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Lázaro Cárdenas

Lázaro Cárdenas del Río (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈlasaɾo ˈkaɾðenas] (listen); 21 May 1895 – 19 October 1970) was a Mexican army officer and politician who served as president of Mexico from 1934 to 1940.

Lázaro Cárdenas
Lázaro Cárdenas, 1934
51st President of Mexico
In office
1 December 1934 (1934-12-01) – 30 November 1940 (1940-11-30)
Preceded byAbelardo L. Rodríguez
Succeeded byManuel Ávila Camacho
Secretary of National Defence
In office
1 September 1942 – 31 August 1945
PresidentManuel Ávila Camacho
Preceded byJesús Agustín Castro
Succeeded byFrancisco Luis Urquizo
Governor of Michoacán
In office
1928–1932
Preceded byLuis Méndez
Succeeded byDámaso Cárdenas
President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
In office
16 October 1930 – 27 August 1931
Preceded byEmilio Portes Gil
Succeeded byManuel Pérez Treviño
Personal details
Born
Lázaro Cárdenas del Río

(1895-05-21)21 May 1895
Jiquilpan, Michoacán, Mexico
Died19 October 1970(1970-10-19) (aged 75)
Mexico City, Mexico
Resting placeMonument to the Revolution
Mexico City, Mexico
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
Spouse
(m. 1932)
ChildrenCuauhtémoc Cárdenas
OccupationStatesman, General
Military service
Branch/serviceMexican Army
Years of service1913–1928
RankGeneral
CommandsMexican Revolution

Born in Jiquilpan, Michoacán, to a working-class family, Cárdenas joined the Mexican Revolution and became a general in the Constitutionalist Army. Although he was not from the state of Sonora, whose revolutionary generals dominated Mexican politics in the 1920s, Cárdenas was hand-picked by Plutarco Elías Calles, Sonoran general and former president of Mexico, as a presidential candidate and won in the 1934 general election.

After founding the National Revolutionary Party (PNR) in the wake of the assassination of president-elect Álvaro Obregón, Plutarco Elías Calles had unofficially remained in power during the Maximato (1928–1934) and expected to maintain that role when Cárdenas took office.[1] Cárdenas, however, out-maneuvered him politically and forced Calles into exile. He established the structure of the National Revolutionary Party, eventually renamed the Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM), on the sectoral representation of peasant leagues, labor union confederations, and the Mexican Army. Cárdenas's incorporation of the army into the party structure was a deliberate move to diminish the power of the military and prevent their intervention in politics through coups d'état.

A left-wing economic nationalist, Cárdenas led the expropriation of the Mexican oil industry and the creation of the state-owned oil company Pemex in 1938.[2] He implemented large-scale land reform programs in Mexico, redistributing large estates to smallholders in lands termed ejidos. He created the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) and El Colegio de México (Colmex). His foreign policy supported and gave asylum to Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. An achievement of Cárdenas was his complete surrender of power in December 1940 to his successor, Manuel Ávila Camacho, who was a political moderate without a distinguished military record.

Cárdenas has been praised as "the greatest constructive radical of the Mexican Revolution", for implementing its ideals, but has also been criticized as an "authoritarian populist".[3] He was the first Mexican president to serve for a sexenio, a practice that continues today. According to numerous opinion polls and analysts, Cárdenas is the most popular Mexican president of the 20th century.[4][5][6]

Early life and career

Lázaro Cárdenas del Río was born on 21 May 1895, one of eight children in a lower-middle-class family in the village of Jiquilpan, Michoacán, where his father owned a billiard hall.[7] After the death of his father, from the age of 16, Cárdenas supported his family (including his mother and seven younger siblings). By the time he reached 18, he had worked as a tax collector, a printer's devil, and a jail keeper. Although he left school when he was eleven, he used every opportunity to educate himself and read widely throughout his life, especially works of history.

Military career

 
General Lázaro Cárdenas

Cárdenas set his sights on becoming a teacher but was drawn into the military during the Mexican Revolution after Victoriano Huerta overthrew President Francisco Madero in February 1913, although Michoacán was far from the revolutionary action that had brought Madero to the Mexican presidency. After Huerta's coup and Madero's assassination, Cárdenas joined a group of Zapatistas, but Huerta's forces scattered the group, where Cárdenas had served as captain and paymaster.[7] Given that revolutionary forces were voluntary organizations, his position of leadership points to his skills and his being a paymaster to the perception that he would be honest in financial matters. Both characteristics followed him through his subsequent career. He escaped the Federal forces in Michoacán and moved north, where he served initially with Álvaro Obregón, then Pancho Villa, and after 1915 when Villa was defeated by Obregón to Plutarco Elías Calles, who served Constitutionalist leader Venustiano Carranza.[7] Although Cárdenas was from the southern state of Michoacán, his key experiences in the Revolution were with Constitutionalist northerners, whose faction won. In particular, he served under Calles, who tasked him with military operations against Yaqui Indians and against Zapatistas in Michoacán and Jalisco, during which time he rose to a field command as general. In 1920, after Carranza was overthrown by northern generals, Cárdenas was given the rank of brigadier general at the age of 25.[7] Cárdenas was appointed provisional governor of his home state of Michoacán under the brief presidency of Adolfo de la Huerta.

Service under President Calles

Cárdenas was a political protégé of Calles, but his ideological mentor was revolutionary General Francisco J. Múgica, a strongly anticlerical, secular socialist. President Calles appointed Cárdenas Chief of Military Operations in the Huasteca, an oil-producing region on the Gulf Coast. Cárdenas saw first-hand the operations of foreign oil companies. In the Huasteca, U.S. oil companies extracted oil, avoided taxes owed to the Mexican government, and treated the region as “conquered territory.” Múgica also was posted to the Huasteca and he and Cárdenas became close. During their time in the Huasteca, Múgica told Cárdenas that “socialism [is] the appropriate doctrine for resolving conflicts in Mexico.”[8]

Governor of Michoacán, 1928–1932

Cárdenas was appointed governor of his home state of Michoacán in 1928, which was undergoing the political conflict between state and Church, known as the Cristero War. His ideological mentor Múgica had previously served as the state's governor and had attempted to counter the power of the Catholic Church in Mexico through laws. He mobilized groups to support his positions, creating “political shock troops,” consisting of public school teachers and members of a disbanded agrarian league, forming the Confederación Revolucionaria Michoacana del Trabajo, under the slogan of “Union, Land, Work.” The organization was funded by the state government, although not listed as an official expenditure. It became the single-most powerful organization representing both workers and peasants.[9] Mobilizing worker and peasant support and controlling the organization to which they belonged became the model for Cárdenas when he became president.

Land reform

As governor, Cárdenas also prioritized land reform at a time when President Calles was disillusioned by the program. He expropriated haciendas and created ejidos, collectively held, state-controlled landholdings. Ejiditarios, members of the ejido, worked individual plots of land but did not hold title to it as private property. Opposition to the program came from estate owners (hacendados), the clergy, and in some cases, tenant farmers, but Cárdenas continued land reform programs in his state.[10]

During his four years as governor, Cárdenas initiated a modest re-distribution of land at the state level, encouraged the growth of peasant and labor organizations, and improved education at a time when it was neglected by the federal government. Cárdenas ensured teachers were paid on time, personally inspected schools, and opened one hundred new rural schools. Due to his grassroots style of governing, Cárdenas made important policy decisions based on direct information received from the public rather than on the advice of his confidants.[11]

Promotion of tourism, art, and indigenous culture

 
Cárdenas's home "La Quinta Eréndira" in Pátzcuaro

During his term as governor, Cárdenas sought to bring peace to the state, unite its population divided by the on-going Cristero War, and make Michoacán, especially the historic town of Pátzcuaro into a tourist destination. Once he was president of Mexico, he continued to devote government funding to the project.[12] Cárdenas built a house in Pátzcuaro when he became governor of the state, naming it "La Quinta Eréndira," after the Purépecha princess, who has been identified as Mexico's first anticolonial heroine for her resistance to the Spanish conquest, and a contrasting figure to Malinche, Cortés's cultural translator.[13] Eréndira became a popular historical figure under Cárdenas. At his estate, he commissioned murals for the house, which are now lost, but it is known from historical sources that they had indigenous themes, particularly the rise and fall of the Purépecha Empire at the time of the Spanish conquest. The murals and the texts "appropriate national historical narratives in order to supplant the national myths and locate Mexico's ideal foundations in Michoacán."[14]

Presidential election of 1934

 
Logo of the Partido Nacional Revolucionario founded by Plutarco Elías Calles in 1929. The logo has the colors and arrangement of the Mexican flag, with the party's acronym replacing the symbol of the eagle.

Calles tapped Cárdenas to be the party's president. Of the revolutionary generals, Cárdenas was considered "honest, able, anti-clerical, and politically astute,"[7] He had come from a poor and marginal state of Mexico, but had risen to political prominence by his military skills on the battlefield but importantly he had chosen the correct side of decisive splits since 1913.[7] When he was chosen as the presidential candidate in 1934, no one expected him to be anything other than being loyal to Calles, the "Jefe Máximo", and power behind the presidency since 1929.[7]

As the PNR's candidate, Cárdenas's election was a foregone conclusion.[15] It was politically impossible for his patron, Calles, to serve as president again, but he continued to dominate Mexico after his presidency (1924–28) through "puppet administrations" in a period known as the Maximato. After two of his hand-picked men held office, the PNR balked in 1932 at supporting his first choice, Manuel Pérez Treviño. Instead, they selected Cárdenas as the presidential candidate. Calles agreed, believing he could control Cárdenas as he had controlled his predecessors. Not only had Cárdenas been associated with Calles for two decades, but he had prospered politically with Calles' patronage. As expected, Cárdenas won handily, officially winning over 98 percent of the vote.[16]

Six-Year Plan and presidential campaign

Cárdenas ran on the Six Year Plan for social and political reform that the party drafted under Calles's direction.[17] Such a multiyear program was patterned after the just-completed Five Year Plan of the Soviet Union.[15] The Six-Year Plan (to span the presidential term 1934–40) was a patchwork of proposals from a variety of participants, but the driving force behind it was Calles, who had given a speech in May 1933, saying that the "Mexican Revolution had failed in most of its important objectives," and that a plan needed to implement its objectives.[15] Interim President Abelardo L. Rodríguez did not get his cabinet's approval for the plan in 1933 so Calles's next move was to present it in draft form to the party convention. "Rather than a blueprint, the Six-Year Plan was a sales prospectus," and a "hopeless jumble" filled with compromises and contradictions, as well as utopian aspirations. But the direction of the plan was toward renewed reform.[18]

The plan called for

  • destruction of the hacienda economy and creation of a collective system of ejidos (common lands) under government control;
  • modern secular schools and eradication of the influence of the Catholic Church; and
  • workers' cooperatives to oppose the excesses of industrial capitalism.[17][19]

Assured of the backing of the powerful Calles and a presidential victory, Cárdenas took the opportunity to actively campaign in many parts of Mexico rather than remaining in Mexico City. His 25,000-kilometer campaign accomplished several things, including making direct contact with regions and constituents who had never seen a presidential candidate before and thus building Cárdenas a personal power base. The campaign also allowed him to refine and articulate for popular consumption what he considered the important elements of the Six Year Plan. On the campaign trail, he acted more like someone already in office than a candidate, settling disputes between groups. He reached out to Mexican workers, as well as peasants, to whom he promised land reform. Cárdenas promised indigenous peoples schools and educational opportunities, and urged them to join with workers against exploitative practices.[20]

Presidency, 1934–1940

 
Lázaro Cárdenas, President of Mexico.

Presidential style

 
Cárdenas decrees nationalization of foreign railways in 1937.

Cárdenas's first action after taking office late in 1934 was to have his presidential salary cut in half. He became the first occupant of the official presidential residence of Los Pinos. He had the previous residence, the ostentatious Chapultepec Castle,[21] turned into the National Museum of History. In a move that struck at the financial interests of his patron Calles's cronies, Cárdenas closed down their gambling casinos and brothels, where "prominent Callistas had invested their profits from bribery and industrial activities."[21] Cárdenas did not use armored cars or bodyguards to protect himself. In the presidential campaign of 1934, he traveled through much of the rural areas by auto and horseback, accompanied only by Rafael M. Pedrajo, a chauffeur and an aide-de-camp. His fearlessness generated widespread respect for Cárdenas, who had demonstrated his bravery and leadership as a revolutionary general.

