In 1872, the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) gathered a meeting for the first time in a city of the Saar Basin, in
St. Johann (now a locality of
Saarbrücken); they met in order to gain supporters starting local party activities. However, the SPD was less successful in the industrial region of the Saar Basin, usually called the Saar Coal District () than in other industrialised areas of the
German Empire. This was due to the dominance of the coal and steel industry in the Saar Coal District which showed strong paternalistic features, providing its workers better life conditions than in other branches which again played a more important role in other industrial regions of Germany. In 1917, the SPD split into the more radical Independent Social Democrats (
USPD) and the more moderate Majority Social Democrats (
MSPD), reuniting in 1922. The Social Democrats in the Saar Territory then formed the
SPD, Unterbezirk Saar, one of the lower-ranking regional subdivisions within the reunited party (Unterbezirk, i.e. subdistrict). The Reko consisted of five members, none elected by the people, but one appointed by France, one by Germany, who had to be a native from the Saar Territory, and three other nationals appointed by the League of Nations. The members of the Governing Commission served one year terms. The Governing Commission decided on all legislation autonomously. According to paragraph 23 of the
Versailles Treaty the Governing Commission was to establish an assembly of elected representatives of the inhabitants of the Saar Territory in such a manner as the Governing Commission would determine itself. In June 1922 the Governing Commission held the first election of the Regional Council, and starting with the
second election of the Regional Council the legislation period was extended from three to four years, with elections in 1928, and
in 1932. The Regional Council counted 30 members, the Governing Commission deliberately determined one person as the chairperson, the president of the Regional Council (Landesratspräsident). Those members of the SPD Reich executive, still not arrested, not yet exiled and able to flee arrived in the Saar Territory right after the ban of the party in Germany. As an organisation based in the Saar Territory the Unterbezirk Saar was not subject to the party ban in Germany and the SPD Reich executive and the SPD Saar regional executive held consultations on the situation and what to do. Whereas the majority of the Reich executive abstained from and rejected any cooperation of the SPD with parties like the
Communist Party of Germany (KPD), which was no less in favour of a dictatorship than the Nazis, the Saar executive felt like forming a cooperation with the Communists, who had long been fighting the
Weimar democracy and the SPD as its supporters, denouncing Social Democrats as social fascists. After the Nazi takeover in Germany, the Social Democrats and the Communists in the Saar Territory, with both their central party organisations in Germany destroyed and many of their fellow party comrades jailed or even murdered, quitted the joint opposition by the parties in the Regional Council against the autocratic government system in the Saar Territory. The Social Democrats yet upheld their demand for democracy, but with Germany having transformed into a dictatorship the
status quo in the Saar Territory happened to be the minor evil. The communists with their own ideas on the
dictatorship of the proletariat, also feared a return of the Saar Territory to a Nazi-ruled Germany. SPD and KPD in the Saar Territory now campaigned for continuing the status quo, with the SPD hoping for a reestablishment of a democratic Germany, and the communists wishing a Soviet Germany. However, the other parties in the Regional Council further supported the return of the Saar Territory as soon as possible even though also their party organisations within Nazi Germany had been forbidden, or dissolved anticipating that, and party members were deposed from offices, banned from the public or arrested. By a cooperation with the communists, the Unterbezirk Saar executive wanted to combine all willing powers in order to win votes in the upcoming referendum against an immediate return to Germany, but for a continuation of the status quo. Of course, the SPD Reich executive was also clearly for upholding the status quo, but against campaigning with the communists. After some days in the Saar Territory, the SPD Reich executive moved on to Prague where the SPD Reich executive, adopting its exile name
SoPaDe, could stay until the powers concluding the
Munich Agreement decided the break-up of
Czechoslovakia in October 1938. ==1933 to 1935: Social Democratic Regional Party of the Saar Territory==