Abstract
After seizing power, Hitler’s top priority was eliminating all
political opposition. He considered the Communists and the Social
Democrats his strongest ideological opponents, and Nazi supporters,
especially members of the SA (also known as Brownshirts), engaged in
frequent street fights with these groups during the first weeks of
Hitler’s rule. Additionally, Hitler relied heavily on Hermann Göring,
who, as acting Prussian Minister of the Interior, controlled the
country’s police forces and used them to persecute alleged enemies of
the state. Still, Hitler took constant care to cloak his brutal and
arbitrary methods in the mantle of legitimacy. In this respect, he was
extremely lucky that Marinus van der Lubbe, a radical leftist Dutchman,
was arrested outside the burning Reichstag on February 27, 1933. The
Nazi leadership immediately decided to present the Reichstag fire as
clear proof of a Communist plot for a coup d’état and to use this
“proof” as grounds for finally eliminating the left-wing political
opposition. On the following day, Hitler persuaded Hindenburg to issue
the “Decree of the Reich President for the Protection of the People and
State” (also called the “Reichstag Fire Decree”), which largely
abolished the basic rights guaranteed by the Weimar Constitution and
increased the central government’s control over regional governments. In
the following weeks, thousands of Communists and Social Democrats were
arrested and their meetings and publications were banned. Hitler had
thus used “legal” means to build the foundation of his
dictatorship..