Cabinet

Cárdenas's cabinet when he was first in office included Calles family members, his oldest son Rodolfo at the Secretariat of Communications and Public Works (1934–1935); Aarón Sáenz Garza, the brother-in-law of Calles's second son, Plutarco Jr. ("Aco"), was appointed the administrator for Mexico City (1934–1935), a cabinet-level position. Others with loyalty to Calles were radical Tomás Garrido Canabal at the Secretariat of Agriculture and Development (1934–1935); Marxist Narciso Bassols held the post of Secretary of Finance and Public Credit (1934–1935); Emilio Portes Gil, who had been interim president of Mexico following the assassination of Obregón but not chosen as the PNR presidential candidate in 1929, held the position of Foreign Secretary (1934–1935). Cárdenas chose his comrade-in-arms and mentor General Francisco José Múgica as Secretary of the National Economy (1934–1935). As Cárdenas began to chart his course and outflank Calles politically, he replaced Calles loyalists in 1935 with his own men.[citation needed]

Cárdenas and the military

As a revolutionary general, Cárdenas followed in the tradition of his immediate predecessors in the presidency who had standing as military leaders but sought to curb the power of the military. Obregón and Calles sought to downsize and professionalize the Mexican military and make it subordinate to the civilian government. Cárdenas's election had not triggered revolts by disgruntled military men with ambitions to the presidency, as had happened in 1923, 1928, and 1929. Much of the military remained loyal to Calles, but Cárdenas had supporters among the army leadership as well. Cárdenas sought to serve as president in his own right, not be a puppet of Calles, and to do that he needed to broaden his base of support. Cárdenas sought to arm the peasantry as a counterpoise to the army, a move that disturbed the more conservative generals. Cárdenas cultivated the loyalty of the junior officer corps, providing better housing, pensions, and schooling for their children.[22]

Cárdenas and the Catholic Church

Cárdenas repealed the Calles Law soon after he became president in 1934.[23] Cárdenas earned respect from Pope Pius XI and had a close friendship with Mexican Archbishop Luis María Martínez,[23] a major figure in Mexico's Catholic Church who successfully persuaded Mexicans to obey the government's laws peacefully. However, he also implemented educational reforms, particularly socialist education and the elimination of religious schooling.[24] Nevertheless, the Cárdenas administration bridged a gap between church and state, developed a working and friendly relationship with the church, and helped subdue the bitter animosity between Catholics and leftists that had lingered since the Mexican Revolution, with the Holy See eventually supporting Cárdenas in comparison to condemning the militant atheism of Calles.[25]

Land reform and the peasantry

During Cárdenas' presidency, the government enacted land reform that was "sweeping, rapid, and, in some respects, innovative".[26] He redistributed large commercial haciendas, some 180,000 km2 of land to peasants.[27] With the powers of Article 27 of the Mexican constitution, he created agrarian collectives, or ejidos, which in early twentieth-century Mexico were an atypical form of landholding.[26] Two high-profile regions of expropriation for Cárdenas's agrarian reform were in the productive cotton-growing region in northern Mexico, known as La Laguna, and in Yucatán, where the economy was dominated by henequen production.[28] Other areas that saw significant land reform were Baja California and Sonora in northern Mexico, his home state of Michoacán and Chiapas in southern Mexico.[26]

 
President Cárdenas, with campesinos by Roberto Cueva del Río, watercolor 1937

In 1937, Cárdenas invited Andrés Molina Enríquez, intellectual father of Article 27 of the 1917 Constitution, to accompany him to Yucatán to implement the land reform, even though Molina Enríquez was not a big supporter of the collective ejido system.[29] Although he could not go due to ill health, he defended Cárdenas's action against Luis Cabrera, who argued that the Ejidal Bank that Cárdenas established when he embarked on his sweeping redistribution of land was, in fact, making the Mexican state the new hacienda owner. For Molina Enríquez, the Yucatecan henequen plantations were an "evil legacy" and "hellholes" for the Maya. As a lifelong supporter of land reform, Molina Enríquez's support of Cárdenas's "glorious crusade" was important.[30]

Cárdenas knew that peasant support was important and as a presidential candidate in 1933, he reached out to an autonomous peasant organization, the Liga Nacional Campesina (National Peasant League) and promised to integrate it into the party structure. The Liga split over this question, but one element was integrated into the Partido Nacional Revolucionario. Cárdenas expanded the peasant league's base in 1938 into the Confederación Nacional Campesina (CNC).[31] Cárdenas "believed that an organized peasantry would represent a political force capable of confronting the established landholding elite, as well as providing a critical voting block for the new Mexican state."[32] Scholars differ as to Cárdenas's intent for the CNC, with some viewing it as an autonomous organization that would advocate for peasants regarding land tenure, rural projects, and peasant political interests, while others see the CNC as in patron-client relationship with the state, restricting its autonomy.[32][33][34] The CNC was created with the idea of "peasant unification" and was controlled by the government. Peasants' rights were acknowledged, but peasants were to be responsible allies of the political regime. The radical Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM) and the Mexican Communist Party (PCM) sought to organize peasants, but Cárdenas asserted the government's right to do that since it was in charge of land reform and warned that their attempting to organize the peasantry would sow dissension.[35]

Cárdenas further strengthened the government's role by creating rural militias or reserves, which armed some 60,000 peasants by 1940, which were under the control of the army. The armed peasantry helped promote political stability against regional strongmen (caudillos). They could ensure that government land reform was accomplished. Peasant reserves could protect recipients of reform against estate owners and break rural strikes that threatened government control.[36]

Agrarian reform took place in a patchwork fashion with uneven results. Over years, many regions had experienced peasant mobilization in the face of repression and "low intensity agrarian warfare."[37] The peasant movement in Morelos had mobilized before the Mexican Revolution and had success under Emiliano Zapata's leadership extinguished the hacienda system in that state. In Cárdenas's agrarian reform, with the revolutionary regime consolidated and agrarian problems still unresolved, the president courted mobilized agraristas, who now found the state attentive to their issue. Land reform, with some exceptions such as in Yucatán, took place in areas of previous mobilization.[37] Peasants themselves pushed for agrarian reform and to the extent it was accomplished, they were integral agents not merely the recipients of top-down state largesse. However, the peasantry was under the control of the national government with no outlet for independent organization or the formation of alliances with Mexican urban workers.[38]

Labor

 
Vicente Lombardo Toledano, socialist leader of the Confederation of Mexican Workers.

The other key sector of reform was industrial labor. Article 123 of the 1917 Constitution had empowered workers in an unprecedented way, guaranteeing human rights such as the minimum wage, an eight-hour workday and the right to strike and form trade unions, but in a more comprehensive fashion, Article 123 signaled that the Mexican state was firmly on the side of workers. A labor organization already existed when Cárdenas took office, the CROM union of Luis Morones. Morones was forced out of his cabinet post in Calles's government and the CROM declined in power and influence, with major defections of Mexico City unions, one of which was led by socialist Vicente Lombardo Toledano. Cárdenas promoted Toledano's "purified" Confederation of Mexican Workers, which evolved into the Mexican Confederation of Workers or CTM. The CTM's alliance with Cárdenas was tactical and conditional, seeing their interests being forwarded by Cárdenas, but not controlled by him.[39] As with the agrarian sector with mobilized peasants, mobilized and organized workers had long agitated and fought for their interests. Article 123 of the Constitution was a tangible result of their participation in the Mexican Revolution on the Constitutionalist side. In fact, workers organized by the Casa del Obrero Mundial, a radical labor organization, fought in the Red Battalions against the peasant revolutionaries led by Emiliano Zapata. Lombardo Toledano and the CTM supported Cárdenas's exile of Calles and in the same stroke Cárdenas also exiled CROM's discredited leader, Luis Napoleón Morones.[40]

Cárdenas nationalized the railway system creating the Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México in 1938 and put under a "workers' administration." His most sweeping nationalization was that of the petroleum industry in 1938.

Various measures affecting labor were also introduced under Cárdenas. A decree was issued “giving binding force throughout the Republic to a collective agreement which establishes a maximum working week of 48 hours for persons employedin sugar-cane plantations, sugar factories (including by-products), and all similar undertakings.” In addition, the Factory Inspection Service was instructed by the Federal authorities “to make arrangements to secure regular and effective supervision of working hours and to prevent infringements of the 8-hour day.” Under an Act of the 20th February 1936 that concerned the payment of wages for the weekly rest day, the State authorities “are free to allow for the special circumstances and needs of each locality when promulgating administrative regulations.” An enquiry made by the Department of Labour into silicosis in mines and byssinosis in the cotton industry “led to the adoption of measures to ensure notification and compensation of these diseases.”Regulations dealing with general industrial hygiene were issued on the 6th of June 1936. Dust-exhaust apparatus and respirators “were made compulsory for factories using certain raw materials (wool, padding, etc.), and the Federal Department of Public Health issued regulations for the protection of the health of workers in the woollen industry.” The Industrial Hygiene Regulations of 6th of June 1936 “make it compulsory for factories to establish a medical service.”[41] Regulations for the inspection of boilers were laid down on the 30th August 1936, while regulations of the 25th of June 1936 “concerning industrial hygiene provide that the Department of Health must determine the cases in which industrial undertakings are to establish crêches and day nurseries for the children of their workers.” The Government also undertook to give effect to Article 123 of the Constitution, which provides “that all agricultural, industrial and mining undertakings shall supply comfortable and healthy living accommodation for their employees.”[42] Under an Act of the 27th of September 1938, which was promulgated on the 5th of December 1938, “laying down the Federal Civil Servants' Statute, hours of work and other conditions of employment are regulated for all Federal civil servants other than those employed in a confidential capacity.” On the 21st of March 1939, regulations for a maritime inspection service were promulgated.[43]

Education

 
General Lázaro Cárdenas del Río.

During the Calles Maximato, Mexican education policies were directed at curtailing the cultural influence of the Catholic Church by introducing sex education and leftist ideology via socialist education, and generally aiming to create a national civic culture.[citation needed] Cárdenas as a presidential candidate, under the patronage of fierce anticlerical Calles, was in favor of such policies. The opposition to socialist education by the Catholic Church as an institution and rural Catholics in such strongholds as Michoacán, Jalisco, and Durango saw the revival of armed peasant opposition, sometimes known as the Second Cristiada. The extent of the opposition was significant and Cárdenas chose to step back from implementing the radical educational policies, particularly as he became engaged with undermining Calles's power. Cárdenas gained support from the Catholic Church when he distanced himself from anticlerical policies.[44]

An important addition to higher education in Mexico was when Cárdenas established the Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN), a technical university in Mexico City, in the wake of the 1938 oil expropriation to train engineers and scientists.

A basic Act on Education, which contained detailed provisions on technical and professional training and education, was promulgated on the 30th of December 1939.[45]

Indigenismo

Cárdenas created the new cabinet-level Department of Indigenous Affairs (Departamento de Asuntos Indígenas) in 1936, with Graciano Sánchez, an agrarista leader in charge. After a controversy at the DAI, Sánchez was replaced by a scholar, Prof. Luis Chávez Orozco.[46] Cárdenas was influenced by an advocate of indigenismo, Moisés Sáenz, who earned a doctorate in education from Columbia University and had held a position in the Calles administration in the Secretariat of Public Education (SEP). Although initially an assimilationist for Mexico's indigenous, he shifted his perspective after a period of residence in a Purépecha village, which he published as Carapan: Bosquejo de una experiencia. He came to see indigenous culture as having value.[47] Sáenz advocated for educational and economic reforms that would better the indigenous, and this became the aim of the department Cárdenas created.

The official 1940 government report on the Cárdenas administration states that “the indigenous problem is one of the most serious that the revolutionary government has had to confront.”[48] The aim of the department was to study fundamental problems concerning Mexico's indigenous, particularly economic and social conditions, and then propose measures to the executive power for coordinated action to promote and manage measures considered to be in the interests of centers of indigenous populations. Most indigenous people were found in Veracruz, Oaxaca, Chiapas, and Yucatán, according to the 1930 national census.[49] In 1936 and 1937, the department had approximately 100 employees and a budget of $750,000 pesos, but as with other aspects of the Cárdenas regime, 1938 marked a significant increase personnel and budget; 350 employees in 1938 and a budget of $2.77 million pesos and in 1939, the high point in the department's budget, there were 850 employees with a budget of $3.75 million pesos. In 1940, the budget remained robust at $3 million pesos, with 650 employees.[50]

The function of the department was primarily economic and educational.[51] Specifically it was tasked with defending indigenous villages and communities, holders of ejidos (ejidatarios) and indigenous citizens from persecution and abuse that could be committed by any type of authority. It defended ejido officials (comisariados ejidales) and agricultural cooperatives.[52] The goals that the department worked toward were primarily economic and education, with cultural actions second. Social measures and public health/sanitation were less important in terms of action for this department.[53]

The department promoted a series of national indigenous congresses, bringing together different indigenous groups to meet as indigenous and discuss common issues. The government's aim in doing this was to have them move in concert toward the “integral liberation” (liberación integral), with their rights respected by the primary goal was to incorporate indigenous into the larger, national population on an equal basis. Initially in 1936 and 1937, there was one annual conference. The first one drew approximately 300 pueblos, while the second only 75. In 1938, there were two conferences with 950 pueblos represented. The last two years of the Cárdenas sexenio there were two congresses each year, but sparser attendance at around 200 pueblos each. The government attempted to engage the active participation of the indigenous pueblos, seeing that such engagement was the key to success, but the fall-off in the last two years indicates decreased mobilization.[54] The department published 12 edited books with a total publication run of 350 as well as 170 tape recorded materials in indigenous languages.[55]

In February 1940, the department established a separate medical/sanitary section with 4 clinics in Chihuahua and one in Sonora, but the largest number were in central in southern Mexico.

In 1940, the first Interamerican Indigenista Congress met in Pátzcuaro, Michoacán, with Cárdenas giving a plenary address to the participants.[56]

Women's suffrage

Cárdenas had pushed for women's suffrage in Mexico, responding to the pressure from women activists and from the political climate that emphasized equality of citizens. Mexico was not alone in Latin America in not enfranchising women, but in 1932, both Brazil and Uruguay had extended suffrage to women,[57] and Ecuador had also done so. Women had made a significant contribution to the Mexican Revolution, but had not made gains in the postrevolutionary phase. Women who were members of the National Peasants Confederation (Confederación Nacional Campesina) or the Confederation of Mexican Workers (Confederación de Trabajadores Mexicanos) were, by virtue of their membership umbrella organizations, also members of Cárdenas's reorganized party, the Party of the Mexican Revolution or PRM, done in 1938. In practice, however, women were marginalized from power.[58] Women could not stand for national or local governmental elections or vote. The Constitution of 1917 did not explicitly address women's rights and so to enfranchise women required a constitutional amendment. The amendment itself was simple and brief, specifying that "mexicanos" referred to both women and men.

Many PNR congressmen and senators gave supportive speeches for the amendment, but there was opposition. Cárdenas's impending reorganization of the party, which took place in 1938, was a factor in changing some opponents into supporters.[59] In the end, it passed unanimously and was sent to the states to ratify it. Despite the speeches and the ratifications, opponents used a loophole to block the amendment's implementation by refusing to publish notice of the change in the Diario official.[60] Skeptics of women's suffrage were suspicious that conservative Catholic women would take instructions on voting from priests and so undermine the progressive gains of the Revolution. Conservative Catholic women had mobilized during the church-state conflict of the late 1920s, the Cristero Rebellion, giving material aid to Cristero armies, and even forming a secret society, Feminine Brigades of St. Joan of Arc.[61]

The concern about Mexican women taking advise from priests on voting had some foundation in the example of the leftist Spanish Republic of the 1930s. Many Spanish women indeed supported the position of the Catholic Church which was opposed to the republic's anticlerical policies.[62] The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) was for Mexico a cautionary tale, the failure of a leftist regime after a military coup.

