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  1. The German Free-minded Party or German Radical Party was a short-lived liberal party in the German Empire, founded on 5 March 1884 as a result of the merger of the German Progress Party and the Liberal Union, an 1880 split-off of the National Liberal Party. The Christian Social Party was a right-wing political party in the German Empire founded ...

  2. German People's Union. German Progress Party. German Reform Party. German Right Party. German Social Party (German Empire) German Social Party (Weimar Republic) German Social Reform Party. German Social Union (West Germany) German State Party.

  3. The Free-minded People's Party (German: Freisinnige Volkspartei, FVp) or Radical People's Party was a social liberal party in the German Empire, founded as a result of the split of the German Free-minded Party in 1893. One of its most notable members was Eugen Richter, who was party leader from 1893 to 1906. The party advocated liberalism, social progressivism and parliamentarism. On 6 March ...

  4. It was a merger between the German Reform Party (DRP) and the German Social Party (DSP). Formation [ edit ] In the early 1890s political antisemitism in Germany was represented by both the DRP (led by Otto Böckel and Oswald Zimmermann ) and DSP of Max Liebermann von Sonnenberg , with the latter being closer to mainstream conservative politics than the more radical DRP. [1]

  5. Elections. The Conservative People's Party (German: Konservative Volkspartei, KVP) was a short-lived conservative and Christian democratic political party of the moderate right in the last years of the Weimar Republic. It broke away from the German National People's Party (DNVP) in July 1930 as a result of the DNVP's increasing shift to the ...

  6. The party turned sharply to the left in late 1920s and 1930s, rejecting right-wing parties and organizations such as the German National People's Party and the Stahlhelm as "too authoritarian and set on establishing a fascist dictatorship". The DHP also pledged its loyalty to the constitution, stating that "as a party of justice and out of a sense of responsibility it prefers not to pursue a ...

  7. He had also been supported by the German Free-minded People's Party with about 4,000 votes. In the 1903 German federal election, Lewandowski received about 4,000 votes, Bogumił Labusz, who replaced Bahrke as a candidate received only 130.