Domestic policy evaluation of Bismarck Kulturkampf was a domestic struggle between the Catholic Church and Otto Von Bismarck and his ally Germany Liberal Party. Bismarck was the first prime minister in Germany between 1871 and 1890. During his tenure as Finance Minister, he brought the country to Germany before the First World War and brought about a series of reforms to further advance Germany that he had imagined. One of the main conflicts encountered by Bismarck was the Catholic church.
"Kulturkampf" that appeared in the 1870s brought his first major political defeat to Bismarck. "Civilized struggle" in Germany is an attempt to prevent Catholic threats he is seeing. The goal in Bismarck's domestic policy is to establish a unified empire in society and politics. To achieve this goal, he needed to get rid of the threat to Protestantism in order to create the protest he wanted in Germany. Catholics "hate unity". The southern part and most of the Rhine are Catholics. The new empire mix Protestant and Catholic, but Catholics still constitute a minority. They formed the central party and won 57 seats in the 1871 election. Bismarck believes that this party is a serious danger to the unity he wants to make, especially because he knows that they will always follow Rome instead of Berlin. In a sense, it can not be said that the implementation of Bismarck's "Kulturkampf" is neither helpless nor wrong.
Prime Minister Bismarck's position between 1871 and 1890 has never been easier. Like the field of success in relative failure, he has dealt with domestic policies in different ways over the years. In this era, the rise of Germany fearing the power of Europe might have reflected the work of Bismarck, but in the home Bismarck is a political field that is modernizing as "Weltpolitik" away from his "Realpolitik" And could not rule the country