Parliamentarisation When it became clear that the war was lost in late summer and fall of 1918, First
Quartermaster general Erich Ludendorff of the military
Supreme Command (OHL), pushed for the "parliamentarisation" of the German Empire, i.e. a transfer of power to those parties that held the majority in the Reichstag (SPD, Centre Party and Progress Party). The goal was to shift the blame for the military defeat from the OHL to the politicians of the majority parties. On 29 September 1918, Ludendorff suddenly informed
Paul von Hintze, the German Foreign Minister, that the
Western Front could collapse at any moment and that a ceasefire had to be negotiated without delay. However, he suggested that the request for the ceasefire should come from a new government sanctioned by the Reichstag majority. In his view, a "revolution from above" was needed. Chancellor
Georg von Hertling and Emperor
Wilhelm II agreed, although the former resigned.
November Revolution ,
Philipp Scheidemann,
Gustav Noske, Friedrich Ebert and
Rudolf Wissell after the USPD had left the Council at the end of 1918. The plans of the new German government were thrown into disarray when a confrontation between officers and crews on board the German fleet at
Wilhelmshaven on 30 October set in motion a train of events that would result in the
German Revolution of 1918–1919 that spread over a substantial part of the country over the next week. On the left, the Spartacists (numbering around 100 in Berlin) and a group of around 80 to 100 popular labour leaders from
Berlin known as
Revolutionary Stewards prepared for a communist revolution in the capital. Shortly after Prince Maximilian's announcement, the SPD leadership arrived at the chancellery and Ebert asked the chancellor to hand over the government to him. In domestic policy, a number of social reforms were quickly introduced by the Council of the People's Deputies under Ebert's leadership, including unemployment benefits, the eight-hour workday, universal suffrage for everyone over the age of 20, and increases in workers' old-age, sick and unemployment benefits.
Violence in Berlin supporting the
Kapp Putsch in March 1920, at
Potsdamer Platz,
Berlin. In the turbulent early weeks of the revolution, Ebert and the leadership of the SPD sided with the conservative and nationalistic elements in German society (civil servants, armed forces, police, judiciary) against the forces that wanted a more radical revolution. No enemy has overcome you. It was only when the superior numbers of our opponents in men and material became increasingly oppressive that we gave up the fight. And it was precisely in view of your heroic courage that it was our duty not to call for further futile sacrifices from you. [...] You will not find our state as you left it. Something new has emerged: German freedom has arisen. The old rule, which lay like a curse on our actions, has been shaken off by the German people. They have made themselves masters of their own destiny. Above all, the hopes of German freedom rest on you. [...] No one suffered more than you from the injustice of the old regime. We thought of you when we did away with a disastrous system; we fought for freedom for you; we won the right to work for you.After the ten divisions had arrived, however, rather than remaining as a cohesive force, they dispersed to their homes. After Ebert's negotiations with the insurgents broke down, his major concern was with maintaining internal peace. He ordered the rebellion to be quashed, and Gustav Noske, who was in charge of the Army and Navy, used both regular forces and
Freikorps units to bring the uprising to an end. Around 170 people lost their lives, including KPD leaders
Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, who were murdered extrajudicially by the Freikorps. == President of Germany (1919–1925) ==