Cárdenas was unable to overcome opposition to women's suffrage although he personally was committed to the cause. Women did not get the vote in Mexico until 1953, when the Mexican government was pursuing economic policies friendlier to business and there was a modus vivendi with the Catholic Church in Mexico.

Partido de la Revolución Mexicana

 
Logo of the PRM, based on the logo of its predecessor the Partido Nacional Revolucionario that used the colors of the Mexican flag as its symbol. Cárdenas's PRM created formal sectoral representation within the party structure, including one for the Mexican military. The sectoral structure was retained when the party became the PRI in 1946.

The Partido de la Revolución Mexicana (PRM) came into being on March 30, 1938 after the party founded in 1929 by Calles, the Partido Nacional Revolucionario (PNR), was dissolved. Cárdenas's PRM was reorganized again in 1946 as the Institutional Revolutionary Party. Calles founded the PNR in the wake of President-elect Obregón's assassination in order to create some way for revolutionary leaders to maintain order and power. Calles could not be re-elected as president, but did hold power through the newly created party. Often called the "official party", it "was created as a cartel to control localized political machines and interests."[63]

When Cárdenas ran as the candidate of the PNR in 1934, Calles had expected to continue to be the real power in Mexico. Cárdenas might have been one of the short-term, powerless presidents of the years 1929–1934, but instead he built a large and mobilized base of support of industrial workers and peasants and forced Calles into exile in 1935. Cárdenas further consolidated power by dissolving the PNR and creating a new party with a completely different kind of organization.

Although Congress was dominated by Callistas early in his term, Cárdenas persuaded congressmen to his side, “to the point that he commanded a majority in the Chamber.”[64] As noted by one study, “when Calles began to criticize agrarian and labor agitation and pressure the government to moderate its policies in mid-1935, Cardenas purged his cabinet of Calles’s most loyal supporters. This action demonstrated that the power of the Jefe Máximo was more apparent than real. In its wake, Cardenistas took over the PNR, Congress, and the governments of 14 states.”[65] As noted by another study, “Calles left the country and the Cardenista blocs in the Union Congress became the majority.”[66]

The PRM was organized in four sectors, industrial labor, peasants, a middle class sector (composed largely of government workers), and the military. This organization was a resurrection of corporatism, essentially organization by estates or interest groups.[67] Each sector of the party had a parallel organization, so that the labor sector was composed of the Confederation of Mexican Workers (CTM), the peasant sector by the National Confederation of Campesinos, (CNC); and the middle class sector by the Federation of Unions of Workers in Service to the State (FSTSE), created in 1938.[68] The old Federal Army had been destroyed in the Revolution and the post-revolutionary military had increasingly been transformed from a collection of veteran revolutionary fighters into a military organized along more traditional lines of hierarchy and control.[69] The military had in most of Latin America in the post-independence period viewed itself as the arbiter of power and intervened in politics by force or the threat of force. In the post-revolutionary period, presidents of Mexico, including Cárdenas, were former generals in the revolutionary army. Curbing the power of the military was instigated by Álvaro Obregón and Calles, but the threat of revolt and undermining of the state remained, as the Cristero Rebellion showed in the late 1920s, led by a former revolutionary general, Enrique Gorostieta. Cárdenas aimed to undermine the military's potential to dominate politics by making it a sector of the official party. Although some critics questioned the military's incorporation into the party, Cárdenas saw it as a way to assert civilian control. He is quoted as saying, "We did not put the Army in politics. It was already there. In fact it had been dominating the situation, and we did well to reduce its voice to one in four."[70] Cárdenas had already mobilized workers and peasants into a counterweight to the "military's domination of politics."[71]

These groups often had different interests, but rather than creating a pluralist system in which the groups competed, the corporatist model placed the President as the arbiter of interests. Thus, the organization of different interest groups with formal representation in the party gave them access to largesse from the State, but also limited their ability to act autonomously since they were dependents of the new system.

The corporatist model is most often associated with fascism, whose rise in Germany and Italy in the 1930s coincided with Cárdenas's presidency. Cárdenas was emphatically opposed to fascism, but created the PRM and organized the Mexican state on authoritarian lines. That reorganization can be seen as the enduring legacy of the Cárdenas presidency. Although the PRM was reorganized into the Institutional Revolutionary Party in 1946, the basic structure was retained. Cárdenas's calculation that the military's incorporation into the PRM would undermine its power was essentially correct, since it disappeared as a separate sector of the party, but was absorbed into the "popular" sector.[72]

1938 oil expropriation

 
PEMEX logo

Cárdenas had had dealings with the oil industry in the Huasteca in his capacity as a military commander. Ongoing issues with the foreign-owned companies and the Mexican petroleum workers' organization became increasingly tense. Early in his presidency, he declared that a previous agreement between companies and the government "was not in harmony with the basic principle of Article 27 of the Constitution." In 1936, the 18,000-member oil workers' union forced oil companies to sign the first-ever collective bargaining agreement. The union demanded 26 million pesos, the companies offered 12 million. Giving more force to Mexican workers' demands, Cárdenas set up the National Oil Administration and the government's Council of Conciliation and Arbitration took jurisdiction over the wage dispute. The Council supported the workers' demands, which the companies refused to pay. To put even more force into the government's position, it cancelled oil concessions dating to the Porfirato. This move was unprecedented in the history of foreign oil in Mexico. Management and high-skilled workers were all foreigners, so the companies thought that nationalization would be a rash move for Mexico. The companies appealed the government's decision to force companies to pay their wages to the Mexican Supreme Court, which ruled against them on 1 March 1938. Cárdenas was ready to act. Cárdenas tasked his old ally, Francisco J. Múgica, with writing the declaration to the nation about expropriation.[73] On 18 March 1938, Cárdenas nationalized Mexico's petroleum reserves and expropriated the equipment of the foreign oil companies in Mexico. The announcement inspired a spontaneous six-hour parade in Mexico City; it was followed by a national fundraising campaign to compensate the private companies.

The legislation for nationalization provided compensation for the expropriated assets, but Cárdenas' action angered the international business community and Western governments, especially the United Kingdom.[74] The Mexican government was more worried about the lack of technical expertise within the nation to run the refineries. Before leaving, the oil companies had ensured they left nothing of value behind, hoping to force Cárdenas to accept their conditions.

Mexico was eventually able to restart the oil fields and refineries, but production did not rise to pre-nationalization levels until 1942, after the entry of the United States into World War II. The US sent technical advisers to Mexico to ensure production could support the overall Allied war effort.

In 1938, the British severed diplomatic relations with Cárdenas' government, and boycotted Mexican oil and other goods. An international court ruled that Mexico had the authority for nationalization. With the outbreak of World War II, oil became a highly sought-after commodity.[75] The company that Cárdenas founded, Petróleos Mexicanos (or Pemex), later served as a model for other nations seeking greater control over their oil and natural gas resources.[74] In the early 21st century, its revenues continued to be the most important source of income for the country, despite weakening finances. Cárdenas founded the National Polytechnic Institute to ensure the education and training of people to run the oil industry.

Spanish Civil War and refugees in Mexico

Cárdenas supported the Republican government of Spain against right-wing general Francisco Franco's forces during the Spanish Civil War. Franco was given support by Germany and Italy. Mexico's support of the Republican government was "by selling arms to the Republican army, underwriting arms purchases from third parties, supporting the Republic in the League of Nations, providing food, shelter and education for children orphaned during the Spanish Civil War."[76] Although Mexico's efforts in the Spanish Civil War were not enough to save the Spanish Republic, it did provide a place of exile for as many as 20,000-40,000 Spanish refugees.[77] Among those who reached Mexico were distinguished intellectuals who left a lasting imprint on Mexican cultural life. The range of refugees may be seen from an analysis of the 4,559 passengers arriving in Mexico in 1939 on board the ships Sinaia, Ipanema and Mexique; the largest groups were technicians and qualified workers (32%), farmers and ranchers (20%), along with professionals, technicians, workers, business people students and merchants, who represented 43% of the total.[78] The Casa de España, founded with Mexican government support in the early 1930s, was an organization to provide a haven for Spanish loyalist intellectuals and artists. It became the Colegio de México in October 1940, an elite institution of higher education in Mexico, with the support of Cárdenas's government.[79]

In 1936, Cárdenas allowed Russian exile Leon Trotsky to settle in Mexico, reportedly to counter accusations that Cárdenas was a Stalinist.[80] Cárdenas was not as left-wing as Leon Trotsky and other socialists would wish, but Trotsky described his government as the only honest one in the world.[citation needed]

Relations with Latin America

Mexico's most important relations with foreign countries during the Cárdenas presidency was the United States, but Cárdenas attempted to influence fellow Latin American nations viable formal diplomatic efforts in Cuba, Chile, Colombia, and Peru, especially in the cultural sphere. Mexico sent artists, engineers, and athletes as goodwill efforts. No Latin American country emulated Cárdenas's radical policies in the agrarian sector, education, or economic nationalism.[81][82]

Other presidential actions

The development bank Nacional Financiera was founded during his term as president. Although not extensively active during that period, in the post-World War II era of the Mexican Miracle, the bank was an important tool in government industrialization projects.[83]

Cárdenas became known for his progressive program of building roads and schools and promoting education, gaining Congressional approval to allocate twice as much federal money to rural education as all his predecessors combined.[11]

Cárdenas ended capital punishment (in Mexico, usually in the form of a firing squad). Capital punishment has been banned in Mexico since that time. The control of the republic by Cárdenas and the PRI (Partido Revolucionario Institucional) predecessor Partido de la Revolución Mexicana without widespread bloodshed effectively signaled the end of rebellions that began with the 1910 Mexican Revolution. Despite Cárdenas' policy of socialist education, he also improved relations with the Roman Catholic Church during his administration.[84]

Failed Saturnino Cedillo revolt, 1938–1939

 
Saturnino Cedillo, revolutionary general and post-revolutionary cacique

The last military major revolt in Mexico was that of Saturnino Cedillo, a regional caudillo and former revolutionary general whose power base was in the state of San Luis Potosí. Cedillo was a supporter of Calles and had participated in the formation of the Partido Nacional Revolucionario. He was a "paradigmatic figure," acting as a strongman in his region and mediating between the federal government and his local power base.[85] As a powerbroker with demonstrated military and political skills, he had a great deal of autonomy in San Luis Potosí, serving a term as governor (1927–32), but then modeling Calles's Maximato was the power behind the governorship. Cedillo supported Cárdenas in his power struggle with Calles. However, relations between Cedillo and Cárdenas soured, particularly as Cárdenas's new political system was consolidated and undermined the autonomous power of local caciques.

Cárdenas was ideologically more radical than Cedillo, and Cedillo became a major figure in right-wing opposition to Cárdenas.[86] Groups around him included the fascist “Gold Shirts”, seen as a force capable of ousting Cárdenas. Cedillo rose in revolt in 1938 against Cárdenas, but the federal government had clear military superiority and crushed the uprising. In 1939, Cedillo, members of his family, and a number of supporters were killed, Cedillo himself was betrayed by a follower while he was in hiding.[86] He was “the last of the great military caciques of the Mexican Revolution who maintained his own quasi-private army,” and who constructed “his campesino fiefdom.”[86] Cárdenas's victory over Cedillo showed the power and consolidation of the newly reorganized Mexican state, but also a showdown between two former revolutionary generals in the political sphere.

Other political opposition to Cárdenas

There was more organized and ideological opposition to Cárdenas. Right-wing political groups opposed Cárdenas's policies, including the National Synarchist Union (UNS), a popular, pro-Catholic, quasi-fascist movement founded in 1937 that opposed his "atheism" and collectivism. Catholic, pro-business conservatives founded the National Action Party (PAN) in 1939, which became the principal opposition party in later years and won the presidency in 2000.[87]

Presidential election of 1940

In the elections of 1940, Cárdenas, hoping to prevent another uprising or even "an outright counter-revolution throughout the Republic" by those opposed to his leftist policies,[88] endorsed the PRM nominee Manuel Ávila Camacho, a moderate conservative.[89][90] Obregonista Francisco Múgica would have been Cárdenas's ideological heir, and he had played an important role in the Revolution, the leader of the left-wing faction that successfully placed key language in the Constitution of 1917, guaranteeing the rights of labor.[91] Múgica had known Cárdenas personally since 1926 when the two were working in Veracruz. Múgica had served in Cárdenas's cabinet as Secretary of the National Economy and as Secretary of the Ministry of Communications and Public Works. In those positions, Múgica made sure the federal government pursued social goals; Múgica was considered "the social conscience of Cardenismo."[92] Múgica resigned his cabinet post to be a candidate for the 1940 presidential election.[93]

 
Juan Andreu Almazán, revolutionary general and presidential candidate

However, the political system was not one of open competition among candidates, although the PRM's rules required an open convention to select the candidate. Cárdenas established the unwritten rule that the president chose his successor.[94] Cárdenas chose political unknown Manuel Ávila Camacho, far more centrist than Múgica, as the PRM's official candidate. He was "known as a conciliator rather than a leader" and later derided as "the unknown soldier."[95] Múgica withdrew, realizing his personal ambitions would not be satisfied, and went on to hold other posts in the government.[93] Cárdenas may well have hoped Ávila Camacho would salvage some of his progressive policies[89] and be a compromise candidate compared to his conservative opponent, General Juan Andreu Almazán. Cárdenas is said to have secured the support of the CTM and the CNC for Ávila Camacho by personally guaranteeing their interests would be respected.[96] Cárdenas's followers maintained a degree of representation in the new government, with Camacho naming Cardenistas “to head the ministries that mattered most to Mexican workers and to leftist ideologues.”[97]

The campaign and elections were marked by violent incidents;[98] on election-day the opposing parties hijacked numerous polling places and each issued their own "election results". Cárdenas himself was unable to vote on election day because the polling place closed early to prevent supporters of Almazán from voting.[99] Since the government controlled the electoral process, the official results declared Ávila Camacho as winner; Almazán cried fraud and threatened revolt,[100] trying to set up a parallel government and congress. Ávila Camacho crushed Almazán's forces[101] and assumed office in December 1940.[101] His inauguration was attended by US Vice President-elect Henry A. Wallace,[101] who was appointed by the U.S. as a "special representative with the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary" for Mexico, indicating that the U.S. recognized the legitimacy of the election results.[101] Almazán also attended Ávila Camacho's inauguration.[102]

Much to the surprise of Mexicans who expected that Cárdenas might follow the example of Calles and remain the power behind the presidency—particularly since Ávila Camacho did not appear to have major leadership skills at a time that the conflict in Europe and domestic turmoil were in evidence—he set the important precedent of leaving the presidency and its powers to his successor.[103]

Post-presidency

 
Monument to the Revolution, where Cárdenas is buried along with revolutionary leaders.

