Abstract
At its First Party Conference in January 1949, the SED decided to
transform itself into a Leninist-Stalinist party of “a new type” along
the lines of the Soviet Communist Party [KPdSU]. At a meeting in Moscow
in early May 1950, Otto Grotewohl, Wilhelm Pieck, Walter Ulbricht, and
Fred Oelßner had Stalin personally approve the program for the 3rd Party
Congress scheduled for July 1950. Changes requested by the Soviets were
inserted word-for-word into the texts of the speeches given at the
congress. At its Third Party Congress, the SED decided to continue
transforming itself into a new type of party; it also decided on a new
statute, on the introduction of a central committee instead of a party
executive committee, and on the Five-Year Plan. The party’s centralized
top-down decision-making made it factually impossible to implement
potential suggestions for changes to the “recommendations” of the party
leadership. Party congresses thus played a chiefly propagandistic
role.