Reichsrat (Germany)
The
Reichsrat was one of the
two legislative bodies in
Germany under the
Weimar constitution, the other one being the
Reichstag. After the end of German monarchy and the founding of the
Weimar Republic in 1919, the Reichsrat replaced the
Bundesrat as the representation of the various German states.
The
Bundesrat had been the central body of the German federal state, which had been founded in 1867 as the
North German Confederation and in 1871 became the
German Empire. As this federal state comprised the various German kingdoms, principalities and free cities under the leadership of the King of
Prussia, the
Bundesrat comprised the delegates of the various states.
Prussia sent almost half the representatives, being the largest state by far and so could block almost any decision. Also, the meetings of the
Bundesrat were headed by the German chancellor appointed by the Kaiser, who usually was identical to the Prussian prime minister. The
Bundesrat was a very powerful institution, as its consent was needed for any legislation. Also before the chancellor's secretaries gained prominence in the 1890s, the
Bundesrat together with the chancellor effectively formed the federal government.
The
Weimar constitution curbed the rights of the various states and the powers of their representation. The Reichsrat could use only a suspensive veto against the
Reichstag's bills and had no influence on federal government. In contrast to the
Bundesrat, it comprised representatives from both the state governments and the state parliaments. After Hitler came to power in 1933, the policy of
Gleichschaltung first deprived the Reichsrat of its powers and later formally abolished it altogether, turning Germany into a centralized state.
After
World War II, when the
Federal Republic of Germany was founded the state's representation again was called
Bundesrat and again became more powerful than the Reichsrat though not as powerful as the
Bundesrat of the
German Empire.