After the defeat of
Nazi Germany in May 1945, former members of the Nazi Party underwent
denazification procedures. This resulted in those judged to be "offenders" either being jailed, paying fines or being banned from participation in electoral politics. However, the vast majority of Party members were determined to be "followers" or "exonerated" and never faced criminal prosecution or civil penalties. These individuals joined various political parties, including the FDP. The FDP
Bundestag members at the end of 1950 voted in favor of ending the denazification process altogether, thus attracting additional support from former Nazis. At their party conference in
Munich in 1951 the FDP demanded the release of all "so-called war criminals" and welcomed the establishment of the (German Soldiers' Association), an organization of former
Wehrmacht and
SS members, in order to advance the integration of former Nazi forces into the political system. In particular, the very
nationalist FDP state association of
North Rhine-Westphalia, under the leadership of
Friedrich Middelhauve, enthusiastically welcomed ex-servicemen and former Nazi Party members in order to expand its voter base to the right. Ernst Achenbach, as a state
Landtag member, together with Werner Best, coordinated a campaign to advocate for a general amnesty for war criminals. He and Middelhauve envisioned creating a unified organization of all the right wing parties along the lines of the
Weimar Republic-era
Harzburg Front, an effort they dubbed the
Nationale Sammlung (National Collective). In the summer of 1952, Middelhauve presented to the state party conference in
Bielefeld the so-called "German Program", which had been formulated largely with input from Naumann, Best, Fritzsche and Six. The text included
revanchist ideas such as refusing to renounce the right of
expelled Germans to return to their home territories, and also voiced objections to the Allies judgments of former soldiers. Middelhauve presented the program at the FDP federal party conference at
Bad Ems in November 1952 but it was not adopted at the federal level, in order to forestall a split in the party. Nevertheless, Middelhauve emerged from the party conference strengthened when he was elected as one of two deputy party leaders. In the municipal elections of November 1952, some fifty former Nazi officials in North Rhine Westphalia were elected to office as candidates of the FDP. Many observers were alarmed by the FDP's rightward shift. The
Frankfurter Rundschau characterized the events at the party conference as the "intra-party January 30th of the FDP", referring to
Adolf Hitler's 1933 assumption of power; France's
Le Monde stated that the FDP was on the way to transforming itself into a "nationalist and reactionary movement of the extreme right". The FDP, along with the DP, was viewed as part of an "extremist" bloc in an analysis by US intelligence officials. A study by Michael Klepsch in 2009 examined a total of 451 state
Landtag deputies in North Rhine-Westphalia who had been at least 18 years old at the end of the war. His findings revealed 41 men with past Nazi Party membership, among whom were full-time Party officials and members of the
SS or
Waffen-SS. Eight served as parliamentary faction leaders and two became ministers in the state government. The proportion of former Nazis in the post-war years was particularly high in the FDP, with more than one in five FDP members of the state parliament having a Nazi past. Between 1955 and 1975, the FDP parliamentary faction was led by six former Nazis, including three SS men. The outlook was similar in the FDP party organizations in the states of
Lower Saxony and
Hesse. In Lower Saxony, the FDP state manager was , a former employee of the Propaganda Ministry and once the
Hitler Youth leader of
Upper Silesia. In Hesse, from December 1952 the DP state chairman was , the former
Oberbürgermeister and Nazi Party
Kreisleiter of
Offenbach am Main. Numerous former Nazi officials were active in both these parties as well as in the All German Bloc. All three parties also employed as organizers or candidates many former functionaries of the recently dissolved Socialist Reich Party. == British actions of January 1953 ==