For example, General von Epp, acting on behalf of Hitler, had several storm troopers expel the government of Bavaria on March 9, and replaced them with a Nazi government. .
On April 7, Hitler's government issued new legislation, which dismissed all local governments from power and appointed Reich Governors in their place, with the power to create new local governments as they saw fit. These new Reich Governors were also govern the power to appoint or dismiss any state official or judge. As well, all Reich Governors were expected, as a Nazi, to fulfill any order given out by the head of the Nazi party, and perform "the general policy laid down by the Reich Chancellor."".
Essentially, by demolishing Germany's traditional federal-type state by abolishing the separate powers within the state, Hitler and the Nazi party unified the country. However, the central authority in this newly designed Reich was Hitler and his party. The law, which over saw this transformation, was called the Law for the Reconstruction of the Reich. It was completely fulfilled by the time Hitler's first year as Chancellor came to pass on January 30, 1934, when all Popular assemblies' in the state were eliminated, and any sovereign authority which the states had enjoyed, were now given up to the Reich. Furthermore, The Reich Minister of the Interior was placed in charge of the administration of all of these local state governments "The state governments from now on are merely administrative bodies of the Reich."".
Hitler's Enabling Act.
On March 23, 1933, the newly elected members of the Reichstag met in the Kroll Opera House in Berlin to consider passing Hitler's Enabling Act. It was officially called the Law for Removing the Distress of the People and the Reich. If this bill was passed, it would end democracy in Germany and establish the legal dictatorship of Adolf Hitler. .
The Nazis had secretly caused confusion in order to create an atmosphere in which the law seems necessary to restore order.