After his presidential term that ended 1 December 1940, Cárdenas served as Mexico's Minister of War 1942–1945, when Mexico was a solid participant in World War II, which reassured Mexican nationalists concerned about a close alliance with the United States.[104][105]

It has been said that Cárdenas was the only president associated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) who did not use the office to make himself wealthy. He retired to a modest home by Lake Pátzcuaro, Michoacán, and worked the rest of his life supervising irrigation projects and promoting free medical clinics and education for the nation's poor. He also continued to speak out about international political issues and in favor of greater democracy and human rights in Latin America and elsewhere. For example, he was one of the participants in the Russell Tribunal for investigating war crimes in Vietnam.[106] Although Cárdenas did not play the role that Calles had as the power behind the presidency, Cárdenas did exert influence on the PRI and in Mexican politics. He opposed the candidacy of Miguel Alemán Valdés for president in 1952, opposed the Vietnam War, and opposed the U.S. policy toward Cuba after the 1959 Cuban Revolution.[105]

Cárdenas was not happy with the rightward shift of Mexican presidents, starting with the presidency of Miguel Alemán (1946-1952). During the presidency of Adolfo López Mateos (1958-1964), Cárdenas emerged from retirement and pressed the president toward leftist stances. With the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in January 1959, Cárdenas among others in Latin America saw the hope of young revolution. Mexico was run by a party that claimed the legacy of the Mexican Revolution but had turned away from revolutionary ideals. Cárdenas went to Cuba in July 1959 and was with Castro at a huge rally where the former guerrilla leader declared himself premier of Cuba. Cárdenas returned to Mexico with the hope that the ideals of the Mexican Revolution could be revived, with land reform, support for agriculture, and an expansion of education and health services to Mexicans. He also directly appealed to López Mateos to free jailed union leaders. López Mateos became increasingly hostile to Cárdenas, who was explicitly and implicitly rebuking him. To Cárdenas he said, "They say the Communists are weaving a dangerous web around you."[107] The pressure on López Mateos had an impact, and he began implementing reforms in land, education, and the creation of social programs that emulated those under Cárdenas. Cárdenas withdrew his public challenge to the PRI's policies and supported López Mateos's designated successor in 1964, Gustavo Díaz Ordaz, his Minister of the Interior.[108]

 
Tanks in the Zócalo during the Mexican Movement of 1968

In 1968, Cárdenas did not anticipate the draconian crackdown by Díaz Ordaz in the run-up to the Mexico City Summer Olympics. That summer saw the emergence of the Mexican Movement of 1968, which mobilized tens of thousands of students and middle class supporters during the summer and early fall 1968. The movement ended in the bloody Tlatelolco Massacre on 2 October 1968. During the troubles that summer, one of Cárdenas's long-time friends, Heberto Castillo Martínez, a professor of mechanical engineering at the National University, actively participated in the movement and was pursued by Díaz Ordaz's secret police. Cárdenas hosted a meeting at his residence in the Polanco section of Mexico City with Castillo and some student leaders. Cárdenas was increasingly concerned about the impact on the movement on the political peace that had been built by the party. Despite the National University being a center of the movement, Cárdenas did not think that the government would violate the university's autonomy and take over the campus. It did, with tanks rolling into campus on 18 September. Castillo had a harrowing escape.[109] In October government troops fired on demonstrators at the Plaza of the Three Cultures in Tlatelolco, someone who had been there made his way to Cárdenas's house to tell him in tears what happened. Cárdenas's wife Amalia reportedly said, "And I believe that the General shed some tears too."[110]

Cárdenas died of lung cancer in Mexico City on 19 October 1970 at the age of 75. He is buried in the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City, sharing his final resting place with Venustiano Carranza, Pancho Villa, and Plutarco Elias Calles. Cárdenas's son Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas and his grandson Lázaro Cárdenas Batel have been prominent Mexican politicians.

Honors

In his honor, his name was given to a number of cities, towns, and a municipality in Mexico, including Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán, the municipality of Lázaro Cárdenas, Quintana Roo, Lázaro Cárdenas, Jalisco, and other smaller communities. A major dam project on the Nazas River named for him was inaugurated in 1946.[111] There are also many streets that have been named after him, including the Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas in Mexico City and highways in Guadalajara, Monterrey and Mexicali. Šetalište Lazaro Kardenasa (Lázaro Cárdenas promenade) in Belgrade, Serbia, is also named after him, as is a street in Barcelona, Spain, and a monument in a park in Madrid dedicated to his memory for his role in admitting defeated Spanish Republicans to Mexico after the Civil War in that country.[citation needed]

In 1955, Lázaro Cárdenas was one of several recipients that year of the Stalin Peace Prize, awarded to foreigners politically sympathetic to the Soviet Union. The prize was later renamed for Lenin as part of de-Stalinization.[citation needed]

A station in the Mexico City Metro was named after him.[112]

Legacy

President Cárdenas and his administration are given credit by socialists for expanding the distribution of land to the peasants, establishing new welfare programs for the poor, and nationalizing the railroad and petroleum industries, including the oil company that Cárdenas founded, Petróleos Mexicanos. Toward the end of his presidency, unhappy landowners and foreign capitalists began to challenge his programs and his power. His choice of his close associate Manuel Ávila Camacho rather than a candidate with a distinguished record as a revolutionary leader was displeasing to many, and occasioned a possible military revolt.

The party that Cárdenas founded, the Partido de la Revolución Mexicana (PRM), established the basic structure of sectoral representation of important groups, a structure retained by its successor in 1946, the PRI. The PRI continued in power until 2000. This is attributed by some to electoral fraud and coercion. This legacy led his son, Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas, to form the Democratic Revolution Party (PRD) to contest the 1988 presidential election. Since that year, the PRD has become one of the three major parties in Mexico, gaining working class support that was previously enjoyed by the PRI.

In his "Political Testament", written the year before his death and published posthumously, he acknowledged that his regime had failed to make the changes in distribution of political power and corruption that were the basis for his presidency and the revolution. He expressed his dismay in the fact that some people and groups were making themselves rich to the detriment of the mainly poor majority. It was said of Cárdenas in a eulogy that "he was the greatest figure produced by the revolution... an authentic revolutionary who aspired to the greatness of his country, not personal aggrandizement."[citation needed]

Philippine President Ramon Magsaysay patterned his people–oriented government on the principles which he found in a biography of Cárdenas written by William Cameron Townsend.[citation needed]

See also

References

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  79. ^ Matesanz, "Casa de España", pp. 205-06.
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Further reading

In English

  • Ashby, Joe C. Organized Labor and the Mexican Revolution under Lázaro Cárdenas. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press 1963.
  • Bantjes, Adrian A. "Cardenismo: Interpretations" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 1. pp. 195–199. Chicago: Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997.
  • Becker, Marjorie (1995). Setting the Virgin on Fire: Lázaro Cárdenas, Michoacán Peasants, and the Redemption of the Mexican Revolution. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520084193.
  • Cárdenas, Enrique. "The Great Depression and Industrialization: The Case of Mexico" in Rosemary Thorp, ed. Latin America in the 1930s: The Role of the Periphery in World Crisis. London 1984, pp. 222–41.
  • Cline, Howard F. The United States and Mexico, second edition, Chapter 11, "The Cárdenas Upheaval", pp. 215–238. Cambridge: Harvard University Press 1961.
  • Dulles, John W. F. Yesterday in Mexico: A Chronicle of the Revolution 1919–1936. Austin: University of Texas Press 1961.
  • Dwyer, John. "Diplomatic Weapons of the Weak: Mexican Policymaking during the U.S.-Mexican Agrarian Dispute, 1934–1941,Diplomatic History, 26:3 (2002): 375
  • Hamilton, Nora. The Limits of State Authority: Post-Revolutionary Mexico. Princeton: Princeton University Press 1982.
  • Hamilton, Nora. "Lázaro Cárdenas" in Encyclopedia of Mexico, vol. 1, pp. 192–195. Chicago: Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997.
  • Jolly, Jennifer. Creating Pátzcuaro, Creating Mexico: Art, Tourism, and Nation Building Under Lázaro Cárdenas. Austin: University of Texas Press 2018. ISBN 978-1477-314203
  • Knight, Alan. "Cardenismo: Juggernaut or Jalopy?" Journal of Latin American Studies 26 (1994).
  • Knight, Alan. "The Rise and Fall of Cardenismo" in Mexico Since Independence, Leslie Bethell, ed. New York: Cambridge University Press 1991, pp. 241–320, 417-422.
  • Krauze, Enrique, Mexico: Biography of Power. New York: HarperCollins 1997. ISBN 0-06-016325-9
  • Leonard, Thomas M.; Rankin, Monica; Smith, Joseph; Bratzel, John (ed.) (September 2006). Latin America during World War II. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9780742537415.
  • Lucas, Jeffrey Kent (2010). The Rightward Drift of Mexico's Former Revolutionaries: The Case of Antonio Díaz Soto y Gama. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 0-7734-3665-0.
  • Michaels, Albert L. "The Crisis of Cardenismo," Journal of Latin American Studies vol. 2 (May 1970): 51-79.
  • Powell, T.G. Mexico and the Spanish Civil War. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press 1981.
  • Riding, Alan (1986). Distant Neighbors. New York City: Vintage Books. ISBN 9780679724414.
  • Smith, Peter H. (April 1996). Talons of the Eagle: Dynamics of U.S.-Latin American Relations (2nd edition). USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195083040.
  • Townsend, William Cameron. Lázaro Cárdenas, Mexican Democrat. Ann Arbor 1952.
  • Weston, Jr., Charles H.; "The Political Legacy of Lázaro Cárdenas", The Americas, Vol. 39, No. 3 (Jan., 1983), pp. 383–405 Published by: Academy of American Franciscan History Stable, URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/981231 Accessed: February 26, 2009 14:16
  • Whetten, Nathan L. Rural Mexico. Chicago 1948.
  • Weston, Charles H. "The Political Legacy of Lázaro Cárdenas." The Americas, Vol. 39, No. 3 (Jan., 1983), pp. 383–405 Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/981231
  • Weyl, Nathaniel and Sylvia Weyl. The Reconquest of Mexico: The Years of Lázaro Cárdenas. London 1939.

In Spanish

  • Anguiano, Arturo. El Estado y la política obrera del cardenismo. Mexico City: Era 1975.
  • Benítez, Fernando. Lázaro Cárdenas y la revolución mexicana, vol. 3 Historia de la revolución mexicana. Colegio de México 1978.
  • Córdova, Arnaldo. La política de masas del cardenismo. Mexico City: Era 1974.
  • Gilly, Adolfo. El cardenismo, una utopía mexicana. Mexico City: Cal y Arena 1994.
  • González, Luis. Los Artífices del Cardenismo: Historia de la Revolución Mexicana. vol. 14. Mexico City: El Colegio de México 1979.
  • Hernández Chávez, Alicia. La mecánica cardenista: Histora de la Revolución Mexicana. vol. 16. Mexico City: Colegio de México 1979.
  • Krauze, Enrique. Lázaro Cárdenas: General misionero. Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Económico 1987.
  • Lanni, Octavio. El estado capitalista en la época de Cárdenas. Mexico 1977.
  • León, Samuel and Ignacio Marván. En el cardenismo (1934–1940). Mexico 1985.
  • Medin, Tzvi. Ideología y praxis política de Lázaro Cárdenas. Mexico City: Siglo XXI 1972, 13th edition 1986.
  • Suárez Valles, Manuel. Lázaro Cárdenas: una vida fecunda al servicio de México (Mexico City, 1971).
  • Viscaíno, Rogelio. Cárdenas y la izquierda mexicana. Mexico 1975.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by President of Mexico
1934–1940
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Jesús Agustín Castro
Secretary of National Defence
1942–1945
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Luis Méndez
Governor of Michoacán
1928–1932
Succeeded by
Dámaso Cárdenas
Party political offices
Preceded by President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
1930–1931
Succeeded by

