Lothar Steuer
Ludwig Lothar Steuer was a German lawyer and politician who was active in the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany and post-war West Germany. During the Weimar years, Steuer was a city councilor in Kassel from 1924 to 1933 and a member of the Landtag of Prussia during the same time period. Under the Nazi regime, he was a member of the Reichstag from November 1933 to April 1938, though he never joined the Nazi Party. In post-war Germany, he served in the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia from 1950 until his death. He was successively a member of the leadership in the German National People's Party, the German Right Party and the Free Democratic Party.
Early life
After completing Volksschule and Gymnasium in Bad Kreuznach, Steuer studied political science, economics and law at the University of Bonn and the University of Heidelberg. He volunteered for service in the Imperial German Army on 2 August 1914 at the start of the First World War. He served with the 27th Field Artillery Regiment and was promoted to Leutnant of reserves in 1916. He fought for the duration of the war until November 1918 and was awarded the Iron Cross 1st and 2nd class.Weimar Republic
In 1919, Steuer was a member of a Freikorps unit, a volunteer cavalry rifle corps. Becoming politically active, he joined the conservative German National People's Party in 1919 and became the party's managing director in Hofgeismar and Kassel that same year. From 1921, he served as the party's managing director for the Province of Hesse-Nassau. He also joined the conservative war veterans' organization Der Stahlhelm in 1926. He was the owner of a print shop and, in 1929, he became editor of the journal Deutsche Selbstverwaltung. Steuer was a city councilor in Kassel from 1924 to 1933. In 1924, he also was elected to the Landtag of Prussia, where he served until its abolition in October 1933.Nazi Germany
Steuer was elected to the Reichstag from electoral constituency 19 on 12 November 1933. He was not a member of the Nazi Party, so he took his seat as a "guest" of the Nazi parliamentary faction. He was also appointed as one of the twelve Schriftführer of that body. In October 1935, he was appointed as first deputy Bürgermeister of Bocholt. He was reelected to the Reichstag in March 1936 from constituency 17 and continued to serve in his secretarial capacity until April 1938 when he left the Reichstag. In September 1939, he became the first deputy Bürgermeister of Recklinghausen, holding this post until 1945. From 1940 to 1945, he also served in the Wehrmacht during the Second World War.Post-war Germany
After the end of the war, Steuer worked as a civil servant in local government. In 1946, he was one of the founders and an executive board member of the German Right Party. On 17 October 1947, denazification proceedings classified him as Category IV. He participated in the negotiations between the DRP, the German Party and the local Hessian National Democratic Party on 1 July 1949, regarding the formation of a joint candidacy in the 1949 [West German federal election|1949 federal election] for the first West German Bundestag. This proposal ultimately failed when the British occupation authorities denied the proposed new party a license to participate in the election.When the Lower Saxony branch of the DRP split in 1950, the majority merged with the DP to form the Deutsche Reichspartei. Steuer remained with the minority and continued to lead the party as the Nationale Recht. In June 1950, Steuer was elected to the Landtag of North Rhine-Westphalia as a representative of the Nationale Recht on the state electoral list of the Free Democratic Party. He initially served as a "guest" of the FDP parliamentary faction, but formally joined the party on 24 January 1954, and served as its state deputy chairman from July 1954 to April 1955. From July 1954 until his death, he served as second vice-president of the Landtag. He died in Düsseldorf in May 1957.