BVP Minister President Kahr was responsible for the idea of establishing Bavaria as an (cell of order) within the "Marxist chaos" and completely "Judaized" Weimar Republic. In 1923 Minister President Knilling appointed Kahr state commissioner general () with dictatorial powers. After Kahr immediately imposed a state of emergency in Bavaria, the government in Berlin did the same for all of Germany. Kahr then stopped enforcing the
Law for the Protection of the Republic, which increased the punishments for politically motivated acts of violence and banned organizations that opposed the "constitutional republican form of government" along with their printed matter and meetings. In spite of his right-wing stances, he helped put down Adolf Hitler's November 1923
Beer Hall Putsch. The (Bavaria Watch), the uniformed paramilitary unit of the Bavarian People's Party, was formed in 1925. It disbanded itself in April 1933. After the stabilization of the political situation in Germany, the BVP pursued a more moderate course under the leadership of Minister President
Heinrich Held (1924–1933) and party president
Fritz Schäffer. Under Held, the Bavarian conflicts with the Reich government ended, the economy stabilized, the state administration was reformed and infrastructure expanded. At the national level, the BVP voted in 1925 against Centre Party Reich presidential candidate Wilhelm Marx and for
Paul von Hindenburg since it feared socialist-driven centralization. == Rise of the Nazi Party and end of the BVP ==