Gustav Bauer

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Gustav Bauer
Minister of Labour
In office
4 October 1918 – 21 June 1919
Staatssekretär: 4 October 1918 – 13 February 1919
ChancellorMax von Baden
Friedrich Ebert (de facto)
Philipp Scheidemann
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byAlexander Schlicke
Member of the Reichstag
In office
24 June 1920 – 13 June 1928
ConstituencyMagdeburg
Member of the Weimar National Assembly
In office
6 February 1919 – 21 May 1920
ConstituencyBreslau
Personal details
Born
Gustav Adolf Bauer

(1870-01-06)6 January 1870
Died16 September 1944(1944-09-16) (aged 74)
Berlin, Nazi Germany
Political partySocial Democratic Party
SpouseHedwig Moch

Gustav Adolf Bauer (listen

German Revolution that preceded the formal establishment of the Weimar Republic
.

Bauer became minister president of the Weimar National Assembly in June 1919 after Philipp Scheidemann resigned in protest against the Treaty of Versailles. Following the adoption of the Weimar Constitution in August 1919, Bauer's title formally changed to "chancellor". During his term of office, a crucial tax restructuring was enacted, as were a series of important social reforms that affected unemployment relief, maternity benefits and health and old age insurance.

After his cabinet fell in March 1920 as a result of its response to the Kapp Putsch, Bauer served as vice-chancellor, minister of the treasury, and minister of transportation in other cabinets from May 1920 to November 1922. In 1925 he was forced to resign his seat in the Reichstag due to his involvement in the fraud and bribery of the Barmat scandal. He was allowed to resume his seat in 1926. He kept it until 1928 when he retired from public life.

Early life

Bauer was born on 6 January 1870 in

Darkehmen, near Königsberg in the Province of Prussia (now Ozyorsk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia) as the son of court bailiff Gustav Bauer and his wife Henriette (née Gross). From 1876 to 1884, he attended primary school in Königsberg. After 1884, he worked as an office assistant and then as head clerk for a lawyer at Königsberg.[1]

In 1895, he became president of the Union of Office Employees of Germany, a white-collar union that he co-founded. He also was editor of the publication Der Büroangestellte ("The Office Worker") and in 1903 was named head of the Central Labour Secretariat of the Free Trade Unions in Berlin. In 1908, Bauer became second chairman of the General Commission of Trade Unions in Berlin, a position he held until 1918.[1]

On 2 October 1911, Bauer married Hedwig Moch.[1]

Political career

Imperial Germany and revolutionary period

In 1912, Bauer was elected to the

Revolution of 1918/19. After Baden resigned on 9 November 1918, Bauer continued to serve under Chancellor Friedrich Ebert (SPD) and then under the Council of the People's Deputies
, also headed by Ebert, which replaced the imperial chancellorship.

On 12 November the Council issued an appeal "To the German People" that included a number of promises related to labour, notably the introduction of the eight-hour workday and the creation and protection of jobs. In the following weeks, the Council issued decrees regulating the hiring, dismissal and pay of industrial workers, including war invalids and demobilised military personnel.[2] In the Stinnes–Legien Agreement of 15 November, industry agreed to introduce the eight-hour workday, guarantee demobilised workers the right to their pre-war jobs and recognise trade unions as the sole representatives of the workers.[3]

Weimar Republic

Chancellor