Paul's firm hand, Ich hatte einen Kameraden ("I had a
- Comrade"). By last week Comrade von Papen had convinced Comrade
- von Hindenburg that the best interests of the Fatherland demanded
- appointment of the leader of the largest party to be Chancellor.
- Proposing himself as Vice-Chancellor and Reich Commissioner for
- Prussia, Comrade von Papen argued that with this "safeguard"
- (himself) in the Cabinet it would be safe to appoint Hitler
- Chancellor. Devious but cogent, this proposition won 85-year-old
- Comrade von Hindenburg's "Ja!"
- </p>
- <p> "Yes, Yes Indeed!" When sober, cold-water-shaven Adolf
- Hitler turned up for the third historic time at the President's
- Palace last week, he found Old Paul all smiles and spruce Colonel
- von Papen ready to pop the question: "Will you, Herr
- Reichsprasident, entrust Herr Hitler with a mandate to form a
- Cabinet?"
- </p>
- <p> "Yes. Yes." said President von Hindenburg. "Yes indeed."
- </p>
- <p> Outside the Palace, thousands of Hitlerites roared guttural
- victory cheers.
- </p>
- <p> "Heil Hitler! Deutschland erwache! Juda verrecke!" they
- bellowed as he emerged waving his black felt hat. "Hail Hitler!
- Germany awake! Perish Juda!"
- </p>
- <p> Wasting not a second, Chancellor Hitler piled into his
- Mercedes beside the chauffeur, shot off between lines of police
- to form his Cabinet with record speed. There were rumors,
- doubtless untrue, but alarming, that General von Schleicher &
- Friends were about to attempt a "General's Putsch" and proclaim
- restoration of the House of Hohenzollern. In less than an hour
- the new Hitler Cabinet had met for a brief conference in the
- Reich Chancellery and Germans were staring at this slate:
- </p>
- <p> Chancellor--Adolf Hitler
- </p>
- <p> Vice-Chancellor and Reich Commissioner for the State of
- Prussia--Franz von Papen.
- </p>
- <p> Foreign Minister--Baron Constantin von Neurath.
- </p>
- <p> Minister of Interior--Dr. Wilhelm Frick (Reichstag Leader
- of the Hitler Party).
- </p>
- <p> Defense--Lieut. General Werner von Blomberg.
- </p>
- <p> Finance--Count von Krosigk.
- </p>
- <p> Economics & Food--Alfred Hugenberg.
- </p>
- <p> Labor--Franz Seldte (Leader of Germany's "Steel Helmet"
- War veterans).
- </p>
- <p> Minister Without Portfolio, Reich Commissioner for Air and
- State Minister of Interior for Prussia--Hermann Wilhelm Goring
- (Hitlerite Speaker of the Reichstag).
- </p>
- <p> Significance. At first glance this Cabinet seemed to bristle
- with anti-Hitler "safeguards":
- </p>
- <p> No. 1: von Papen
- </p>
- <p> No. 2: von Neurath who was Foreign Minister in the past two
- cabinets, is tolerably well liked in France where Hitler is
- Beelzebub.
- </p>
- <p> No. 3: General von Blomberg, never before in politics, a
- crony of President von Hindenburg, who can be trusted to keep the
- Army out of Hitler mischief.
- </p>
- <p> No. 4: Count von Krosigk, another hold-over firmly
- entrenched in his Ministry of Finance.
- </p>
- <p> On second glance, the Cabinet was seen to give Adolf Hitler
- a handsome slice of power, providing the Centre Parties support
- him when the Reichstag meets, which seemed not improbable,
- considering the "safeguards."
- </p>
- <p> As Chancellor, Herr Hitler hopes shortly to provoke an
- election and go to the country with a matchless slogan: "For
- Hindenburg and Hitler!"
- </p>
- <p> As Minister of Interior, Hitler-Henchman Frick will control
- Germany's electoral machinery and the Federal police.
- </p>
- <p> Speaker Goring, another Hitler henchman will have similar
- control, as Prussian Minister of Interior, in Germany's largest
- state.
- </p>
- <p> Potentially last week formation of the Hitler Cabinet was of
- such maximum importance that Berlin's famed Der Tag (not a Hitler
- organ) cried: "This historic day marks the birth of a new
- Germany!"
- </p>
- <p> "In appointing this Cabinet," warned the Socialist Vorwarts,
- "the President has assumed a fearful responsibility. He is the
- guarantor that this Government shall not depart from a
- constitutional basis and that it shall resign immediately as soon
- as defeated in the Reichstag."
- </p>
- <p> Reassured the Borsen (Stock Exchange) Courier: "Hitler the
- Chancellor will be a different man than Hitler the agitator."
