1932: Gregor Strasser (NSDAP) [1]
1939: Otto Strasser (SNDAP) [2]
1974: Adolf von Thadden (SNDAP) [3]
1980: Erich Honecker (SNDAP) [4]
1994: Egon Krenz (SNDAP) [5]
2000: Paul Deiss (SNDAP) [6]
2007: Prinz Georg-Friedrich von Preussen (German Monarchist Union) [7]
2011: Georg Mascalo (Liberal Party)[8]
[1] Strasser and his northern faction came out victorious over Hitler's southern faction in 1926. He wins the 1932 election by a small margin.
[2] After Strasser is assassinated by a lone gunman, his more left- wing brother takes over, and reforms the NSDAP into a National-Bolshevik party.
[3] Ascended to power with little fuss.
[4] Manoeuvred himself into power after von Thadden's sudden stroke.
[5] Honecker dies of liver cancer.
[6] After Krenz's arrest on charges of corruption, a sea-change in how the 'Red Reich' operated was set in motion. The Fuhrer was clearly no longer the be all and end all of government. The reforming bureaucrat Deiss was selected by the National Bolshevik Council and was a popular choice overseas, with Premier Zhdanov flying from Moscow to personally congratulate him on his accession. Comrade Protector Galloway followed suit, saluting Deiss' 'indefatigability' after the crushing of some of the more 'backward, racialist' elements of the SNDAP.
[7] Although Deiss reforms were promising at first, his lack of charisma, combined with a severe economic crisis ultimately led to the breakdown of the red reich. As all other faction were weakened by infighting, as a surprise for everyone even themselve the still existing monarchists were able to get into power.
[8] After the restoration, the Kaiser called free elections for the first time since Weimar and Germans overwhelmingly backed the Liberal Party, untainted as it was by the horrid fusion of left and right that had dominated their lives since the 1930s. Mascalo became Chancellor, abolishing the office of Fuhrer with a ceremonial tearing apart of the 'Red Reich' constitution in front of television cameras.
1939: Otto Strasser (SNDAP) [2]
1974: Adolf von Thadden (SNDAP) [3]
1980: Erich Honecker (SNDAP) [4]
1994: Egon Krenz (SNDAP) [5]
2000: Paul Deiss (SNDAP) [6]
2007: Prinz Georg-Friedrich von Preussen (German Monarchist Union) [7]
2011: Georg Mascalo (Liberal Party)[8]
[1] Strasser and his northern faction came out victorious over Hitler's southern faction in 1926. He wins the 1932 election by a small margin.
[2] After Strasser is assassinated by a lone gunman, his more left- wing brother takes over, and reforms the NSDAP into a National-Bolshevik party.
[3] Ascended to power with little fuss.
[4] Manoeuvred himself into power after von Thadden's sudden stroke.
[5] Honecker dies of liver cancer.
[6] After Krenz's arrest on charges of corruption, a sea-change in how the 'Red Reich' operated was set in motion. The Fuhrer was clearly no longer the be all and end all of government. The reforming bureaucrat Deiss was selected by the National Bolshevik Council and was a popular choice overseas, with Premier Zhdanov flying from Moscow to personally congratulate him on his accession. Comrade Protector Galloway followed suit, saluting Deiss' 'indefatigability' after the crushing of some of the more 'backward, racialist' elements of the SNDAP.
[7] Although Deiss reforms were promising at first, his lack of charisma, combined with a severe economic crisis ultimately led to the breakdown of the red reich. As all other faction were weakened by infighting, as a surprise for everyone even themselve the still existing monarchists were able to get into power.
[8] After the restoration, the Kaiser called free elections for the first time since Weimar and Germans overwhelmingly backed the Liberal Party, untainted as it was by the horrid fusion of left and right that had dominated their lives since the 1930s. Mascalo became Chancellor, abolishing the office of Fuhrer with a ceremonial tearing apart of the 'Red Reich' constitution in front of television cameras.