Majority Social Democratic Party of Germany

He and his supporters sought to achieve socialism not through revolution, the original goal of the SPD, but through reforms and democratic majorities legitimised in general elections.[9] Karl Kautsky, the long-time editor of the journal Die Neue Zeit, and leading theorists of the reform wing also moved to the USPD.In the remaining Majority SPD, the former left-wing anti-revisionists of the Lensch-Cunow-Haenisch group, who were close to the German-Russian journalist Alexander Parvus, influenced the theoretical debates instead of Kautsky and Bernstein from 1915 onwards.Its primary achievement was the German constitutional reforms of October 1918, which made the chancellor responsible to the Reichstag rather than to the emperor and required parliamentary approval for declarations of war and peace.[13] At the end of 1918, the coalition between the MSPD and USPD collapsed due to a dispute about the use of the military against the rebellious sailors of the People's Navy Division (Volksmarinedivision) during the Christmas crisis.When the Council of the People's Deputies was attacked during the Spartacist uprising in January 1919, they decided to trust to the troops led by the old imperial officers and leaders of the newly constituted Freikorps.Noske, who later became the Weimar Republic's first Reichswehr minister, was politically responsible for the murders by Freikorps units of many revolutionaries, including Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht on 15 January 1919.A series of regulations on unemployment benefits, job creation and protection, health insurance and pensions introduced important political and social reforms.[18] In the new republic's first presidential election in August 1919, Friedrich Ebert defeated Arthur von Posadowsky-Wehner of the conservative German National People's Party by 73% to 13%.The assassination of Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau by members of the ultra-nationalist paramilitary Organisation Consul in June 1922 and the growth of the extreme Right led both the MSPD and the USPD to the view that saving the Republic was more important than their already shrinking political differences.
Eduard Bernstein , who began the reformist movement within the SPD, in 1895
Karl Liebknecht of the SPD, a leading anti-war figure, shown here in 1912
Friedrich Ebert, leader of the MSPD and republican Germany's first president, in 1918
Council of the People's DeputiesOtto LandsbergPhilipp ScheidemannGustav NoskeFriedrich EbertRudolf WissellSocial Democratic Party of GermanyIndependent Social Democratic PartyFirst World WarGerman Revolution of 1918–1919Weimar RepublicSpartacus LeagueCommunist Party of GermanyEduard BernsteinAnti-Socialist LawsparliamentarismAugust BebelBurgfriedenspolitikReichstagHugo HaaseGerman EmpireKarl LiebknechtRosa LuxemburgMarxistClara ZetkinKarl KautskyDie Neue ZeitLensch-Cunow-Haenisch groupAlexander ParvustsarismCentre PartyProgressive People's PartyGerman constitutional reforms of October 1918Maximilian von Badensoviet republicOctober RevolutionBolsheviksPeople's Navy DivisionChristmas crisisSpartacist uprisingFreikorpsReichswehrBavarian Soviet Republichealth insuranceJanuary 1919 electionWeimar National Assembly1920 electionWeimar ReichstagKapp PutschRuhr uprisingfirst presidential electionArthur von Posadowsky-WehnerGerman National People's PartyWalther RathenauOrganisation ConsulNurembergPolitical parties in GermanySocialistGeneral German Workers' Association (ADAV)Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany (SDAP)Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD)Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD)CatholicCentre Party (Zentrum)LiberalSocial liberalGerman Progress Party (DFP)Democratic People's Party (DVP)German People's Party (DtVP)Liberal Union (LV)German Free-minded Party (DFsP)Free-minded People's Party (FVP)Free-minded Union (FV)National-Social Association (NSV)Democratic Union (DV)Progressive People's Party (FVP)National liberalNational Liberal Party (NLP)Imperial Liberal Party (LRP)ConservativeFree Conservative Party (FKP)German Conservative Party (DkP)Christian Social Party (CSP)German Fatherland PartyConservative Party (Prussia)AntisemiticGerman Reform Party (DRP)German Social Party (DSP)German Social Reform Party (DSRP)RegionalistSaxon People's PartyGerman-Hanoverian Party (DHP)Bavarian Peasants' League (BB)Polish PartyDanish PartyPolitical partiesCommunistCommunist Party of Germany (KPD)Communist Workers Party of Germany (KAPD)Communist Party Opposition (KPO)Social DemocraticDemocratic SocialistOld Social Democratic Party of Germany (ASPD)Socialist Workers' Party of Germany (SAPD)AgrarianAgricultural LeagueSchleswig-Holstein Farmers and Farmworkers Democracy (SHBLD)Christian National Peasants' and Farmers' Party (CNBL)German Farmers' Party (DBP)Bavarian People's Party (BVP)Christian People's Party (CVP)German Democratic Party (DDP)German People's Party (DVP)German State Party (DStP)German National People's Party (DnVp)Economic Party (WP)People's Justice Party (VRP)Christian Social People's Service (CSVD)Conservative People's Party (KVP)VölkischeGerman Workers' Party (DAP)German Social Party (DtSP)German Socialist Party (DSP)Greater German People's Community (GVG)National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSDAP)German Völkisch Freedom Party (DVFP)National Socialist Freedom Movement (NSFB)Tannenberg Union (TB)Weimar paramilitary groups