- </p>
- <p> On Berlin change stocks rose two or three points on news of
- the Hitler Cabinet, closed after losing most of their small
- gains.
- </p>
- <p> Slightly ludicrous was the appointment of Dr. Hugenberg (who
- is constantly proposed for Chancellor by his newspapers), to the
- Ministry of Economics and Food.
- </p>
- <p> Rise of Hitler. Recalling that Napoleon was born in Corsica,
- loyal Hitlerites boast: "Our Leader is more German than Napoleon
- was French!"
- </p>
- <p> The new Chancellor was born to the wife of an Austrian
- customs inspector on the German frontier of Austria in 1889. Shy,
- nervous and inclined to keep to himself, Adolf was encouraged by
- his mother to do water-colors. In his teens he became an orphan,
- went to Vienna, tried to be a painter, became a builder's helper
- ("house painter" to his critics) and emigrated to Munich with $4
- in his pocket rather than perform his Austrian compulsory
- military service.
- </p>
- <p> No coward, he enlisted in the German Army in 1914, mostly
- fought against British troops, never learned English, picked up a
- little French, won an Iron Cross and ended the War in a hospital,
- gassed.
- </p>
- <p> In the early 1920's War-Veteran Hitler plunged into local
- Munich politics, rose by sheer gift of gab, lung power and
- personal magnetism to such eminence that on the night of Nov. 8,
- 1923 he with General Erich Ludendorff attempted the famed "Beer
- Putsch." In the presence of the Military Governor of Bavaria,
- General von Kahr, spellbinder Hitler leaped upon a beer-greasy
- table and bellowed:
- </p>
- <p> "I proclaim the Nationalist Revolution! Von Kahr and his
- brother officers will please join me. I guarantee their safety."
- </p>
- <p> Governor von Kahr did join Hitler and Ludendorff ("at the
- point of a pistol," he afterwards testified). Enough other beer-
- soused Bavarians joined to make it necessary for a Reichswehr
- regiment to shoot several people. When Ludendorff and Hitler were
- tried for high treason the General was acquitted, the upstart
- given a light prison sentence from which he was released in a few
- month ("as insane," say enemies).
- </p>
- <p> Starting from scratch again, but with confidence in his own
- spellbindery, Adolf Hitler slowly worked up the fantastic party
- he calls National Socialist, Nazi Fascist. Its program consists
- of stentorian appeals to every form of German prejudice.
- Essentially Nationalists and patrioteers, the Nazis insert
- "Socialist" into their party's name simply as a lure to
- discontented workers.
- </p>
- <p> "Marxism is not Socialism!" Herr Hitler has absurdly
- postulated. "The Marxians have stolen the term and confused its
- meaning. I shall take Socialism away from the Socialists."
- </p>
- <p> Today it is no exaggeration to state that the Nazi Party is
- pledged to so many things that it is pledged to nothing.
- Abolition of interest ("usury"), expulsion of Jews from Germany,
- confiscation of department stores and the parceling out of their
- different departments to small merchants: these are but three
- pledges mouthed at Nazi mass meetings. More basic are the Party's
- pledges to "scrap" the Treaty of Versailles and pay not a pfennig
- more in Reparations--but all German statesmen have those aims!
- </p>
- <p> That precisely is the point. In so far as it has a doctrine,
- National Socialism promises the bulk of the German people
- whatever they want. Also its "Storm Battalions" offer shelter,
- food and a pittance to perhaps 200,000 German unemployed. The
- money comes from rich Germans who expect favors from Chancellor
- Hitler and from every German who has dropped a copper into the
- box thrust at him by a young Storm Trooper.
- </p>
- <p> Results count, and are measured by votes. In 1928 the Party
- won a ludicrous twelve Reichstag seats; in 1930 it became second
- largest party with 107 seats. It has been largest since last
- August. The fact that entrenched, conservative German
- industrialists like Fritz Thyssen count themselves Herr Hitler's
- friends; the fact that ex-Kaiser Wilhelm's fourth Son Prince
- August ("Auwi") Wilhelm is a Nazi; and the fact that Germany's
- new Cabinet is so full of "safeguards," sufficiently explained
- last week the equanimity with which best posted observers greeted
- the advent of Chancellor Hitler.
- </p>
- <p> Enterprising Manhattan reporters managed to find local
- "Nazi" headquarters in the beery Yorkville neighborhood. Patient
- knocking at last aroused six preoccupied Teutons, some curiously
- clad in pajamas, all with well-thumbed newspapers in hand. "Maybe
- we send a cable," said the spokesman. "Maybe we celebrate
- tonight." Pointing to the new Chancellor's photograph he added
- pridefully: "Just like Mussolini ja?"
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-