seated at the table (second from right),
Wilhelm Liebknecht standing in front of the window, and
August Bebel seated in front of Liebknecht. The law resulted in the banning of the Socialist Workers' Party of Germany (SAPD) and its affiliated organizations such as trade unions. Altogether some 330 workers' organizations, including many trade unions, were banned during the twelve-year life of the law. 797 social democrats were expelled as "agitators" from cities where a minor state of siege was imposed. They included Berlin in November 1878 (67 expelled) and
Hamburg in 1880 (350 expelled). Many socialists went into exile under the political pressure of the law, mainly to France, Switzerland, England and the United States of America. The Anti-Socialist Law did not affect electoral laws or parliamentary immunity. Men who were known to have social democratic backgrounds were still able to run as individuals in elections and legally participate in parliamentary work in the Reichstag and state parliaments. In contrast to the careful and pragmatic approach of party leaders, some party members radicalized in the face of the government's crackdown. According to historian
Volker Ullrich, "Only ... in the intensified confrontation with the class state did
Marx's theories find widespread resonance, because they met the need for a party ideology that explained the de facto pariah status of social democracy and at the same time pointed the way to a better future." Among the rank and file, the repression increased the sense of solidarity, and sympathy for their situation was felt not only in Germany's working class but also extended well into the bourgeoisie. Late in 1880, Berlin's police president notedthat the courage of German social democracy remains unbroken, that the movement, which had slackened somewhat for a time, has now gained new momentum, and that people's minds are once again filled with the best hopes. Despite the prohibitions, membership in labor unions grew from 50,000 before the Anti-Socialist Law to 250,000 when it lapsed in 1890. During the final three years under the law, there were 670 strikes in Germany. Bismarck was aware of the relative limitations of repressive measures. He therefore worked with the forces of reform in the Empire to push through social legislation that was progressive for its time. The goal was to win social democrats over to the government side by showing them that "the state is not merely a necessary institution but also a benevolent one". Bismarck successfully had health insurance passed in 1883, accident insurance in 1884 and old age and disability insurance in 1889. The measures, which were relatively weak, did little to slow the growing strength of the social democrats. The party received 312,000 votes in
1881, 550,000 in
1884, 763,000 in
1887 and 1,427,000 in
1890. With the latter result, the SAPD won the most votes of any party in the Empire, although because of increasingly unequal numbers of voters in urban versus rural districts, it held only 35 of the 397 seats in the Reichstag. == Lapse ==