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{{Infobox political party|name=Social Democratic Party of Germany|native_name=Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands|logo=SPD-Logo 2022 (rot).svg|founded=27 May 1875|general_secretary=[[Kevin Kühnert]]|leader1_title=Co-leaders|leader1_name=[[Saskia Esken]]<br>[[Lars Klingbeil]]|merger=[[General German Workers' Association|ADAV]]<br>[[Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany|SDAP]]|newspaper=Vorwärts|student_wing=Juso-Hochschulgruppen|youth_wing=Young Socialists in the SPD|womens_wing=Association of Social Democratic Women|wing1_title=LGBT+ wing|wing1=SPDqueer|political_orientation=[[Social democracy | {{Infobox political party|name=Social Democratic Party of Germany|native_name=Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands|logo=SPD-Logo 2022 (rot).svg|founded=27 May 1875|general_secretary=[[Kevin Kühnert]]|leader1_title=Co-leaders|leader1_name=[[Saskia Esken]]<br>[[Lars Klingbeil]]|merger=[[General German Workers' Association|ADAV]]<br>[[Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany|SDAP]]|newspaper=Vorwärts|student_wing=Juso-Hochschulgruppen|youth_wing=Young Socialists in the SPD|womens_wing=Association of Social Democratic Women|wing1_title=LGBT+ wing|wing1=SPDqueer|political_orientation=[[Social democracy]]<br>[[Imperialism]]}} | ||
The '''Social Democratic Party of Germany''' ('''SPD'''), originally called the '''Socialist Workers' Party of Germany''', is a [[Social democracy|social democratic]] party in [[Federal Republic of Germany|Germany]] that was originally a [[Marxism|Marxist]] party but over time slipped into [[revisionism]] and [[opportunism]] before eventually abandoning Marxism officially. It currently holds the most seats in the [[Bundestag]] as a part of the ruling coalition and is the party of the current German Chancellor, [[Olaf Scholz]]. | The '''Social Democratic Party of Germany''' ('''SPD'''), originally called the '''Socialist Workers' Party of Germany''', is a [[Social democracy|social democratic]] party in [[Federal Republic of Germany|Germany]] that was originally a [[Marxism|Marxist]] party but over time slipped into [[revisionism]] and [[opportunism]] before eventually abandoning Marxism officially. It currently holds the most seats in the [[Bundestag]] as a part of the ruling coalition and is the party of the current German Chancellor, [[Olaf Scholz]]. | ||
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=== Founding === | === Founding === | ||
The SPD originated in a congress in Eisenach occurring in 1869 where the [[Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany]] (SDAP) was formed from a merger of the [[Assembly of German Worker Associations]] (VDAV) and leftists in the [[General German Workers' Association]] (ADAV). The SDAP leaders, [[August Bebel]] and [[Wilhelm Liebknecht]], sought a counter-weight to the [[Ferdinand Lassalle|Lassallean]] ADAV that supported [[Otto von Bismarck]]'s policy of unifying [[German Empire (1871–1918)|Germany]] "from above" relying on [[Kingdom of Prussia (1701–1918)|Prussian]] militarism and instead followed the lead of | The SPD originated in a congress in Eisenach occurring in 1869 where the [[Social Democratic Workers' Party of Germany]] (SDAP) was formed from a merger of the [[Assembly of German Worker Associations]] (VDAV) and leftists in the [[General German Workers' Association]] (ADAV). The SDAP leaders, [[August Bebel]] and [[Wilhelm Liebknecht]], sought a counter-weight to the [[Ferdinand Lassalle|Lassallean]] ADAV that supported [[Otto von Bismarck]]'s policy of unifying [[German Empire (1871–1918)|Germany]] "from above" relying on [[Kingdom of Prussia (1701–1918)|Prussian]] militarism and instead followed the lead of Marx and Engels in struggling for the revolutionary unification of Germany "from below." <ref name=":0">{{Citation|author=E. A. Volina|year=1979|title=The Great Soviet Encyclopedia|title-url=https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Social+Democratic+Party+of+Germany|chapter=Social Democratic Party of Germany}}</ref> | ||
Following Bismarck's unification of Germany a congress was held at Gotha in 1875 at which the SDAP merged with VDAV to form the Socialist Workers' Party of Germany which would be renamed to the Social Democratic Party of Germany in 1890. The party program adopted at the congress, the Gotha Program, contained many concessions to the [[Idealism|idealist]] Lassalleans, particularly concerning the [[dictatorship of the proletariat]], which would lead Marx and Engels to criticise the program in their [[Critique of the Gotha Program|''Critique of the Gotha Program'']].<ref name=":0" /> | Following Bismarck's unification of Germany a congress was held at Gotha in 1875 at which the SDAP merged with VDAV to form the Socialist Workers' Party of Germany which would be renamed to the Social Democratic Party of Germany in 1890. The party program adopted at the congress, the Gotha Program, contained many concessions to the [[Idealism|idealist]] Lassalleans, particularly concerning the [[dictatorship of the proletariat]], which would lead Marx and Engels to criticise the program in their [[Critique of the Gotha Program|''Critique of the Gotha Program'']].<ref name=":0" /> | ||
== References == | == References == |