Der Angriff was conceived as a mass circulation paper that fought the hated "System" with rude and aggressive language.
The most regular contributors were party functionaries; lead articles were usually written by the publisher, Goebbels, until 1933, and signed "Dr. G." Willi Krause, using the pen name Peter Hagen, was its first editor-in-chief.
He was succeeded first by Julius Lippert, then in 1933 by Karoly Kampmann, and from 1935, by Goebbels's trusted friend Hans Schwarz van Berk.
It contained principally party propaganda, agitation against the Weimar Republic, and antisemitism; among many others it regularly attacked Bernhard Weiss, the deputy head of the Berlin police, who was Jewish.
This interview was published on 23 December 1935, in which Georg publicly defends the antisemitic Nuremberg Laws as means to preserve the integrity of the Jewish race.