After the election, von Papen urged Hindenburg to continue to
rule by decree, while at the same time attempting to form a coalition with the Nazis. Negotiations failed and Papen was dismissed by Hindenburg, who replaced him with Defence minister
Kurt von Schleicher. In the subsequent two months, Schleicher held talks with a faction of the Nazi Party led by
Gregor Strasser in an attempt at a
Querfront strategy, attempting to unite
Strasserists, the SPD, the Centre Party and the trade unions. The plans failed when Hitler disempowered Strasser and approached Papen for coalition talks; it is disputed if Schleicher was actually serious about his proposal. Since Schleicher's ineffective rule was growing increasingly unpopular among German elites, Papen convinced Hindenburg to dismiss him and
appoint Hitler as Chancellor on 30 January 1933, with a cabinet composed of NSDAP and DNVP politicians; the new government lacked a majority in the Reichstag, so
a snap election was called and scheduled for March by Hindenburg. On 27 February,
the Reichstag was set on fire allegedly by Dutch
council communist Marinus van der Lubbe: in response, the
Reichstag Fire Decree was enacted, suspending basic liberties and allowing the Nazis to conduct mass arrests of KPD members and freely engage in paramilitary violence against their opponents. The elections were the last free and fair all-German election before the Nazi seizure of power, since the subsequent vote in March saw massive suppression against opposition politicians, especially SPD and KPD ones. The next free national elections were not held until
1949 in
West Germany and
1990 in
East Germany. The next free all-German elections took place in
December 1990, after
reunification two months earlier. ==References==