How does a political system rebuild after a cataclysmic military
defeat? How can a society, and its political infrastructure,
resurrects itself or, in the case of Germany after World War II, be
resurrected in such a way as to ensure long-term political
stability?
Politics After Hitler is the first book to demonstrate the
importance of America, Britain, and France in the development of
party politics in Germany after 1945. In the wake of the war,
rightists of all descriptions, Communists, nationalists, and
founders of small splinter parties all came under intense and
deliberate pressure from the Western occupying forces. The
occupiers arrived in Germany in 1945 without firm plans for
reviving German politics and were forced to improvise by hastily
constructing a licensing system for new parties. The Allies then
used their licensing powers to limit and steer party politics in
desirable directions, disempowering reactionary and
hypernationalist forces, diluting fears of a Communist revolution,
and preventing the political fragmentation that led to the collapse
of the Weimar Republic a generation earlier.
Based on extensive archival research, Politics After Hitler
concludes that interference by the occupying forces made a stable
and moderate party system in the FRG much more likely than has
previously been assumed. The Allied occupation of Germany was
therefore a resounding success in helping move the German political
system toward the stability it enjoys to the present day.
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