From 1907 to 1914 Kutscher was the
Landrat (District Administrator) of the Lauenburg im Pommern district (today, part of the
Pomeranian Voivodeship). He also was elected as a member of the
Landtag of the Province of Pomerania from 1912 to 1915. From 1914 until 1919 he was a
Geheime Regierungsrat (Privy Government Councilor) in the
Prussian Ministry of the Interior. During the
First World War, he worked closely with
East Prussian Oberpräsident Adolf Tortilowicz von Batocki-Friebe in the reconstruction of towns and communities that had been damaged or destroyed by the
Russian military invasion of August 1914. After the end of the war and the establishment of the
Weimar Republic, he became a member of the
German National People's Party. He was promoted and transferred to the in April 1919 as the
Regierungspräsident (District President) where he remained until July 1922. From 1923 to 1932 he worked as an executive board member of the German Agricultural Council under its president,
Ernst Brandes and concurrently sat as a member of the Provisional Reich Economic Council. After the
takeover of the Prussian state government by the central Reich government in July 1932, East Prussian
Oberpräsident Ernst Siehr was relieved of office and Kutscher was appointed as his successor on 4 October 1932. However, following the
Nazi seizure of power, Kutscher was slow to implement the Nazi policy of
Gleichschaltung (coordination) and was reluctant to remove qualified incumbents from their posts in favor of Nazi Party loyalists. Despite the objections of Prussian
Minister president Hermann Göring who knew that Kutscher was experienced as well as well liked and respected by the East Prussian large landowners, he was replaced. He was forced out as
Oberpräsident in favor of the
Nazi Party Gauleiter Erich Koch on 2 June 1933. On 11 July 1933, Göring appointed Kutscher to the recently reconstituted
Prussian State Council, where he would serve in a purely advisory capacity until the fall of the Nazi regime in May 1945. He served briefly as a member of the Pomeranian Provincial Council before being permanently retired in 1934. He then joined the
board of directors of both the
Deutsche Rentenbank-Kreditanstalt and the
Zentrallandschaftsbank and, additionally, was the chairman of the
supervisory board at
Deutschen Bodenkultur AG. Little is documented of his post-war life and he died in
Göttingen on 13 June 1962. == References ==