as a state minister, but thought it was a swindle for the anti-Semitic Christian Social Party to have one. Although Hinteregger's goal was to deflate the impact of antiSemitism, which was being directed against the SDAP, by noting the sharp contrasts between the theories and practices of the antiSemites, like many other Socialists he attacked Jewish capitalists as much for being in collusion with bourgeois anti-Marxists who were also antiSemites as for being capitalists. In the end, the reader is confused as to whether the author objected to antiSemitism itself, or merely to the way that antiSemitism was being used by the enemies of the Socialist Party.
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Although Socialist antiSemitism was directed primarily against wealthy Jews, other forms of Socialist antiSemitism, or at least ill will toward Jews, did exist. The newly formed Jewish National Council established by Zionists in October 1918, perhaps hoping to win over Jews in the SDAP, complained to the board of directors of the Social Democratic Party in November of the same year about recent articles and advertisements in the Arbeiter-Zeitung that the council considered anti-Semitic (but which may have been actually merely anti-Zionist). If continued, they could arouse the general population against the Jews in a dangerous way. The Arbeiter-Zeitung did not take kindly to this criticism and replied that now that there was no longer any censorship it would say anything it wanted. If the Jews were a nationality, they could be criticized like Czechs, Hungarians, or any other nationality. 25
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We have already noted how Albert Sever, the Social Democratic governor of Lower Austria, which at the time still included Vienna, favored the expulsion of all foreigners who had been harming the economy, including (but not limited to) Ostjuden. The attempt to expel the "army of profiteers," which had the support of the whole Social Democratic Party, failed, ostensibly because of an insufficient number of available trains, but more likely, as we saw in Chapter 6, because of diplomatic protests. 26
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Although the Socialists usually opposed antiSemitism in summer resorts, some exceptions did occur, especially in the federal states during the desperately hard early postwar years. For example, a workers' council in Frohnleiten in Styria warned Jews in August 1919 to leave the health resort within twenty-four hours because they were allegedly eating too much food and driving up the prices. During the same summer many people, but especially Jews, were having difficulty receiving permission from a Socialist workers' council even to enter the province of Tyrol to take a summer vacation. 27
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The anti-Semitic feelings of individual members of the Social Democratic Party may have also reemerged in August 1925 during the Zionist Congress in Vienna. Although the SDAP did not adopt any official policy toward the
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