Conflicts with the Reich government On 26 September 1923, following a period of turmoil that included assassinations and political violence, the Bavarian state government of Minister President
Eugen von Knilling (BVP) appointed Kahr state commissioner general () with dictatorial powers under Article 64 of the Bamberg (Bavarian) Constitution. The step was taken in protest against the Reich government for ending passive resistance to the
occupation of the Ruhr by French and Belgian troops. and on 29 September he suspended the enforcement in Bavaria of the Law for the Protection of the Republic. Beginning in mid-October, Kahr again had several hundred Jewish families who had immigrated from Eastern Europe decades earlier expelled from Bavaria. By this means he sought to solidify his support among the supporters of
Adolf Hitler and the
Deutscher Kampfbund, a league of nationalist societies led by Hitler. At the time Kahr and Hitler were in rivalry with each other for leadership of the right-wing camp. On 20 October 1923, Lieutenant General
Otto von Lossow, regional commander of the
Reichswehr (the German armed forces) and commander of the Munich military district, was relieved of his posts by Defense Minister Gessler for refusing to obey orders. Kahr then reinstated him as Bavarian state commander and entrusted him with the command of the Reichswehr in Bavaria. Two days later, he had the Munich Reichswehr Division take an oath to Bavaria and its government as "trustees of the German people". On 9 November 1923 Reich President Ebert imposed a military state of emergency across Germany and told General
Hans von Seeckt to do "whatever was necessary to secure the Reich". In spite of Bavaria's openly rebellious acts, the Reich government did not impose a federal intervention (
Reichsexekution) against it. Seeckt would not have been willing to implement the because he insisted that "troops do not fire on troops". He was also pursuing dictatorial aspirations of his own at the national level. Kahr, together with von Lossow and
Hans von Seisser, commander of the Bavarian police, formed a "triumvirate" with the goal of using Bavaria as a base from which to overthrow the Republic and establish a national dictatorship. It was to be accomplished by a march on Berlin modeled on
Benito Mussolini's successful
March on Rome of a year earlier and was not to include Hitler. Kahr warned the "patriotic associations" – including the – against independent action. He remarked to an assembly of high-ranking officers on 19 October 1923 that the real matter at hand was "a great battle of two worldviews which will decide the destiny of the German people – the international Marxist-Jewish and the national Germanic." Weighing on Kahr's mind however, were the Weimar leadership's warnings against revolutionary activities, including the threat of a military intervention. Seeckt reiterated the warnings, prompting the triumvirate of Kahr, Lossow and Seisser to back down. They then informed the members of the
Kampfbund that it was they who would determine when action would be taken. The statement greatly angered Hitler.
The Hitler-Ludendorff Putsch On 8 November 1923, while Kahr was delivering a speech to an audience of some 3,000 in the packed hall of Munich's
Bürgerbräukeller, the meeting was stormed by Adolf Hitler,
Erich Ludendorff,
Hermann Göring and other
National Socialists. Hitler proclaimed a "national revolution" and called for Kahr, Lossow and Seisser to meet with him. In a back room, he compelled Kahr and the others at gunpoint to join the national uprising that he had proclaimed. Returning to the hall, the three called for those present to support Hitler's coup, which was planned for the next day. In view of their word of honor not to do anything against Hitler, Ludendorff did not have Kahr, Lossow and Seisser imprisoned. The latter two then immediately initiated countermeasures to put down the coup. After a few hours of internal wrangling, Kahr also turned against Hitler and at 2:55 a.m. broadcast a ban on the Nazi Party,
Freikorps Oberland and
Bund Reichskriegsflagge (Imperial War Flag Society). During the night, and unknown to Hitler, the three men prepared resistance against the coup. The following day when Hitler and his followers marched from the beer hall to the
Bavarian War Ministry to overthrow the Bavarian government as a prelude to their "March on Berlin", the police dispersed them.
Fifteen Nazis and four police officers were killed. Kahr's involvement in the collapse of Hitler's coup attempt cost him the support of right-wing nationalist forces in Bavaria, and he was made a scapegoat for the failure. On 26 February 1924 Kahr testified as a witness in the treason trial against Hitler and the other putschists. From 16 October 1924 to 31 December 1930 he served as president of the Bavarian Administrative Court. He retired in relative obscurity on 1 January 1931. == Death ==