The Nazi Party's lean years, 1924-1929

Hitler was released from jail after the in December 1924. He committed the Nazis to democratic politics – taking part in elections – and began to reorganise the party, strengthening his authority as leader and beginning to build a national party structure. However, the period up to 1929 is known as the Nazi Party’s ‘lean years’ because two apparently contradictory things were happening to it:

  • it was growing in size – its membership increased from 27,000 in 1925 to 130,000 in 1929
  • but it struggled to win seats in the :
ElectionMay 1924Dec 1924May 1928
Number of seats won by the Nazis321412
Total number of seats in the Reichstag472493491
ElectionNumber of seats won by the Nazis
May 192432
Dec 192414
May 192812
ElectionTotal number of seats in the Reichstag
May 1924472
Dec 1924493
May 1928491

Development of the Nazi Party

Party reorganisation

The decision to pursue power through methods meant the party needed a national structure to attract members, develop polices and campaign. Hitler put this in place during 1925 and 1926.

New structure of the Nazi Party:

A pyramid diagram to show the structure of the Nazi Party- from top to bottom- Hitler, The SS, Leadership Corps, The SA, Party Membership and Hitler Youth

Propaganda - Mein Kampf

While in jail Hitler wrote a book called Mein Kampf (My Struggle), which was an autobiography-cum-manifesto, laying out his political beliefs and ambitions. Many of the ideas contained in the books directly informed Nazi policy after 1933 under the Third Reich, including:

  • The belief that the Jews were an inferior race to the German , and also represented a threat to the German state.
  • The need to destroy the of government and replace it with that of a single, strong dictator.
  • Germany’s requirement for Lebensraum, or living space, to house its growing population. This required Germany to expand to the East into Poland and Russia.

The Bamberg Conference 1926

Hitler called a special Nazi Party conference on February 14 1926 at Bamberg in southern Germany in response to tension between the northern and southern sections of the party. During his time in jail disagreements had grown between the two sections:

  • The northern section, led by a man named Gregor Strasser, was keen to emphasise the elements of the to attract support from the workers.
  • The southern section more interested in the and policies in order to attract support from the middle classes and farmers.

The results of the conference were:

  • Hitler insisted that policies which could be painted as , such as taking land from rich noblemen, would not be pursued.
  • However, the conference did reaffirm the 25-Point Programme, with its socialist ideas, as the party’s policy platform.
  • In addition, Hitler established the Fuhrerprinzip, or ‘Leader Principle’, the idea that the party’s leader was in absolute control and all members must follow his directions. No from this was expected or tolerated.

Reasons for limited support of the Nazi Party, 1924-28

Photo of Joseph Goebells
Figure caption,
Joseph Goebells

Despite all of this development of the party, by 1928 the Nazis were still on the fringes of politics in Weimar Germany for several reasons:

  • After 1923, the introduction of a new currency and the Dawes Plan had helped to turn Weimar’s economy around and Germans began to feel more . As part of the Plan, America agreed to loan 800 million marks to Germany (although this would later cause problems).
  • As a result of this, Germany was also more politically stable. Germans voted for moderate parties who supported the Republic, rather than more extreme parties like the Nazis who wanted to abolish it.
  • At a time of stability, the Nazis’ messages about the dangers posed by Jews and the need to abolish democracy largely fell on deaf ears.
  • Hitler was jailed and then banned from speaking in public until 1927 after the . This prevented the party from campaigning effectively.
  • The Nazi Party was under constant pressure from the Weimar authorities following the Munich Putsch. Several times it was banned nationally or in certain parts of Germany.

Nevertheless, the party was developing effective techniques under its Berlin , Joseph Goebbels, which would enable it to capitalise on the economic disaster that was to strike Germany from 1929 onwards.