Theodor Barth
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theodor Barth (1849-1909) was a German liberal politician and publicist. He was a member of the Reichstag between 1881 and 1884, between 1885 and 1898, and between 1901 and 1903.
Barth started his political career with the National Liberal Party. He soon rejected the Manchesterism of the old liberals though, and claimed that liberalism needed a social programme. To that end, he sought the cooperation of the with the Social Democrats, and at multiple times voted against his own party. In the German Freeminded Party (Freisinnige Partei), founded in 1884, Barth would soon found himself opposed to the leadership of Eugen Richter. When the Freeminded Party split in 1893, Barth became a member of the Freeminded Union (Freisinnigen Vereinigung), instead of the Freeminded People's Party of Richter. In 1903, the imperialist Friedrich Naumann would join the Freeminded Union as well. Barth however would found the Democratic Union (Demokratische Vereinigung) in 1908, together with Rudolf Breitscheid and Hellmut von Gerlach, after the Freeminded Union's participation in the Bülow-Block coalition in the 1907 elections.
Barth was publisher of the liberal weekly Die Nation (The Nation) between 1883 and 1907.