Second Marx cabinet

Second Cabinet of Wilhelm Marx

11th Cabinet of Weimar Germany
3 June 1924 – 15 December 1924
(until 15 January 1925 as caretaker government)
Chancellor Wilhelm Marx
Date formed3 June 1924 (1924-06-03)
Date dissolved15 January 1925 (1925-01-15)
(7 months and 12 days)
People and organisations
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
ChancellorWilhelm Marx
Vice ChancellorKarl Jarres
Member partiesCentre Party
German People's Party
German Democratic Party
Status in legislatureMinority coalition government
138 / 472 (29%)
Opposition partiesGerman National People's Party
Communist Party
National Socialist Freedom Movement
History
ElectionMay 1924 federal election
Legislature term2nd Reichstag of the Weimar Republic
PredecessorFirst Marx cabinet
SuccessorFirst Luther cabinet
Gustav Stresemann (DVP), Foreign Minister
Otto Gessler (DDP), Reichswehr Minister
Eduard Hamm (DDP), Minister of Economic Affairs
Hans Luther (Ind.),Minister of Finance

The second Marx cabinet, headed by Wilhelm Marx of the Centre Party, was the 11th democratically elected government during the Weimar Republic. It took office on 3 June 1924 when it replaced the first Marx cabinet, which had resigned on 26 May following the unfavourable results of the May 1924 Reichstag election. The new cabinet, made up of the Centre Party, German People's Party (DVP) and German Democratic Party (DDP), was unchanged from the previous one. The three coalition parties ranged politically from centre-left to centre-right.

During the cabinet's tenure, the Reichstag voted in favour of the Dawes Plan, which resolved important issues regarding the reparations payments that the Treaty of Versailles required Germany to make to the Allied victors of World War I.

Due to the failure of Marx's attempts to expand the cabinet's minority coalition to the right, new elections were held in December 1924. The results provided little help to Marx in his attempt to form a more stable coalition, with the result that his second cabinet resigned on 15 December 1924. It remained in office as a caretaker government until it was replaced on 15 January 1925 by the cabinet of the independent Hans Luther.