lázaro, cárdenas, this, article, about, former, president, mexico, grandson, batel, other, uses, disambiguation, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, cárdenas, second, maternal, family, name, río, río, spanish, pronunciation, ˈlasaɾo, ˈkaɾðenas, list. This article is about the former president of Mexico For his grandson see Lazaro Cardenas Batel For other uses see Lazaro Cardenas disambiguation In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Cardenas and the second or maternal family name is del Rio Lazaro Cardenas del Rio Spanish pronunciation ˈlasaɾo ˈkaɾdenas listen 21 May 1895 19 October 1970 was a Mexican army officer and politician who served as president of Mexico from 1934 to 1940 Lazaro CardenasLazaro Cardenas 193451st President of MexicoIn office 1 December 1934 1934 12 01 30 November 1940 1940 11 30 Preceded byAbelardo L RodriguezSucceeded byManuel Avila CamachoSecretary of National DefenceIn office 1 September 1942 31 August 1945PresidentManuel Avila CamachoPreceded byJesus Agustin CastroSucceeded byFrancisco Luis UrquizoGovernor of MichoacanIn office 1928 1932Preceded byLuis MendezSucceeded byDamaso CardenasPresident of the Institutional Revolutionary PartyIn office 16 October 1930 27 August 1931Preceded byEmilio Portes GilSucceeded byManuel Perez TrevinoPersonal detailsBornLazaro Cardenas del Rio 1895 05 21 21 May 1895Jiquilpan Michoacan MexicoDied19 October 1970 1970 10 19 aged 75 Mexico City MexicoResting placeMonument to the Revolution Mexico City MexicoPolitical partyInstitutional Revolutionary PartySpouseAmalia Solorzano m 1932 wbr ChildrenCuauhtemoc CardenasOccupationStatesman GeneralMilitary serviceBranch serviceMexican ArmyYears of service1913 1928RankGeneralCommandsMexican RevolutionBorn in Jiquilpan Michoacan to a working class family Cardenas joined the Mexican Revolution and became a general in the Constitutionalist Army Although he was not from the state of Sonora whose revolutionary generals dominated Mexican politics in the 1920s Cardenas was hand picked by Plutarco Elias Calles Sonoran general and former president of Mexico as a presidential candidate and won in the 1934 general election After founding the National Revolutionary Party PNR in the wake of the assassination of president elect Alvaro Obregon Plutarco Elias Calles had unofficially remained in power during the Maximato 1928 1934 and expected to maintain that role when Cardenas took office 1 Cardenas however out maneuvered him politically and forced Calles into exile He established the structure of the National Revolutionary Party eventually renamed the Party of the Mexican Revolution PRM on the sectoral representation of peasant leagues labor union confederations and the Mexican Army Cardenas s incorporation of the army into the party structure was a deliberate move to diminish the power of the military and prevent their intervention in politics through coups d etat A left wing economic nationalist Cardenas led the expropriation of the Mexican oil industry and the creation of the state owned oil company Pemex in 1938 2 He implemented large scale land reform programs in Mexico redistributing large estates to smallholders in lands termed ejidos He created the National Polytechnic Institute IPN and El Colegio de Mexico Colmex His foreign policy supported and gave asylum to Republicans during the Spanish Civil War An achievement of Cardenas was his complete surrender of power in December 1940 to his successor Manuel Avila Camacho who was a political moderate without a distinguished military record Cardenas has been praised as the greatest constructive radical of the Mexican Revolution for implementing its ideals but has also been criticized as an authoritarian populist 3 He was the first Mexican president to serve for a sexenio a practice that continues today According to numerous opinion polls and analysts Cardenas is the most popular Mexican president of the 20th century 4 5 6 Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Military career 1 2 Service under President Calles 1 3 Governor of Michoacan 1928 1932 1 3 1 Land reform 1 3 2 Promotion of tourism art and indigenous culture 2 Presidential election of 1934 2 1 Six Year Plan and presidential campaign 3 Presidency 1934 1940 3 1 Presidential style 3 2 Cabinet 3 3 Cardenas and the military 3 4 Cardenas and the Catholic Church 3 5 Land reform and the peasantry 3 6 Labor 3 7 Education 3 8 Indigenismo 3 9 Women s suffrage 3 10 Partido de la Revolucion Mexicana 3 11 1938 oil expropriation 3 12 Spanish Civil War and refugees in Mexico 3 13 Relations with Latin America 3 14 Other presidential actions 3 15 Failed Saturnino Cedillo revolt 1938 1939 3 16 Other political opposition to Cardenas 3 17 Presidential election of 1940 4 Post presidency 5 Honors 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 In English 9 2 In Spanish 10 External linksEarly life and career EditLazaro Cardenas del Rio was born on 21 May 1895 one of eight children in a lower middle class family in the village of Jiquilpan Michoacan where his father owned a billiard hall 7 After the death of his father from the age of 16 Cardenas supported his family including his mother and seven younger siblings By the time he reached 18 he had worked as a tax collector a printer s devil and a jail keeper Although he left school when he was eleven he used every opportunity to educate himself and read widely throughout his life especially works of history Military career Edit General Lazaro Cardenas Cardenas set his sights on becoming a teacher but was drawn into the military during the Mexican Revolution after Victoriano Huerta overthrew President Francisco Madero in February 1913 although Michoacan was far from the revolutionary action that had brought Madero to the Mexican presidency After Huerta s coup and Madero s assassination Cardenas joined a group of Zapatistas but Huerta s forces scattered the group where Cardenas had served as captain and paymaster 7 Given that revolutionary forces were voluntary organizations his position of leadership points to his skills and his being a paymaster to the perception that he would be honest in financial matters Both characteristics followed him through his subsequent career He escaped the Federal forces in Michoacan and moved north where he served initially with Alvaro Obregon then Pancho Villa and after 1915 when Villa was defeated by Obregon to Plutarco Elias Calles who served Constitutionalist leader Venustiano Carranza 7 Although Cardenas was from the southern state of Michoacan his key experiences in the Revolution were with Constitutionalist northerners whose faction won In particular he served under Calles who tasked him with military operations against Yaqui Indians and against Zapatistas in Michoacan and Jalisco during which time he rose to a field command as general In 1920 after Carranza was overthrown by northern generals Cardenas was given the rank of brigadier general at the age of 25 7 Cardenas was appointed provisional governor of his home state of Michoacan under the brief presidency of Adolfo de la Huerta Service under President Calles Edit Cardenas was a political protege of Calles but his ideological mentor was revolutionary General Francisco J Mugica a strongly anticlerical secular socialist President Calles appointed Cardenas Chief of Military Operations in the Huasteca an oil producing region on the Gulf Coast Cardenas saw first hand the operations of foreign oil companies In the Huasteca U S oil companies extracted oil avoided taxes owed to the Mexican government and treated the region as conquered territory Mugica also was posted to the Huasteca and he and Cardenas became close During their time in the Huasteca Mugica told Cardenas that socialism is the appropriate doctrine for resolving conflicts in Mexico 8 Governor of Michoacan 1928 1932 Edit Cardenas was appointed governor of his home state of Michoacan in 1928 which was undergoing the political conflict between state and Church known as the Cristero War His ideological mentor Mugica had previously served as the state s governor and had attempted to counter the power of the Catholic Church in Mexico through laws He mobilized groups to support his positions creating political shock troops consisting of public school teachers and members of a disbanded agrarian league forming the Confederacion Revolucionaria Michoacana del Trabajo under the slogan of Union Land Work The organization was funded by the state government although not listed as an official expenditure It became the single most powerful organization representing both workers and peasants 9 Mobilizing worker and peasant support and controlling the organization to which they belonged became the model for Cardenas when he became president Land reform Edit As governor Cardenas also prioritized land reform at a time when President Calles was disillusioned by the program He expropriated haciendas and created ejidos collectively held state controlled landholdings Ejiditarios members of the ejido worked individual plots of land but did not hold title to it as private property Opposition to the program came from estate owners hacendados the clergy and in some cases tenant farmers but Cardenas continued land reform programs in his state 10 During his four years as governor Cardenas initiated a modest re distribution of land at the state level encouraged the growth of peasant and labor organizations and improved education at a time when it was neglected by the federal government Cardenas ensured teachers were paid on time personally inspected schools and opened one hundred new rural schools Due to his grassroots style of governing Cardenas made important policy decisions based on direct information received from the public rather than on the advice of his confidants 11 Promotion of tourism art and indigenous culture Edit Cardenas s home La Quinta Erendira in Patzcuaro During his term as governor Cardenas sought to bring peace to the state unite its population divided by the on going Cristero War and make Michoacan especially the historic town of Patzcuaro into a tourist destination Once he was president of Mexico he continued to devote government funding to the project 12 Cardenas built a house in Patzcuaro when he became governor of the state naming it La Quinta Erendira after the Purepecha princess who has been identified as Mexico s first anticolonial heroine for her resistance to the Spanish conquest and a contrasting figure to Malinche Cortes s cultural translator 13 Erendira became a popular historical figure under Cardenas At his estate he commissioned murals for the house which are now lost but it is known from historical sources that they had indigenous themes particularly the rise and fall of the Purepecha Empire at the time of the Spanish conquest The murals and the texts appropriate national historical narratives in order to supplant the national myths and locate Mexico s ideal foundations in Michoacan 14 Presidential election of 1934 Edit Logo of the Partido Nacional Revolucionario founded by Plutarco Elias Calles in 1929 The logo has the colors and arrangement of the Mexican flag with the party s acronym replacing the symbol of the eagle Calles tapped Cardenas to be the party s president Of the revolutionary generals Cardenas was considered honest able anti clerical and politically astute 7 He had come from a poor and marginal state of Mexico but had risen to political prominence by his military skills on the battlefield but importantly he had chosen the correct side of decisive splits since 1913 7 When he was chosen as the presidential candidate in 1934 no one expected him to be anything other than being loyal to Calles the Jefe Maximo and power behind the presidency since 1929 7 As the PNR s candidate Cardenas s election was a foregone conclusion 15 It was politically impossible for his patron Calles to serve as president again but he continued to dominate Mexico after his presidency 1924 28 through puppet administrations in a period known as the Maximato After two of his hand picked men held office the PNR balked in 1932 at supporting his first choice Manuel Perez Trevino Instead they selected Cardenas as the presidential candidate Calles agreed believing he could control Cardenas as he had controlled his predecessors Not only had Cardenas been associated with Calles for two decades but he had prospered politically with Calles patronage As expected Cardenas won handily officially winning over 98 percent of the vote 16 Six Year Plan and presidential campaign Edit Cardenas ran on the Six Year Plan for social and political reform that the party drafted under Calles s direction 17 Such a multiyear program was patterned after the just completed Five Year Plan of the Soviet Union 15 The Six Year Plan to span the presidential term 1934 40 was a patchwork of proposals from a variety of participants but the driving force behind it was Calles who had given a speech in May 1933 saying that the Mexican Revolution had failed in most of its important objectives and that a plan needed to implement its objectives 15 Interim President Abelardo L Rodriguez did not get his cabinet s approval for the plan in 1933 so Calles s next move was to present it in draft form to the party convention Rather than a blueprint the Six Year Plan was a sales prospectus and a hopeless jumble filled with compromises and contradictions as well as utopian aspirations But the direction of the plan was toward renewed reform 18 The plan called for destruction of the hacienda economy and creation of a collective system of ejidos common lands under government control modern secular schools and eradication of the influence of the Catholic Church and workers cooperatives to oppose the excesses of industrial capitalism 17 19 Assured of the backing of the powerful Calles and a presidential victory Cardenas took the opportunity to actively campaign in many parts of Mexico rather than remaining in Mexico City His 25 000 kilometer campaign accomplished several things including making direct contact with regions and constituents who had never seen a presidential candidate before and thus building Cardenas a personal power base The campaign also allowed him to refine and articulate for popular consumption what he considered the important elements of the Six Year Plan On the campaign trail he acted more like someone already in office than a candidate settling disputes between groups He reached out to Mexican workers as well as peasants to whom he promised land reform Cardenas promised indigenous peoples schools and educational opportunities and urged them to join with workers against exploitative practices 20 Presidency 1934 1940 Edit Lazaro Cardenas President of Mexico Presidential style Edit Cardenas decrees nationalization of foreign railways in 1937 Cardenas s first action after taking office late in 1934 was to have his presidential salary cut in half He became the first occupant of the official presidential residence of Los Pinos He had the previous residence the ostentatious Chapultepec Castle 21 turned into the National Museum of History In a move that struck at the financial interests of his patron Calles s cronies Cardenas closed down their gambling casinos and brothels where prominent Callistas had invested their profits from bribery and industrial activities 21 Cardenas did not use armored cars or bodyguards to protect himself In the presidential campaign of 1934 he traveled through much of the rural areas by auto and horseback accompanied only by Rafael M Pedrajo a chauffeur and an aide de camp His fearlessness generated widespread respect for Cardenas who had demonstrated his bravery and leadership as a revolutionary general Cabinet Edit Cardenas s cabinet when he was first in office included Calles family members his oldest son Rodolfo at the Secretariat of Communications and Public Works 1934 1935 Aaron Saenz Garza the brother in law of Calles s second son Plutarco Jr Aco was appointed the administrator for Mexico City 1934 1935 a cabinet level position Others with loyalty to Calles were radical Tomas Garrido Canabal at the Secretariat of Agriculture and Development 1934 1935 Marxist Narciso Bassols held the post of Secretary of Finance and Public Credit 1934 1935 Emilio Portes Gil who had been interim president of Mexico following the assassination of Obregon but not chosen as the PNR presidential candidate in 1929 held the position of Foreign Secretary 1934 1935 Cardenas chose his comrade in arms and mentor General Francisco Jose Mugica as Secretary of the National Economy 1934 1935 As Cardenas began to chart his course and outflank Calles politically he replaced Calles loyalists in 1935 with his own men citation needed Cardenas and the military Edit See also Military history of Mexico Lazaro Cardenas and the military As a revolutionary general Cardenas followed in the tradition of his immediate predecessors in the presidency who had standing as military leaders but sought to curb the power of the military Obregon and Calles sought to downsize and professionalize the Mexican military and make it subordinate to the civilian government Cardenas s election had not triggered revolts by disgruntled military men with ambitions to the presidency as had happened in 1923 1928 and 1929 Much of the military remained loyal to Calles but Cardenas had supporters among the army leadership as well Cardenas sought to serve as president in his own right not be a puppet of Calles and to do that he needed to broaden his base of