After the
Nazi seizure of power on 30 January, Pfundtner, with his vast knowledge and experience of ministerial bureaucracy, was appointed the State Secretary in the
Reich Ministry of the Interior under
Wilhelm Frick on 3 February 1933. Pfundtner soon set in motion plans to purge the civil service of
Social Democrats and others perceived to be opponents of the regime, to be replaced by Nazis. His plan did not specifically mention
Jews as a group to be purged. However, on 7 April 1933, the government promulgated the
Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service that, with certain exceptions, required the dismissal of Jewish civil servants. As early as 4 July 1933, in a speech to the Academy for Administrative Science, Pfundtner announced plans for a new law that would distinguish between those inhabitants possessing German or "alien" blood. Only those eligible for "Reich citizenship" would "be permitted to work in and for the State". On 25 August 1933, Pfundtner signed the (first expatriation list), revoking the citizenship of 33 Germans, mostly opposition politicians and journalists, among them
Albert Grzesinski,
Philipp Scheidemann,
Bernhard Weiß and
Otto Wels. On 2 October 1933, Pfundtner became one of the founding members of
Hans Frank's
Academy for German Law. When the Prussian Interior Ministry was merged with the Reich Interior Ministry on 1 November 1934, Pfundtner remained a State Secretary in the combined ministry and
Hermann Göring, the Prussian
minister president, appointed him to the
Prussian State Council. On 13 September 1935, together with his
Ministerialdirektor (Ministerial Director)
Wilhelm Stuckart, Pfundtner met in
Nuremberg with Hitler, who instructed them to prepare a law to address marriages between
Aryans and non-Aryans. They set to work immediately, enlisting the assistance of
Ministerialrat (Ministerial Councilors)
Bernhard Lösener and , as Hitler wanted to have the proposal passed by the
Reichstag when it met on 15 September. Pfundtner thus played a key role in drafting two of the statutes that would become known as the
Nuremberg Laws: the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, which forbade marriage and extramarital intercourse between Jews and Germans, and the Reich Citizenship Law, which declared that only Aryans were eligible to be Reich citizens, while non-Aryans were excluded from citizenship rights. In addition, Pfundtner introduced the plan for the
Romani Holocaust to exterminate
Romani people in March 1936. This document referred to "the introduction of the total solution of the Gypsy problem on either a national or an international level." Pfundtner was from 1934 to 1936 a member of the Presidium of the Organizing Committee and chairman of the Construction and Finance Committee for the
1936 Winter Olympics to be held at
Garmisch-Partenkirchen. On 3 March 1936, he was named chairman of the Board of Trustees for the
Tannenberg Memorial. On 23 September 1936, he was appointed president of the Examination Board for senior civil servants. On 19 August 1943, Pfundtner submitted his resignation as State Secretary, at the same time that Frick was removed as Interior Minister in favor of
Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler. Pfundtner went into retirement and his post was left unfilled. He and his wife committed suicide in Berlin on 25 April 1945, to avoid capture by
Red Army soldiers. == References ==