Reichsrat (Germany)


The Reichsrat was one of the two legislative bodies of Germany during the Weimar Republic, the other being the Reichstag.
The Reichsrat consisted of members appointed by the German states and participated in legislation affecting all constitutional changes and state competences, whereas the Reichstag was the legislative body dealing with both these issues and all other issues and was elected by the people. In other words, the Reichsrat functioned similarly to a parliamentary upper house, such as the House of Lords in the United Kingdom, although the Weimar constitution did not specifically spell out a bicameral parliament. The Reichsrat was the successor body to the Bundesrat of the German Empire, which was a more formalized upper house.

History

The Bundesrat had been the central body of the German federal state founded in 1867 as the North German Confederation and in 1871 became the German Empire. As this federal state comprised the various German kingdoms, principalities and free cities under the leadership of the King of Prussia, the Bundesrat comprised the delegates of the various states. Prussia sent almost half the representatives, being the largest state by far and so could block almost any decision. Also, the meetings of the Bundesrat were headed by the German chancellor appointed by the Emperor, who usually was identical to the Prussian prime minister. The Bundesrat was a very powerful institution, as its consent was needed for any legislation. Also before the chancellor's secretaries gained prominence in the 1890s, the Bundesrat together with the chancellor effectively formed the federal government.
The Weimar constitution at least de jure curbed the rights of the various states and the powers of their representation. The Reichsrat had no influence on the federal government. It could veto the Reichstag's bills unless the Reichstag overruled the veto by a two-thirds majority. In order to reduce the power of the Prussian state government in the chamber, the Weimar constitution explicitly mandated that half of the Prussian delegation be appointed by the state's various provincial parliaments, therefore in contrast to the Bundesrat the Reichsrat was not a chamber representing only the German states. However, de facto the Reichsrat remained very powerful as the Reichstag was splintered into many parties and frequently dissolved. In effect, bills vetoed by the Reichsrat rarely became law.
After Hitler came to power in 1933, the policy of Gleichschaltung brought an end to the Reichsrat. The "Law concerning the Reconstruction of the Reich," passed on 30 January 1934, transferred the states' powers to the Reich, effectively rendering the Reichsrat impotent. It can be argued that this violated the Enabling Act, which stipulated that any laws passed under its authority could not affect the institutions of either chamber. Two weeks later, another law passed on 14 February formally abolished the Reichsrat altogether. This indisputably violated the Enabling Act, which explicitly protected the existence of both chambers. By this time, however, the Nazis had become law unto themselves, and these actions were never challenged in court.
After World War II, when the Federal Republic of Germany was founded the state's representation again was called Bundesrat and again became more powerful than the Reichsrat but not as powerful as the Bundesrat of the German Empire. The Prussian state was abolished altogether.
The number of votes in the Reichsrat, by state:
1919-08-151920-05-011921-07-141926-05-151929-04-01
Prussia2522262726
Bavaria77101111
Saxony55777
Württemberg33444
Baden33333
Hesse22222
Thuringia72222
Hamburg11222
Mecklenburg-Schwerin11111
Oldenburg11111
Brunswick11111
Anhalt11111
Bremen11111
Lippe11111
Lübeck11111
Mecklenburg-Strelitz11111
Waldeck1111-
Schaumburg-Lippe11111
In total6355666866