Scheidemann cabinet

Cabinet of Philipp Scheidemann

1st Cabinet of Weimar Germany
13 February 1919 – 20 June 1919
First meeting of the cabinet
Date formed13 February 1919 (1919-02-13)
Date dissolved20 June 1919 (1919-06-20)
(4 months and 7 days)
People and organisations
PresidentFriedrich Ebert
Minister-PresidentPhilipp Scheidemann
Deputy Minister-PresidentEugen Schiffer (until 19 April 1919)
Bernhard Dernburg
Member partiesSocial Democratic Party
Centre Party
German Democratic Party
Status in legislatureWeimar Coalition
331/423 (78%)




Opposition partiesGerman National People's Party
Independent Social Democratic Party
German People's Party
History
Election1919 federal election
Legislature termWeimar National Assembly
PredecessorCouncil of the People's Deputies
SuccessorBauer cabinet

The Scheidemann cabinet, headed by Minister President Philipp Scheidemann of the Social Democratic Party (SPD), was Germany's first democratically elected national government. It took office on 13 February 1919, three months after the collapse of the German Empire following Germany's defeat in World War I. Although the Weimar Constitution was not in force yet, it is generally counted as the first government of the Weimar Republic.

It was formed from members elected in January 1919 to the Weimar National Assembly, which was to act as Germany's interim parliament and adopt a constitution for the new republic. The cabinet was based on the Weimar Coalition of three centre-left parties: the SPD, the Centre Party and the German Democratic Party.

During its time in office, Scheidemann's cabinet had to deal with leftist uprisings, most notably in Berlin, the Ruhr and Bavaria, and with separatist movements in the occupied Rhineland and in eastern provinces of Prussia such as Posen and Silesia. By far its biggest challenge, however, was responding to the Armistice of 1918 and the Paris Peace Conference. The tension between the outrage at the terms of the Treaty of Versailles and the potential repercussions of rejecting the treaty led to the breakup of the cabinet. Scheidemann, who had called the treaty "intolerable", resigned in protest against it on 20 June 1919.

Gustav Bauer, also of the SPD, headed the Bauer cabinet that replaced Scheidemann's.