Today’s disturbing echoes of the buildup to the second world war | Letters

Bernie Evans and Michael Meadowcroft respond to Martin Kettle’s article on the alarming similarities of Weimar Germany and Brexit Britain

As Martin Kettle says (Brexit Britain and Weimar Germany are perilously alike, 16 May), there exist in the UK at the moment far too many similarities with Weimar Germany for comfort. It is easy to see parallels in the falling out of love with parliament, the lack of cooperation between parties and the far right’s repeated message of national betrayal, and to link them with a possible surge in support for a rightwing autocracy.

It is worth mentioning, however, that Adolf Hitler’s rise initially was through democratic votes in general elections, with the Nazis becoming the biggest party in the Reichstag after the July 1932 election. It was after the November election of that year when they actually lost ground, when it was decided to offer Hitler the chancellorship, leading to the Enabling Act and the destruction of opposition parties.

Divisions on the left, with the inevitable lack of viable policies to challenge the promise of a strong Germany coming from Hitler, were an important factor in the rise of fascism, and must not be repeated here. The Labour leadership has a duty to provide a united opposition to the threat from the right; if Labour loses the support of its remain voters and their votes are shared around smaller parties, a significant and dangerous similarity could be created, with terrible consequences.
Bernie Evans
Liverpool

• Martin Kettle points to today’s echoes of 1920s and 1930s Germany. He is far from the only observer to make the point: in his final book, containing riveting biographical essays on individuals who stood up to Hitler, the late Paddy Ashdown wrote: “In reading this book you may be struck, as I was in writing it, by the similarities between what happened in the build-up to World War II and the age in which we now live. Then as now, nationalism and protectionism were on the rise and democracies were seen to have failed, people hungered for the government of strong men; those who suffered most from the pain of economic collapse felt alienated and turned towards simplistic solutions and strident voices … ‘fake news’ built around the convincing untruth carried more weight in the public discourse than rational arguments and provable facts.”

Paddy comments wryly: “Painting a lie on the side of a bus and driving it around the country would have seemed perfectly normal in those days.”

Teaching the uncomfortable facts of history is crucially important and we neglect it at our peril.
Michael Meadowcroft
Leeds

• Join the debate – email guardian.letters@theguardian.com

• Read more Guardian letters – click here to visit gu.com/letters

• Do you have a photo you’d like to share with Guardian readers? Click here to upload it and we’ll publish the best submissions in the letters spread of our print edition

Letters

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Counteract racism and turn the tide on rightwing populists | Letters
Letters: John Green says when a society faces a critical breakdown, as Germany did in the 1930s, marginalised views are given a blood transfusion. Keith Flett thinks free market capitalism is the problem

Letters

27, May, 2019 @5:10 PM

Article image
Boris Johnson and a warning from history | Letters
Letters: I pray for our PM and hope that I am needlessly crying wolf, writes Canon Dr Paul Oestreicher, who fled the Nazis as a child. Plus letters from Professor Bob Brecher and Pat Kennedy

Letters

31, Jul, 2019 @4:16 PM

Article image
Poisonous political discourse, the ERG and fighting fascism | Letters
Letters: Jeff Wallace argues that language is not just a set of tools, words express what people think and feel; Keith Flett ponders David Lammy’s comments; sexagenarian John Ridout says he is prepared to take on the fascists; while Les Bright notices that ‘careless talk costs lives’ has new relevance

Letters

15, Apr, 2019 @4:31 PM

Article image
Britain stood alone? Let’s consign that myth to history | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to Michael Knowles’s letter on Brexit, where he claimed the rest of Europe should remember its debt to Britain from the second world war

Letters

09, Sep, 2018 @5:36 PM

Article image
For a time, Hitler was seen as comic | Letters
David Lammy is right, writes Marcia Heinemann Saunders. And David Wardrop suggests Mein Kampf had more impact in the UK than you might think

Letters

17, Apr, 2019 @4:51 PM

Article image
Italy shows rise in populism is not limited to Trump and Brexit | Letters
Letters: The other factor in the Italian result was globalisation, with its job-destroying and far-too-open borders to goods such as steel, writes Colin Hines. Plus letters from Stan Labovitch and Christopher Clayton

Letters

06, Mar, 2018 @5:27 PM

Article image
Britain’s memory of war and the Brexit debate | Letters
Letters: Readers respond after the outgoing German ambassador says some Brexiters were motivated by a sense of national identity built around the UK standing alone

Letters

30, Jan, 2018 @6:14 PM

Article image
The best place to answer the call of nature? | Brief letters
Brief letters: Referendums | Stupidity | National Trust land | The DUP | Public toilets

Letters

15, Oct, 2018 @3:55 PM

Article image
EU friends of Britain say: we want you to stay | Letters
Letters: European Guardian readers share their sadnesses and frustrations regarding Brexit

Letters

18, Dec, 2018 @5:16 PM

Article image
Brexit developments – or not | Letters
Letters: Readers respond to the government’s latest Brexit announcement and resignations

Letters

09, Jul, 2018 @4:57 PM