support Cardenas sought to arm the peasantry as a counterpoise to the army a move that disturbed the more conservative generals Cardenas cultivated the loyalty of the junior officer corps providing better housing pensions and schooling for their children 22 Cardenas and the Catholic Church Edit Cardenas repealed the Calles Law soon after he became president in 1934 23 Cardenas earned respect from Pope Pius XI and had a close friendship with Mexican Archbishop Luis Maria Martinez 23 a major figure in Mexico s Catholic Church who successfully persuaded Mexicans to obey the government s laws peacefully However he also implemented educational reforms particularly socialist education and the elimination of religious schooling 24 Nevertheless the Cardenas administration bridged a gap between church and state developed a working and friendly relationship with the church and helped subdue the bitter animosity between Catholics and leftists that had lingered since the Mexican Revolution with the Holy See eventually supporting Cardenas in comparison to condemning the militant atheism of Calles 25 Land reform and the peasantry Edit Further information Land reform in Mexico and Ejido During Cardenas presidency the government enacted land reform that was sweeping rapid and in some respects innovative 26 He redistributed large commercial haciendas some 180 000 km2 of land to peasants 27 With the powers of Article 27 of the Mexican constitution he created agrarian collectives or ejidos which in early twentieth century Mexico were an atypical form of landholding 26 Two high profile regions of expropriation for Cardenas s agrarian reform were in the productive cotton growing region in northern Mexico known as La Laguna and in Yucatan where the economy was dominated by henequen production 28 Other areas that saw significant land reform were Baja California and Sonora in northern Mexico his home state of Michoacan and Chiapas in southern Mexico 26 President Cardenas with campesinos by Roberto Cueva del Rio watercolor 1937 In 1937 Cardenas invited Andres Molina Enriquez intellectual father of Article 27 of the 1917 Constitution to accompany him to Yucatan to implement the land reform even though Molina Enriquez was not a big supporter of the collective ejido system 29 Although he could not go due to ill health he defended Cardenas s action against Luis Cabrera who argued that the Ejidal Bank that Cardenas established when he embarked on his sweeping redistribution of land was in fact making the Mexican state the new hacienda owner For Molina Enriquez the Yucatecan henequen plantations were an evil legacy and hellholes for the Maya As a lifelong supporter of land reform Molina Enriquez s support of Cardenas s glorious crusade was important 30 Cardenas knew that peasant support was important and as a presidential candidate in 1933 he reached out to an autonomous peasant organization the Liga Nacional Campesina National Peasant League and promised to integrate it into the party structure The Liga split over this question but one element was integrated into the Partido Nacional Revolucionario Cardenas expanded the peasant league s base in 1938 into the Confederacion Nacional Campesina CNC 31 Cardenas believed that an organized peasantry would represent a political force capable of confronting the established landholding elite as well as providing a critical voting block for the new Mexican state 32 Scholars differ as to Cardenas s intent for the CNC with some viewing it as an autonomous organization that would advocate for peasants regarding land tenure rural projects and peasant political interests while others see the CNC as in patron client relationship with the state restricting its autonomy 32 33 34 The CNC was created with the idea of peasant unification and was controlled by the government Peasants rights were acknowledged but peasants were to be responsible allies of the political regime The radical Confederation of Mexican Workers CTM and the Mexican Communist Party PCM sought to organize peasants but Cardenas asserted the government s right to do that since it was in charge of land reform and warned that their attempting to organize the peasantry would sow dissension 35 Cardenas further strengthened the government s role by creating rural militias or reserves which armed some 60 000 peasants by 1940 which were under the control of the army The armed peasantry helped promote political stability against regional strongmen caudillos They could ensure that government land reform was accomplished Peasant reserves could protect recipients of reform against estate owners and break rural strikes that threatened government control 36 Agrarian reform took place in a patchwork fashion with uneven results Over years many regions had experienced peasant mobilization in the face of repression and low intensity agrarian warfare 37 The peasant movement in Morelos had mobilized before the Mexican Revolution and had success under Emiliano Zapata s leadership extinguished the hacienda system in that state In Cardenas s agrarian reform with the revolutionary regime consolidated and agrarian problems still unresolved the president courted mobilized agraristas who now found the state attentive to their issue Land reform with some exceptions such as in Yucatan took place in areas of previous mobilization 37 Peasants themselves pushed for agrarian reform and to the extent it was accomplished they were integral agents not merely the recipients of top down state largesse However the peasantry was under the control of the national government with no outlet for independent organization or the formation of alliances with Mexican urban workers 38 Labor Edit Vicente Lombardo Toledano socialist leader of the Confederation of Mexican Workers The other key sector of reform was industrial labor Article 123 of the 1917 Constitution had empowered workers in an unprecedented way guaranteeing human rights such as the minimum wage an eight hour workday and the right to strike and form trade unions but in a more comprehensive fashion Article 123 signaled that the Mexican state was firmly on the side of workers A labor organization already existed when Cardenas took office the CROM union of Luis Morones Morones was forced out of his cabinet post in Calles s government and the CROM declined in power and influence with major defections of Mexico City unions one of which was led by socialist Vicente Lombardo Toledano Cardenas promoted Toledano s purified Confederation of Mexican Workers which evolved into the Mexican Confederation of Workers or CTM The CTM s alliance with Cardenas was tactical and conditional seeing their interests being forwarded by Cardenas but not controlled by him 39 As with the agrarian sector with mobilized peasants mobilized and organized workers had long agitated and fought for their interests Article 123 of the Constitution was a tangible result of their participation in the Mexican Revolution on the Constitutionalist side In fact workers organized by the Casa del Obrero Mundial a radical labor organization fought in the Red Battalions against the peasant revolutionaries led by Emiliano Zapata Lombardo Toledano and the CTM supported Cardenas s exile of Calles and in the same stroke Cardenas also exiled CROM s discredited leader Luis Napoleon Morones 40 Cardenas nationalized the railway system creating the Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Mexico in 1938 and put under a workers administration His most sweeping nationalization was that of the petroleum industry in 1938 Various measures affecting labor were also introduced under Cardenas A decree was issued giving binding force throughout the Republic to a collective agreement which establishes a maximum working week of 48 hours for persons employedin sugar cane plantations sugar factories including by products and all similar undertakings In addition the Factory Inspection Service was instructed by the Federal authorities to make arrangements to secure regular and effective supervision of working hours and to prevent infringements of the 8 hour day Under an Act of the 20th February 1936 that concerned the payment of wages for the weekly rest day the State authorities are free to allow for the special circumstances and needs of each locality when promulgating administrative regulations An enquiry made by the Department of Labour into silicosis in mines and byssinosis in the cotton industry led to the adoption of measures to ensure notification and compensation of these diseases Regulations dealing with general industrial hygiene were issued on the 6th of June 1936 Dust exhaust apparatus and respirators were made compulsory for factories using certain raw materials wool padding etc and the Federal Department of Public Health issued regulations for the protection of the health of workers in the woollen industry The Industrial Hygiene Regulations of 6th of June 1936 make it compulsory for factories to establish a medical service 41 Regulations for the inspection of boilers were laid down on the 30th August 1936 while regulations of the 25th of June 1936 concerning industrial hygiene provide that the Department of Health must determine the cases in which industrial undertakings are to establish creches and day nurseries for the children of their workers The Government also undertook to give effect to Article 123 of the Constitution which provides that all agricultural industrial and mining undertakings shall supply comfortable and healthy living accommodation for their employees 42 Under an Act of the 27th of September 1938 which was promulgated on the 5th of December 1938 laying down the Federal Civil Servants Statute hours of work and other conditions of employment are regulated for all Federal civil servants other than those employed in a confidential capacity On the 21st of March 1939 regulations for a maritime inspection service were promulgated 43 Education Edit General Lazaro Cardenas del Rio During the Calles Maximato Mexican education policies were directed at curtailing the cultural influence of the Catholic Church by introducing sex education and leftist ideology via socialist education and generally aiming to create a national civic culture citation needed Cardenas as a presidential candidate under the patronage of fierce anticlerical Calles was in favor of such policies The opposition to socialist education by the Catholic Church as an institution and rural Catholics in such strongholds as Michoacan Jalisco and Durango saw the revival of armed peasant opposition sometimes known as the Second Cristiada The extent of the opposition was significant and Cardenas chose to step back from implementing the radical educational policies particularly as he became engaged with undermining Calles s power Cardenas gained support from the Catholic Church when he distanced himself from anticlerical policies 44 An important addition to higher education in Mexico was when Cardenas established the Instituto Politecnico Nacional IPN a technical university in Mexico City in the wake of the 1938 oil expropriation to train engineers and scientists A basic Act on Education which contained detailed provisions on technical and professional training and education was promulgated on the 30th of December 1939 45 Indigenismo Edit Main article Indigenismo in Mexico Indigenismo under Cardenas Cardenas created the new cabinet level Department of Indigenous Affairs Departamento de Asuntos Indigenas in 1936 with Graciano Sanchez an agrarista leader in charge After a controversy at the DAI Sanchez was replaced by a scholar Prof Luis Chavez Orozco 46 Cardenas was influenced by an advocate of indigenismo Moises Saenz who earned a doctorate in education from Columbia University and had held a position in the Calles administration in the Secretariat of Public Education SEP Although initially an assimilationist for Mexico s indigenous he shifted his perspective after a period of residence in a Purepecha village which he published as Carapan Bosquejo de una experiencia He came to see indigenous culture as having value 47 Saenz advocated for educational and economic reforms that would better the indigenous and this became the aim of the department Cardenas created The official 1940 government report on the Cardenas administration states that the indigenous problem is one of the most serious that the revolutionary government has had to confront 48 The aim of the department was to study fundamental problems concerning Mexico s indigenous particularly economic and social conditions and then propose measures to the executive power for coordinated action to promote and manage measures considered to be in the interests of centers of indigenous populations Most indigenous people were found in Veracruz Oaxaca Chiapas and Yucatan according to the 1930 national census 49 In 1936 and 1937 the department had approximately 100 employees and a budget of 750 000 pesos but as with other aspects of the Cardenas regime 1938 marked a significant increase personnel and budget 350 employees in 1938 and a budget of 2 77 million pesos and in 1939 the high point in the department s budget there were 850 employees with a budget of 3 75 million pesos In 1940 the budget remained robust at 3 million pesos with 650 employees 50 The function of the department was primarily economic and educational 51 Specifically it was tasked with defending indigenous villages and communities holders of ejidos ejidatarios and indigenous citizens from persecution and abuse that could be committed by any type of authority It defended ejido officials comisariados ejidales and agricultural cooperatives 52 The goals that the department worked toward were primarily economic and education with cultural actions second Social measures and public health sanitation were less important in terms of action for this department 53 The department promoted a series of national indigenous congresses bringing together different indigenous groups to meet as indigenous and discuss common issues The government s aim in doing this was to have them move in concert toward the integral liberation liberacion integral with their rights respected by the primary goal was to incorporate indigenous into the larger national population on an equal basis Initially in 1936 and 1937 there was one annual conference The first one drew approximately 300 pueblos while the second only 75 In 1938 there were two conferences with 950 pueblos represented The last two years of the Cardenas sexenio there were two congresses each year but sparser attendance at around 200 pueblos each The government attempted to engage the active participation of the indigenous pueblos seeing that such engagement was the key to success but the fall off in the last two years indicates decreased mobilization 54 The department published 12 edited books with a total publication run of 350 as well as 170 tape recorded materials in indigenous languages 55 In February 1940 the department established a separate medical sanitary section with 4 clinics in Chihuahua and one in Sonora but the largest number were in central in southern Mexico In 1940 the first Interamerican Indigenista Congress met in Patzcuaro Michoacan with Cardenas giving a plenary address to the participants 56 Women s suffrage Edit Cardenas had pushed for women s suffrage in Mexico responding to the pressure from women activists and from the political climate that emphasized equality of citizens Mexico was not alone in Latin America in not enfranchising women but in 1932 both Brazil and Uruguay had extended suffrage to women 57 and Ecuador had also done so Women had made a significant contribution to the Mexican Revolution but had not made gains in the postrevolutionary phase Women who were members of the National Peasants Confederation Confederacion Nacional Campesina or the Confederation of Mexican Workers Confederacion de Trabajadores Mexicanos were by virtue of their membership umbrella organizations also members of Cardenas s reorganized party the Party of the Mexican Revolution or PRM done in 1938 In practice however women were marginalized from power 58 Women could not stand for national or local governmental elections or vote The Constitution of 1917 did not explicitly address women s rights and so to enfranchise women required a constitutional amendment The amendment itself was simple and brief specifying that mexicanos referred to both women and men Many PNR congressmen and senators gave supportive speeches for the amendment but there was opposition Cardenas s impending reorganization of the party which took place in 1938 was a factor in changing some opponents into supporters 59 In the end it passed unanimously and was sent to the states to ratify it Despite the speeches and the ratifications opponents used a loophole to block the amendment s implementation by refusing to publish notice of the change in the Diario official 60 Skeptics of women s suffrage were suspicious that conservative Catholic women would take instructions on voting from priests and so undermine the progressive gains of the Revolution Conservative Catholic women had mobilized during the church state conflict of the late 1920s the Cristero Rebellion giving material aid to Cristero armies and even forming a secret society Feminine Brigades of St Joan of Arc 61 The concern about Mexican women taking advise from priests on voting had some foundation in the example of the leftist Spanish Republic of the 1930s Many Spanish women indeed supported the position of the