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Enabling Act of 1933 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Enabling act - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An enabling act is a piece of legislation by which a legislative body grants an entity which depends on it for authorization or legitimacy to take a certain action(s). For example, enabling acts o...
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On March 23, 1933, Hitler pushed the Enabling Act through the Reichstag and thus equipped his government with dictatorial powers, first for four years and afterwards indefinitely. The regime invoked the new law to rescind the democratic freedoms of the Weimar Republic and to dissolve political parties and organizations.
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48 of the constitution, the decree would have been withdrawn once the so-called emergency had passed, any hope of this happening was prevented by the establishment of Hitler's dictatorship following the Enabling Act (see below). ... (c) Law Against the Establishment of Parties, July 14, 1933...
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Hitler's path to power was made possible by the March 23, 1933 "Enabling Act." This law was officially called the 'Law for Removing the Distress of the People and the Reich.'
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The Enabling Act of 1933 provided Hitler with what he had wanted for years - to tear down the German Democratic Republic legally and end democracy, paving the way for a complete Nazi takeover of Germany. ... 1933key.com History 1933 Enabling Act of 1933...
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Patriot Act vs. German Enabling Act: The Decrees of 1933 from Furniture for the People, May 25, 2005; (Posted here by Wes Penre, May 27, 2005); ... To soften resistance to the passing of the Enabling Act, the Nazis secretly caused confusion in order to create an atmosphere in which the law seem necessary to restore...
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