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otto bauer andhis time 39
in state enterprises on 23November 1933 and theArbeiterkammer (workers’
chamber)inDecember1933,followedbythedissolutionofthelatteron27June
1938.
The solutions offered by Bauer and his comrades during this year, which
wassodecisive for theAustrianworkers’movement,didnotmeet theexpect-
ations of partymembers and sympathisers.While theworking class staged
spontaneousdemonstrations toprotestagainst thedissolutionofparliament,
theparty leadership couldnot agreeonproclaiminga general strike.At that
time, the sdapwasbigger than theSocialDemocraticPartyofGermany,had
greatersocialweight,hadpreserveditsunity,anddidnothavetoconsiderthe
influenceofthekpö.Theonlyobjective justificationforthepoliticalpassivity
of its leadershipwas the fact that the sdap’s electoral support basewas con-
centrated inVienna,LowerAustriaandStyria since industrial areas,unlike in
Germany,weredispersedacrosstheentirecountry.Provincesaverse,evenact-
ivelyhostile,tothesocialistssurroundedtheseterritories.Evenso,theworking
classwasmore internally consolidatedandbetter armed inMarch 1933 than
wouldbe the case a year later, asBauer confirmed inDerAufstandderöster-
reichischenArbeiter (TheUprisingof theWorkersofAustria, 1934). Indeed, 1934
sawworkers buildbarricades in anact of desperation to save the remains of
a dying democracy. The fall of democracywas largely due to political rather
thaneconomic factors.Amongthemwereaweakparliamentarypractice, the
ossification and bureaucratisation of political parties, offers of co-operation
being rejected, the personal charisma of politicians of an authoritarian pro-
clivity, the sdap leadership’s erratic assessmentof possibilities to evoke sup-
port from themiddle classes, thepolitical ambitions of the church, and, not
least, theSocialDemocrats’ excessivewillingness tocompromise, a tendency
whichdominatedinBauer’spositions.In1933,hefoughtforacoalitiongovern-
ment,andinordertoachievesuchco-operation,heevenamendedhisofficial,
if not actual, position concerningAnschluss. Bauer’s suggestion to theChris-
tianSocialPartytowageacommonstruggleagainst fascisminMarch1933led
todiscordwithin thesdap.89Dollfuss rejected theoffer, yet thisdidnot stop
Bauer frombelieving in thepotential of anunderstandinguntil January 1934
andattemptingtoconvincethechancellorofco-operation–hewasprepared
89 AsButterweggestates, theautumnof1933sawtheformationofapartyist left for thefirst
timesincetheendofthewar.UndertheleadershipofErnstFischerandLudwigWagner,it
criticisedwhat it regardedas ‘Austromarxist fatalism’,defensivemethodsofstruggle, fear
of foreign interventionandcompromisewith the government.At the sdapcongress in
1933,theleftwasaminority. Itdroppeditsresolution,whichcalledforactivestruggle,not
least inordertopreservepartyunity.SeeButterwegge1990,pp.463–5.
Otto Bauer (1881–1938)
Thinker and Politician
- Titel
- Otto Bauer (1881–1938)
- Untertitel
- Thinker and Politician
- Autor
- Ewa Czerwińska-Schupp
- Verlag
- Brill
- Ort
- Leiden
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-90-04-32583-8
- Abmessungen
- 7.9 x 12.0 cm
- Seiten
- 444
- Schlagwörter
- Otto Bauer, Österreich, Österreichische, Politiker, Denker, Austomarxismus, Sozialismus, Moral, Imperialismus, Nation, Demokratie, Revolution, Staat, Faschismus, Krieg, SDAP
- Kategorie
- Biographien