Just over 50 parties and an estimated 4,638 candidates contested the election, although only eight of the parties were large enough to have a real chance at winning seats. The Centre Party, DDP and SPD – the parties of the
Weimar Coalition that had dominated the Weimar Republic's founding – competed as a bloc using the resources and membership of the defense organization
Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold, which the three parties had formed earlier in the year. The second-strongest member of the governing coalition, the right of center DVP, tried to woo voters to it from both the center and the right. It emphasized nationalist and monarchists issues where the DNVP was a major competitor, whereas in strongholds of the DDP and Centre, it campaigned on issues such as the importance of duly implementing Germany's treaty agreements. The DNVP announced its monarchism openly in its party program:Our party remains as it was—monarchist and nationalist. Our aims are German and national. Our glorious colors are black, white, and red. Our will is firmer than ever to create a Germany free from Jewish and French domination, free from parliamentary cliques and the domination of capitalism—a Germany in which we and our children again proudly wish to do our duty. The
Communist Party of Germany (KPD), at the opposite end of the political spectrum, carried out a campaign of boisterous agitation, but it was handicapped by an improving economy and the many voters who had been alienated by its unruly tactics during the previous Reichstag session. ==Electoral system==