Richard Kunze | |
---|---|
Born |
Sagan, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire |
5 February 1872
Disappeared | May 1945 (age 73) Berlin |
Status | presumed dead |
Nationality | German |
Other names | Knüpple Kunze |
Occupation | Political organiser |
Years active | 1914 - 1945 |
Known for | Anti-Semitic politician |
Title | Member of the Reichstag |
Term | 1933 - 1945 |
Political party |
German Conservative Party Fatherland Party Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund Deutschvölkischen Arbeitsring Berlin German National People's Party German Social Party Nazi Party |
Richard Kunze (5 February 1872 in Sagan – May 1945) was a German right-wing politician known for his anti-Semitism.
Kunze's political career began around 1914 when he was employed by the German Conservative Party along with fellow rightist Wilhelm Kube. Serving the party as general secretary he earned 12,000 marks per month for a role that largely involved travelling Germany drumming up support. Near the end of the war he became involved with the Fatherland Party where he gained the nickname Knüpple Kunze (Cudgel Kunze) because of strong attacks on the Jews.
After the war Kunze was associated with the Deutschvölkischer Schutz und Trutzbund and in 1920 he joined with Reinhold Wulle and Arnold Ruge to form the Deutschvölkischen Arbeitsring Berlin, a short-lived successor group. The group was absorbed by the joined German National People's Party (DNVP) in June 1920 and Kunze joined the DNVP and became the party's chief publicist. However Kunze split from the party in 1921, feeling that it did not match his own hard-line stance on the Jews.
In 1921 Kunze established his own anti-Semitic party in north Germany known as the German Social Party, an early rival to the Nazi Party on the far right. The new party rejected the monarchism of the DNVP, arguing that Jewish influence had been just as pronounced in the German empire as in the new Weimar Republic. The party became noted for provocative street activities, with Kunze himself becoming a well-known demagogue. However support was lost as Kunze also gained a reputation for using the party as a way to make money for himself, diverting funds into his own pockets and after a number of defections he wound the party up in 1929.