Catholic Church which was opposed to the republic s anticlerical policies 62 The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 was for Mexico a cautionary tale the failure of a leftist regime after a military coup Cardenas was unable to overcome opposition to women s suffrage although he personally was committed to the cause Women did not get the vote in Mexico until 1953 when the Mexican government was pursuing economic policies friendlier to business and there was a modus vivendi with the Catholic Church in Mexico Partido de la Revolucion Mexicana Edit Main article Institutional Revolutionary Party PRM 1938 1946 Logo of the PRM based on the logo of its predecessor the Partido Nacional Revolucionario that used the colors of the Mexican flag as its symbol Cardenas s PRM created formal sectoral representation within the party structure including one for the Mexican military The sectoral structure was retained when the party became the PRI in 1946 The Partido de la Revolucion Mexicana PRM came into being on March 30 1938 after the party founded in 1929 by Calles the Partido Nacional Revolucionario PNR was dissolved Cardenas s PRM was reorganized again in 1946 as the Institutional Revolutionary Party Calles founded the PNR in the wake of President elect Obregon s assassination in order to create some way for revolutionary leaders to maintain order and power Calles could not be re elected as president but did hold power through the newly created party Often called the official party it was created as a cartel to control localized political machines and interests 63 When Cardenas ran as the candidate of the PNR in 1934 Calles had expected to continue to be the real power in Mexico Cardenas might have been one of the short term powerless presidents of the years 1929 1934 but instead he built a large and mobilized base of support of industrial workers and peasants and forced Calles into exile in 1935 Cardenas further consolidated power by dissolving the PNR and creating a new party with a completely different kind of organization Although Congress was dominated by Callistas early in his term Cardenas persuaded congressmen to his side to the point that he commanded a majority in the Chamber 64 As noted by one study when Calles began to criticize agrarian and labor agitation and pressure the government to moderate its policies in mid 1935 Cardenas purged his cabinet of Calles s most loyal supporters This action demonstrated that the power of the Jefe Maximo was more apparent than real In its wake Cardenistas took over the PNR Congress and the governments of 14 states 65 As noted by another study Calles left the country and the Cardenista blocs in the Union Congress became the majority 66 The PRM was organized in four sectors industrial labor peasants a middle class sector composed largely of government workers and the military This organization was a resurrection of corporatism essentially organization by estates or interest groups 67 Each sector of the party had a parallel organization so that the labor sector was composed of the Confederation of Mexican Workers CTM the peasant sector by the National Confederation of Campesinos CNC and the middle class sector by the Federation of Unions of Workers in Service to the State FSTSE created in 1938 68 The old Federal Army had been destroyed in the Revolution and the post revolutionary military had increasingly been transformed from a collection of veteran revolutionary fighters into a military organized along more traditional lines of hierarchy and control 69 The military had in most of Latin America in the post independence period viewed itself as the arbiter of power and intervened in politics by force or the threat of force In the post revolutionary period presidents of Mexico including Cardenas were former generals in the revolutionary army Curbing the power of the military was instigated by Alvaro Obregon and Calles but the threat of revolt and undermining of the state remained as the Cristero Rebellion showed in the late 1920s led by a former revolutionary general Enrique Gorostieta Cardenas aimed to undermine the military s potential to dominate politics by making it a sector of the official party Although some critics questioned the military s incorporation into the party Cardenas saw it as a way to assert civilian control He is quoted as saying We did not put the Army in politics It was already there In fact it had been dominating the situation and we did well to reduce its voice to one in four 70 Cardenas had already mobilized workers and peasants into a counterweight to the military s domination of politics 71 These groups often had different interests but rather than creating a pluralist system in which the groups competed the corporatist model placed the President as the arbiter of interests Thus the organization of different interest groups with formal representation in the party gave them access to largesse from the State but also limited their ability to act autonomously since they were dependents of the new system The corporatist model is most often associated with fascism whose rise in Germany and Italy in the 1930s coincided with Cardenas s presidency Cardenas was emphatically opposed to fascism but created the PRM and organized the Mexican state on authoritarian lines That reorganization can be seen as the enduring legacy of the Cardenas presidency Although the PRM was reorganized into the Institutional Revolutionary Party in 1946 the basic structure was retained Cardenas s calculation that the military s incorporation into the PRM would undermine its power was essentially correct since it disappeared as a separate sector of the party but was absorbed into the popular sector 72 1938 oil expropriation Edit Main article Mexican oil expropriation See also Petroleum industry in Mexico PEMEX logo Cardenas had had dealings with the oil industry in the Huasteca in his capacity as a military commander Ongoing issues with the foreign owned companies and the Mexican petroleum workers organization became increasingly tense Early in his presidency he declared that a previous agreement between companies and the government was not in harmony with the basic principle of Article 27 of the Constitution In 1936 the 18 000 member oil workers union forced oil companies to sign the first ever collective bargaining agreement The union demanded 26 million pesos the companies offered 12 million Giving more force to Mexican workers demands Cardenas set up the National Oil Administration and the government s Council of Conciliation and Arbitration took jurisdiction over the wage dispute The Council supported the workers demands which the companies refused to pay To put even more force into the government s position it cancelled oil concessions dating to the Porfirato This move was unprecedented in the history of foreign oil in Mexico Management and high skilled workers were all foreigners so the companies thought that nationalization would be a rash move for Mexico The companies appealed the government s decision to force companies to pay their wages to the Mexican Supreme Court which ruled against them on 1 March 1938 Cardenas was ready to act Cardenas tasked his old ally Francisco J Mugica with writing the declaration to the nation about expropriation 73 On 18 March 1938 Cardenas nationalized Mexico s petroleum reserves and expropriated the equipment of the foreign oil companies in Mexico The announcement inspired a spontaneous six hour parade in Mexico City it was followed by a national fundraising campaign to compensate the private companies The legislation for nationalization provided compensation for the expropriated assets but Cardenas action angered the international business community and Western governments especially the United Kingdom 74 The Mexican government was more worried about the lack of technical expertise within the nation to run the refineries Before leaving the oil companies had ensured they left nothing of value behind hoping to force Cardenas to accept their conditions Mexico was eventually able to restart the oil fields and refineries but production did not rise to pre nationalization levels until 1942 after the entry of the United States into World War II The US sent technical advisers to Mexico to ensure production could support the overall Allied war effort In 1938 the British severed diplomatic relations with Cardenas government and boycotted Mexican oil and other goods An international court ruled that Mexico had the authority for nationalization With the outbreak of World War II oil became a highly sought after commodity 75 The company that Cardenas founded Petroleos Mexicanos or Pemex later served as a model for other nations seeking greater control over their oil and natural gas resources 74 In the early 21st century its revenues continued to be the most important source of income for the country despite weakening finances Cardenas founded the National Polytechnic Institute to ensure the education and training of people to run the oil industry Spanish Civil War and refugees in Mexico Edit Monument to Lazaro Cardenas in Parque Espana Mexico City Cardenas supported the Republican government of Spain against right wing general Francisco Franco s forces during the Spanish Civil War Franco was given support by Germany and Italy Mexico s support of the Republican government was by selling arms to the Republican army underwriting arms purchases from third parties supporting the Republic in the League of Nations providing food shelter and education for children orphaned during the Spanish Civil War 76 Although Mexico s efforts in the Spanish Civil War were not enough to save the Spanish Republic it did provide a place of exile for as many as 20 000 40 000 Spanish refugees 77 Among those who reached Mexico were distinguished intellectuals who left a lasting imprint on Mexican cultural life The range of refugees may be seen from an analysis of the 4 559 passengers arriving in Mexico in 1939 on board the ships Sinaia Ipanema and Mexique the largest groups were technicians and qualified workers 32 farmers and ranchers 20 along with professionals technicians workers business people students and merchants who represented 43 of the total 78 The Casa de Espana founded with Mexican government support in the early 1930s was an organization to provide a haven for Spanish loyalist intellectuals and artists It became the Colegio de Mexico in October 1940 an elite institution of higher education in Mexico with the support of Cardenas s government 79 In 1936 Cardenas allowed Russian exile Leon Trotsky to settle in Mexico reportedly to counter accusations that Cardenas was a Stalinist 80 Cardenas was not as left wing as Leon Trotsky and other socialists would wish but Trotsky described his government as the only honest one in the world citation needed Relations with Latin America Edit Mexico s most important relations with foreign countries during the Cardenas presidency was the United States but Cardenas attempted to influence fellow Latin American nations viable formal diplomatic efforts in Cuba Chile Colombia and Peru especially in the cultural sphere Mexico sent artists engineers and athletes as goodwill efforts No Latin American country emulated Cardenas s radical policies in the agrarian sector education or economic nationalism 81 82 Other presidential actions Edit The development bank Nacional Financiera was founded during his term as president Although not extensively active during that period in the post World War II era of the Mexican Miracle the bank was an important tool in government industrialization projects 83 Cardenas became known for his progressive program of building roads and schools and promoting education gaining Congressional approval to allocate twice as much federal money to rural education as all his predecessors combined 11 Cardenas ended capital punishment in Mexico usually in the form of a firing squad Capital punishment has been banned in Mexico since that time The control of the republic by Cardenas and the PRI Partido Revolucionario Institucional predecessor Partido de la Revolucion Mexicana without widespread bloodshed effectively signaled the end of rebellions that began with the 1910 Mexican Revolution Despite Cardenas policy of socialist education he also improved relations with the Roman Catholic Church during his administration 84 Failed Saturnino Cedillo revolt 1938 1939 Edit Saturnino Cedillo revolutionary general and post revolutionary cacique The last military major revolt in Mexico was that of Saturnino Cedillo a regional caudillo and former revolutionary general whose power base was in the state of San Luis Potosi Cedillo was a supporter of Calles and had participated in the formation of the Partido Nacional Revolucionario He was a paradigmatic figure acting as a strongman in his region and mediating between the federal government and his local power base 85 As a powerbroker with demonstrated military and political skills he had a great deal of autonomy in San Luis Potosi serving a term as governor 1927 32 but then modeling Calles s Maximato was the power behind the governorship Cedillo supported Cardenas in his power struggle with Calles However relations between Cedillo and Cardenas soured particularly as Cardenas s new political system was consolidated and undermined the autonomous power of local caciques Cardenas was ideologically more radical than Cedillo and Cedillo became a major figure in right wing opposition to Cardenas 86 Groups around him included the fascist Gold Shirts seen as a force capable of ousting Cardenas Cedillo rose in revolt in 1938 against Cardenas but the federal government had clear military superiority and crushed the uprising In 1939 Cedillo members of his family and a number of supporters were killed Cedillo himself was betrayed by a follower while he was in hiding 86 He was the last of the great military caciques of the Mexican Revolution who maintained his own quasi private army and who constructed his campesino fiefdom 86 Cardenas s victory over Cedillo showed the power and consolidation of the newly reorganized Mexican state but also a showdown between two former revolutionary generals in the political sphere Other political opposition to Cardenas Edit There was more organized and ideological opposition to Cardenas Right wing political groups opposed Cardenas s policies including the National Synarchist Union UNS a popular pro Catholic quasi fascist movement founded in 1937 that opposed his atheism and collectivism Catholic pro business conservatives founded the National Action Party PAN in 1939 which became the principal opposition party in later years and won the presidency in 2000 87 Presidential election of 1940 Edit In the elections of 1940 Cardenas hoping to prevent another uprising or even an outright counter revolution throughout the Republic by those opposed to his leftist policies 88 endorsed the PRM nominee Manuel Avila Camacho a moderate conservative 89 90 Obregonista Francisco Mugica would have been Cardenas s ideological heir and he had played an important role in the Revolution the leader of the left wing faction that successfully placed key language in the Constitution of 1917 guaranteeing the rights of labor 91 Mugica had known Cardenas personally since 1926 when the two were working in Veracruz Mugica had served in Cardenas s cabinet as Secretary of the National Economy and as Secretary of the Ministry of Communications and Public Works In those positions Mugica made sure the federal government pursued social goals Mugica was considered the social conscience of Cardenismo 92 Mugica resigned his cabinet post to be a candidate for the 1940 presidential election 93 Juan Andreu Almazan revolutionary general and presidential candidate However the political system was not one of open competition among candidates although the PRM s rules required an open convention to select the candidate Cardenas established the unwritten rule that the president chose his successor 94 Cardenas chose political unknown Manuel Avila Camacho far more centrist than Mugica as the PRM s official candidate He was known as a conciliator rather than a leader and later derided as the unknown soldier 95 Mugica withdrew realizing his personal ambitions would not be satisfied and went on to hold other posts in the government 93 Cardenas may well have hoped Avila Camacho would salvage some of his progressive policies 89 and be a compromise candidate compared to his conservative opponent General Juan Andreu Almazan Cardenas is said to have secured the support of the CTM and the CNC for Avila Camacho by personally guaranteeing their interests would be respected 96 Cardenas s followers maintained a degree of representation in the new government with Camacho naming Cardenistas to head the ministries that mattered most to Mexican workers and to leftist ideologues 97 The campaign and elections were marked by violent incidents 98 on election day the opposing parties hijacked numerous polling places and each issued their own election results Cardenas himself was unable to vote on election day because the polling place closed early to prevent supporters of Almazan from voting 99 Since the government controlled the electoral process the official results declared Avila Camacho as winner Almazan cried fraud and threatened revolt 100 trying to set up a parallel government and congress Avila Camacho crushed Almazan s forces 101 and assumed office in December 1940 101 His inauguration was attended