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Otto Nuschke

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Otto Nuschke
Grave of Otto Nuschke

Otto Nuschke (23 February 1883–27 February 1957) was a German politician.

Nuschke was born in Frohburg. In 1910 he was elected General Secretary of the liberal Progressive People's Party (Fortschrittliche Volkspartei) of Kassel. In the same year he became chief editor of the Berliner Tageblatt and in 1915 co-editor of the Berliner Volkszeitung.

Nuschke soon joined the Liberal Union (Freisinnige Vereinigung), left-wing liberal organisation, and became its general secretary of Kassel in 1906. As this group fused with other left-liberal organisations (in 1910) to form the Progressive People's Party, Nuschke became the general secretary of the new party in Kassel.

In 1918 he took part in establishing the German Democratic Party. In 1919 he was a delegate of the German Democratic Party to the National Congress of Weimar and from 1921 to 1933 he was a member of the Reichstag for the German Democratic Party. In 1920s Nuschke was at times the deputy chairman of the German Democratic Party. Nuschke was one of the founders of the republican Reichsbanner Schwarz-Rot-Gold and became the general secretary of the German State Party in 1931 (i.e. a successor to the German Democratic Party).

After the Nazis gained power in 1933 Nuschke joined the opposition. After the 1944 assassination attempt on Hitler's life, he went into hiding.

Directly after World War II, he became involved in the politics of the Soviet Occupation Zone (SBZ). Unlike most of the former German Democratic Party members, Nuschke did not take part in forming the LDPD/FDP, but became one of the co-founders of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) in June 1945, similarly to Ferdinand Friedensburg, Ernst Lemmer and Walther Schreiber. In 1946 Nuschke was elected in the party's executive committee. From 1946 to 1952 he was a member of the Landtag of Brandenburg. In 1947, after the deposition of party chairmen Jakob Kaiser and Ernst Lemmer by the Soviet military authorities, Nuschke became acting chairman and after the party congress of 1948, chairman of the CDU (SBZ).

In March 1948, Nuschke - alongside Wilhelm Pieck (SED) and Wilhelm Külz (LDPD) - was chairman of the German People's Council (Deutscher Volksrat) that composed the Constitution of the German Democratic Republic. In 1949 Nuschke became member of the Provisional People's Chamber of the GDR. He belonged to the parliament (Volkskammer) until his death.

A loyal supporter of the SED regime, Nuschke became after the establishment of the German Democratic Republic Deputy Prime Minister and chief of the Church Office of the GDR.

On 17 June 1953, during the East German uprising, Nuschke and his driver were kidnapped and brought to West Berlin. Some American military recognised him and saved him from the angry masses. He and his driver were brought to a police station, but released on 19 June. After that Nuschke and his driver returned to East Berlin. In a spontaneous interview given to RIAS reporter Peter Schultze, Nuschke claimed that the East German government had popular support and that the demonstrators included West-Berliners.[1].

In 1954 he received the Patriotic Order of the GDR and in 1955 he received an honorary degree.

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