Friedrich "Fritz" Carl Heckert (28 March 1884 – 7 April 1936) was a German trade unionist and politician who co-founded the Spartacus League and the Communist Party of Germany. He was a member of the Reichstag from 1924 to 1933, a leading Comintern functionary, and briefly served as the Saxon Economic Minister in 1923.[1][2]
In November 1918, he became chairman of the Chemnitz Workers' and Soldiers' Council.[5] Heckert was one of the delegates to the founding party conference of the KPD on December 30, 1918. The name "Communist Party of Germany" was his suggestion.[6]
Under the leadership of Heinrich Brandler and Heckert, the Chemnitz KPD organisation was one of the strongest in Germany. At the side of his friend Brandler, Heckert rose to the Central Committee of the KPD (ZK) after the unification party congress with the USPD in December 1920. Except for a brief interruption in 1924, he remained a member of the Central Committee until his death in 1936. Heckert was temporarily the KPD's representative at the Red International of Labor Unions in Moscow, then from 1922 onward he was the deputy of Jacob Walcher, the head of the trade union department at the KPD headquarters in Berlin.[1]
As a member of the party leadership, Heckert was appointed Minister of Economic Affairs of the Free State of Saxony after Minister-PresidentErich Zeigner formed an SPD-KPD coalition government on October 12, 1923. He served in the Zeigner Cabinet for 19 days during the German October until PresidentFriedrich Ebert issued a Reichsexekution, sending the Reichswehr to forcibly dissolve the government.[7] During this time and the subsequent illegality of the KPD in 1923–24, Heckert was actively involved in the party's preparations for a civil war. This resulted in his imprisonment in October 1924, which lasted until July 1925 when the Reichstag passed a resolution recognizing Heckert's parliamentary immunity.[1]
The 12th Party Congress of the KPD re-elected him to the Central Committee and the Politburo in 1929. In 1931, Heckert was seriously injured in clashes with the SA at a rally in Gelsenkirchen.[1]
In 1932, as a representative of the KPD, he returned to the ECCI in Moscow, where he worked until his death. When Adolf Hitler came to power, Heckert's stay in Moscow was not publicly known and he was wanted by the authorities. Heckert's name was on the first expatriation list of the German Reich, published on August 25, 1933.[8]
^This conflict was based on the fact that Stolle had won his mandate for the SPD (from which the SPD's claim was derived) but had joined the USPD in 1917.
References
^ abcdef"Heckert, Fritz". Bundesstiftung Aufarbeitung. Berlin: Bundesstiftung zur Aufarbeitung der SED-Diktatur. Retrieved 2024-11-25.
^Michael Hepp, ed. (1985), Die Ausbürgerung deutscher Staatsangehöriger 1933–45 nach den im Reichsanzeiger veröffentlichten Listen, vol. Band 1: Listen in chronologischer Reihenfolge, München: De Gruyter Saur, p. 3, ISBN3-11-095062-6
External links
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