'' in November 1938 in
Merkers Salt Mine Funk, who was a
nationalist and
anti-Marxist, resigned from the
Berliner Börsenzeitung in the summer of 1931 and joined the
Nazi Party, becoming close to
Gregor Strasser, who arranged his first meeting with
Adolf Hitler. Partially because of his interest in
economic policy, he was elected a
Reichstag deputy in July 1932 and made chairman of the party's Committee on Economic Policy in December 1932, a post that he did not hold for long. After the Nazi Party came to power in 1933, he stepped down from his
Reichstag position and was made
Reich Chief
Press Officer under
Joseph Goebbels. The post involved
censorship of anything deemed critical of Nazi policies. In March 1933, Funk was appointed as a
State Secretary (
Staatssekretär) at the
Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. In the summer of 1936, when Hitler commissioned
Albert Speer for the rebuilding of central Berlin, it was Funk who proposed his new title of "Inspector-General of Buildings for the Renovation of the Reich Capital".
Economics minister On 5 February 1938, Funk became General Plenipotentiary for Economics (
Generalbevollmächtigter für die Wirtschaft), as well as
Reichsminister for the Economy to permanently replace
Hjalmar Schacht who had resigned on 26 November 1937. Funk also succeeded Schacht as Minister of Economics and Labor of
Prussia (
Preußischer Minister für Wirtschaft und Arbeit) and as an
ex officio member of the
Prussian State Council. He would hold all these posts until the fall of the Nazi regime. Schacht had been engaged in a power struggle with
Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring, who wanted to tie the economics ministry more closely to his
Four Year Plan Office. Göring briefly served as Schacht's immediate successor between November 1937 and January 1938 until Funk's appointment. Schacht, who knew Funk well, said he was "extraordinarily musical" being "a first-rate connoisseur of music whose personal preferences in life were decidedly for the artistic and literary." At a dinner when he sat next to Funk, the orchestra played a melody by
Franz Lehár. Funk remarked "Ah! Lehár – the Fuhrer is particularly fond of his music." Schacht replied, jokingly, "It's a pity that Lehár is married to a Jewess", to which Funk immediately responded, "That's something the Fuhrer must not know on any account!" Speer relates how Hitler played for him a record of
Franz Liszt's
Les Préludes and said "This is going to be our victory fanfare for the Russian campaign. Funk chose it!" , was awarded the Knight's Cross for the
War Merit Cross. Between April 1938 and March 1939, Funk was also a Director of the
Switzerland-based multi-national
Bank of International Settlements. In January 1939,
Adolf Hitler appointed Funk as President of the
Reichsbank. Funk recorded that by 1938 the German state had confiscated
Jewish property worth two million
Reichsmarks, using decrees from Hitler and other top Nazis to force
German Jews to leave their property and assets to the state if they emigrated, such as the
Reich Flight Tax. On 30 August 1939, immediately prior to the outbreak of the
Second World War, Funk was appointed by Hitler to the six-person
Council of Ministers for Defense of the Reich which was set up to operate as a "
war cabinet". Throughout the war years, Funk was present at a great many important meetings, including one about the Four Year Plan held in the Great Hall of the
Air Ministry Building on 13 February 1942. The meeting included 30 crucial people in the Nazi government and was chaired by Field-Marshal
Erhard Milch. Funk sat to the right of Milch, at his request. After much debate,
Albert Vogler said "there must be one man able to make decisions. Industry did not care who it was." After further discussion, Funk stood up and nominated Milch as that man, though Speer whispered to Milch this was not a good idea. Milch declined the position, and five days later Hitler conferred the role on Speer. As he and Funk walked Hitler back to his apartment in the Chancery, Funk promised Speer that he would place everything at his disposal and do all in his power to help him. Speer relates that Funk "kept the promise, with minor exceptions." In September 1943, Funk was appointed as a fourth member of the
Central Planning Board, which was charged with managing the
raw materials and manpower for Germany's entire
war economy. He subsequently joined
Robert Ley, Speer and Goebbels in the struggle against the influence on Hitler by
Martin Bormann. Funk and Milch were again together for Göring's birthday party on 12 January 1944 when Funk, as he did every year, delivered the birthday speech at the banquet. Funk stayed in office until nearly the end of the Nazi regime, and was named by Hitler in his
last will and testament to continue as
Reichsminister for the Economy in the cabinet of Goebbels after his
suicide on 30 April 1945. However, after Goebbels' own suicide the next day, Funk was not named to the
Flensburg Government formed by
Lutz Graf Schwerin von Krosigk, effectively ending his tenure as economics minister on 5 May. Schwerin von Krosigk, the
Minister of Finance, did not include an economics minister in his new cabinet. On 11 May, Funk was arrested by
Allied forces and sent to
Camp Ashcan in
Luxembourg to await trial. ==Nuremberg==