The NDPD was co-founded by
Lothar Bolz (a former member of the
Communist Party of Germany and the
National Committee for a Free Germany in the Soviet Union),
Wilhelm Adam (a former member of the
SA) and others. It was intended to reach out to social groups that had been attracted by the
Nazi Party (NSDAP) before 1945 (such as military men or middle class
Petite bourgeoisie) and provide them with a political outlet, so that they would not be tempted by
far-right politics again or turn to the
anti-communist Western Allies.
German nationalism had been a potent force during the interwar era, millions of Germans had been members of the NSDAP, and
Stalin wanted to use them to create a new pro-Soviet and anti-Western strain in German politics. According to top Soviet diplomat
Vladimir Semyonov, Stalin even suggested that they could be allowed to continue publishing their own newspaper,
Völkischer Beobachter. German Communists and some Soviet officials were initially appalled by Stalin's ideas and were not enthusiastic in their implementation. Instead, the party launched a regional daily,
Mitteldeutsche Neueste Nachrichten, in 1952. In addition to old NSDAP members, former
Wehrmacht officers and
displaced persons were also to be intercepted by the new party, like the West German
All-German Bloc/League of Expellees and Deprived of Rights and the Austrian
Federation of Independents. The
Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) Board, meeting in May 1948, stated that "these politically unclear people" should not vote "cadets" for the bourgeois parties
CDU and
LDPD at the next election, like the West German
CDU and
FDP. According to
Klaus Schroeder, the NDPD had fewer former Nazis among its ranks than the
communist SED had. This was due to the NDPD being much smaller than the SED. The NDPD was recognized by the
Soviet Military Administration in Germany on 16 August 1948 and later sent 52 delegates to the East German
parliament, the
Volkskammer, as part of the
National Front. None of these ever voted against the government on any issue, similarly to other
block parties which were effectively puppets of the ruling party, the SED. Nonetheless, after the fall of the
Berlin Wall, the NDPD became an independent agent in politics, participating in the only free
Volkskammer election ever held (
on 18 March 1990). NDPD was not included in the electoral cartel of the other liberal-to-be parties in East Germany and entered the race alone. The results were a debacle: with 44,292 votes (0.38%) they received fewer votes than they (nominally) had members. On 27 March 1990 the NDPD became part of the
Bund Freier Demokraten, a short-lived organization that eventually merged into the
Free Democratic Party (FDP). == Programme and ideology ==