by US Vice President elect Henry A Wallace 101 who was appointed by the U S as a special representative with the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary for Mexico indicating that the U S recognized the legitimacy of the election results 101 Almazan also attended Avila Camacho s inauguration 102 Much to the surprise of Mexicans who expected that Cardenas might follow the example of Calles and remain the power behind the presidency particularly since Avila Camacho did not appear to have major leadership skills at a time that the conflict in Europe and domestic turmoil were in evidence he set the important precedent of leaving the presidency and its powers to his successor 103 Post presidency Edit Monument to the Revolution where Cardenas is buried along with revolutionary leaders After his presidential term that ended 1 December 1940 Cardenas served as Mexico s Minister of War 1942 1945 when Mexico was a solid participant in World War II which reassured Mexican nationalists concerned about a close alliance with the United States 104 105 It has been said that Cardenas was the only president associated with the Institutional Revolutionary Party PRI who did not use the office to make himself wealthy He retired to a modest home by Lake Patzcuaro Michoacan and worked the rest of his life supervising irrigation projects and promoting free medical clinics and education for the nation s poor He also continued to speak out about international political issues and in favor of greater democracy and human rights in Latin America and elsewhere For example he was one of the participants in the Russell Tribunal for investigating war crimes in Vietnam 106 Although Cardenas did not play the role that Calles had as the power behind the presidency Cardenas did exert influence on the PRI and in Mexican politics He opposed the candidacy of Miguel Aleman Valdes for president in 1952 opposed the Vietnam War and opposed the U S policy toward Cuba after the 1959 Cuban Revolution 105 Cardenas was not happy with the rightward shift of Mexican presidents starting with the presidency of Miguel Aleman 1946 1952 During the presidency of Adolfo Lopez Mateos 1958 1964 Cardenas emerged from retirement and pressed the president toward leftist stances With the triumph of the Cuban Revolution in January 1959 Cardenas among others in Latin America saw the hope of young revolution Mexico was run by a party that claimed the legacy of the Mexican Revolution but had turned away from revolutionary ideals Cardenas went to Cuba in July 1959 and was with Castro at a huge rally where the former guerrilla leader declared himself premier of Cuba Cardenas returned to Mexico with the hope that the ideals of the Mexican Revolution could be revived with land reform support for agriculture and an expansion of education and health services to Mexicans He also directly appealed to Lopez Mateos to free jailed union leaders Lopez Mateos became increasingly hostile to Cardenas who was explicitly and implicitly rebuking him To Cardenas he said They say the Communists are weaving a dangerous web around you 107 The pressure on Lopez Mateos had an impact and he began implementing reforms in land education and the creation of social programs that emulated those under Cardenas Cardenas withdrew his public challenge to the PRI s policies and supported Lopez Mateos s designated successor in 1964 Gustavo Diaz Ordaz his Minister of the Interior 108 Tanks in the Zocalo during the Mexican Movement of 1968 In 1968 Cardenas did not anticipate the draconian crackdown by Diaz Ordaz in the run up to the Mexico City Summer Olympics That summer saw the emergence of the Mexican Movement of 1968 which mobilized tens of thousands of students and middle class supporters during the summer and early fall 1968 The movement ended in the bloody Tlatelolco Massacre on 2 October 1968 During the troubles that summer one of Cardenas s long time friends Heberto Castillo Martinez a professor of mechanical engineering at the National University actively participated in the movement and was pursued by Diaz Ordaz s secret police Cardenas hosted a meeting at his residence in the Polanco section of Mexico City with Castillo and some student leaders Cardenas was increasingly concerned about the impact on the movement on the political peace that had been built by the party Despite the National University being a center of the movement Cardenas did not think that the government would violate the university s autonomy and take over the campus It did with tanks rolling into campus on 18 September Castillo had a harrowing escape 109 In October government troops fired on demonstrators at the Plaza of the Three Cultures in Tlatelolco someone who had been there made his way to Cardenas s house to tell him in tears what happened Cardenas s wife Amalia reportedly said And I believe that the General shed some tears too 110 Cardenas died of lung cancer in Mexico City on 19 October 1970 at the age of 75 He is buried in the Monument to the Revolution in Mexico City sharing his final resting place with Venustiano Carranza Pancho Villa and Plutarco Elias Calles Cardenas s son Cuauhtemoc Cardenas and his grandson Lazaro Cardenas Batel have been prominent Mexican politicians Honors EditIn his honor his name was given to a number of cities towns and a municipality in Mexico including Lazaro Cardenas Michoacan the municipality of Lazaro Cardenas Quintana Roo Lazaro Cardenas Jalisco and other smaller communities A major dam project on the Nazas River named for him was inaugurated in 1946 111 There are also many streets that have been named after him including the Eje Central Lazaro Cardenas in Mexico City and highways in Guadalajara Monterrey and Mexicali Setaliste Lazaro Kardenasa Lazaro Cardenas promenade in Belgrade Serbia is also named after him as is a street in Barcelona Spain and a monument in a park in Madrid dedicated to his memory for his role in admitting defeated Spanish Republicans to Mexico after the Civil War in that country citation needed In 1955 Lazaro Cardenas was one of several recipients that year of the Stalin Peace Prize awarded to foreigners politically sympathetic to the Soviet Union The prize was later renamed for Lenin as part of de Stalinization citation needed A station in the Mexico City Metro was named after him 112 Legacy EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message President Cardenas and his administration are given credit by socialists for expanding the distribution of land to the peasants establishing new welfare programs for the poor and nationalizing the railroad and petroleum industries including the oil company that Cardenas founded Petroleos Mexicanos Toward the end of his presidency unhappy landowners and foreign capitalists began to challenge his programs and his power His choice of his close associate Manuel Avila Camacho rather than a candidate with a distinguished record as a revolutionary leader was displeasing to many and occasioned a possible military revolt The party that Cardenas founded the Partido de la Revolucion Mexicana PRM established the basic structure of sectoral representation of important groups a structure retained by its successor in 1946 the PRI The PRI continued in power until 2000 This is attributed by some to electoral fraud and coercion This legacy led his son Cuauhtemoc Cardenas to form the Democratic Revolution Party PRD to contest the 1988 presidential election Since that year the PRD has become one of the three major parties in Mexico gaining working class support that was previously enjoyed by the PRI In his Political Testament written the year before his death and published posthumously he acknowledged that his regime had failed to make the changes in distribution of political power and corruption that were the basis for his presidency and the revolution He expressed his dismay in the fact that some people and groups were making themselves rich to the detriment of the mainly poor majority It was said of Cardenas in a eulogy that he was the greatest figure produced by the revolution an authentic revolutionary who aspired to the greatness of his country not personal aggrandizement citation needed Philippine President Ramon Magsaysay patterned his people oriented government on the principles which he found in a biography of Cardenas written by William Cameron Townsend citation needed See also Edit Mexico portalHistory of Mexico List of heads of state of Mexico Monument to Lazaro Cardenas Lazaro Cardenas Park Puerto Vallarta Mexico Statue of Lazaro Cardenas Madrid References Edit Medin Tzvi 1982 El minimato presidencial historia politica del maximato 1928 1935 First ed Mexico D F Ediciones Era p 144 ISBN 968 411 077 4 OCLC 8674374 Barbosa Cano Fabio Erazo 12 March 2020 A 82 anos de la expropiacion petrolera en Mexico Instituto de Investigaciones Economicas UNAM in Spanish Retrieved 22 June 2022 Alan Knight Lazaro Cardenas in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 555 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1996 Batres Guadarrama Marti Lazaro Cardenas el presidente del pueblo La Jornada Retrieved 12 September 2018 Ayala Rodrigo 19 May 2018 Quien fue Lazaro Cardenas y cuales fueron sus aportaciones Cultura Colectiva Retrieved 12 September 2018 Velazquez Carlos Lazaro Cardenas el presidente mas popular que ha tenido Mexico Sinaloa Dossier Retrieved 12 September 2018 a b c d e f g Cline United States and Mexico p 217 Enrique Krauze Mexico Biography of Power pp 442 44 Krauze Mexico Biography of Power pp 448 51 Krauze Mexico Biography of Power pp 451 52 a b The Course of Mexican History by Michael C Meyer and William L Sherman Jolly Jennifer Creating Patzcuaro Creating Mexico Art Tourism and Nation Building Under Lazaro Cardenas Austin University of Texas Press 2018 Ramirez Barreto Ana Cristina Erendira a caballo Acoplamamiento de Cuerpos e historias en un relato de conquista y resistencia e misferica Performance and Politica in the Americas 2 no 2 2005 1 19 Jolly Creating Patzcuaro Creating Mexico p 189 a b c Cline United States and Mexico p 216 Nohlen Dieter 2005 Elections in the Americas a data handbook Dieter Nohlen New York p 472 ISBN 0 19 925358 7 OCLC 58051010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Tuck Jim Mr Clean the phenomenon of Lazaro Cardenas 1895 1970 Mexico History Mexconnect com Retrieved 15 October 2011 Cline United States and Mexico pp 217 218 Cline United States and Mexico p 218 Cline United States and Mexico pp 217 219 a b Cline United States and Mexico p 219 Lieuwen Edwin Mexican Militarism The Political Rise and Fall of the Revolutionary Army 1910 1940 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1968 115 16 a b Religion Where Is He Time 26 December 1938 Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 David Espinosa Jesuit Student Groups the Universidad Iberoamericana amp Political Resistance in Mexico 1913 1979 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2014 pp 61 2 Espinosa Jesuit Student Groups p 61 3 a b c Knight Cardenismo p 82 Faces of the Revolution Lazaro Cardenas The Storm That Swept Mexico The Revolution PBS Wells Allen Reports of Its Demise Are Not Exaggerated The Life and Times of Yucatecan Henequen in From Silver to Cocaine Latin American Commodity Chains and the Building of the World Economy 1500 2000 Steven Topik Carlos Marichal and Zephyr Frank eds Durham Duke University Press 2006 p 315 Shadle Stanley F Andres Molina Enriquez Mexican Land Reformer of the Revolutionary Era Tucson University of Arizona Press 1994 pp 97 98 Shadle Andres Molina Enriquez p 98 Stanford Lois Confederacion Nacional Campesina CNC in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 p 286 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 a b Stanford Confederacion Nacional Campesina CNC p 286 Escarcega Lopez Evarardo and Escobar Toledo Saul Historia de la cuestion agraria mexicana vol 5 El Cardenismo un parteaguas historico en el proceso agrario 1934 1940 Mexico Siglo XXI Centro de Estudios Historicos del Agrarismo en Mexico 1990 Gonzalez Navarro Moises La Confederacion Nacional Campesina en la reforma agraria mexicana Mexico Centro de Estudios Economicos y Social del Tercer Mundo Nuevo Imagen 1984 Markiewicz Dana The Mexican Revolution and the Limits of Agrarian Reform 1915 1946 Boulder Lynne Rienner Publishers 1993 p 104 05 Markiewicz The Mexican Revolution pp 105 06 a b Knight Cardenismo p 94 Markiewicz The Mexican Revolution pp 106 07 Knight Cardenismo p 95 Aguilar Garcia Javier Luis Napoleon Morones in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 2 p 955 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 The I L O YEAR BOOK 1936 37 The I L O YEAR BOOK 1938 39 The I L O YEAR BOOK 1939 40 Espinosa Jesuit Student Groups p 61 3 The I L O YEAR BOOK 1939 40 Dawson Alexander S Indian and Nation in Revolutionary Mexico Tucson University of Arizona Press 2004 pp 74 78 Dawson Alexander A Moises Saenz in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 2 pp 1325 26 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 Government of Mexico Seis Anos de Gobierno al Servicio de Mexico 1934 40 Mexico City La Nacional Impresora S A 1940 p 355 Seis Anos pp 355 56 Seis Anos p 357 Seis Anos p 358 Seis Anos p 359 Seis Anos p 361 Seis Anos p 368 Seis Anos p 370 Memoria Politica de Mexico Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2015 Lavrin Asuncion Women Feminism and Social Change in Argentina Chile and Uruguay Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1995 Olcott Jocelyn Revolutionary Women in Postrevolutionary Mexico Durham Duke University Press 2005 p 8 Morton Ward M Woman Suffrage in Mexico Gainesville University of Florida Press 1962 33 Olcott Revolutionary Women in Postrevolutionary Mexico p 2 Sr Barbara Miller The Role of Women in the Mexican Cristero Rebellion Las Senoras y Las Religiosas The Americas vol 4 no 3 Jan 1984 Morton Ward M Woman Suffrage in Mexico Gainesville University of Florida Press 1962 p 23 Cline Howard F Mexico 1940 1960 Revolution to Evolution Oxford Oxford University Press 1963 p 149 Presidentialism and Democracy in Latin America Edited by Scott Mainwaring and Matthew Soberg Shugart 1997 P 234 The Oxford History of Mexico edited by Michael C Meyer and William H Beezley 2000 P 478 XVII Jornadas de Historia de Occidente Lazaro Cardenas en las regiones 26 27 de octubre 1995 1996 P 61 Charles H Weston Jr The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas The Americas vol 39 no 3 Jan 1963 p 388 Weston Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas p 394 Lieuwen Edward Mexican Militarism The Political Rise and fall of the Revolutionary Army 1919 1940 Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1968 quoted in Lieuwen Mexican Militarism p 114 Cline Mexico 1940 1960 Revolution to Evolution p 153 Weston Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas p 395 Krauze Mexico Biography of Power pp 472 75 a b Maurer Noel 2011 The Empire Struck Back Sanctions and Compensation in the Mexican Oil Expropriation of 1938 The Journal of Economic History 71 3 590 615 doi 10 1017 S0022050711001859 ISSN 0022 0507 S2CID 153774511 Smith 1996 p 79harvnb error no target CITEREFSmith1996 help Matesanz Jose Antonio Casa de Espana in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 p 205 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 Matesanz Casa de Espana p 205 Pla Brugat 1989 quoted by Clara E Lida 1993 Los espanoles en Mexico poblacion cultura y sociedad in Simbiosis de Culturas Los inmigrantes y su cultura en Mexico Guillermo Bonfil Batalla ed Mexico DF Fondo de Cultura Economica pp 425 454 here p 443 Matesanz Casa de Espana pp 205 06 Gunther John Inside Latin America 1941 p 84 Amelia M Kiddle Mexico s Relations with Latin America During the Cardenas Era Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2016 Alan Knight Review of Mexico s Relations with Latin America during the Cardenas Era American Historical Review vol 122 5 December 2017 pp 1660 61 Lopez Pablo J 2012 Nacional Financiera durante la industrializacion via sustitucion de importaciones en Mexico America Latina en la historia economica in Spanish 19 3 129 163 doi 10 18232 alhe v19i3 531 ISSN 1405 2253 Mexico Cardenismo and the Revolution Rekindled Countrystudies us Retrieved 15 October 2011 Falcon Vega Romana Saturnino Cedillo in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 p 230 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 a b c Falcon Vega Saturnino Cedillo p 231 Alan Knight Lazaro Cardenas in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 554 New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1994 Cline Howard F The United States and Mexico second edition Cambridge Harvard University Press 1961 p 262 a b MEXICO Cardenas amp Almazan Out TIME 25 November 1940 Archived from the original on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 15 October 2011 Manuel Avila Camacho History com Articles Video Pictures and Facts History com Archived from the original on 8 March 2010 Retrieved 15 October 2011 Cline United States and Mexico p 262 Schuler Friedrich E Francisco Mugica in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 2 p 975 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 a b Schuler Francisco Mugica p 975 Weston The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas p 399 Cline United States and Mexico p 263 Weston The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas p 400 fn 53 quoting Brandenburg Frank The Making of Modern Mexico p 93 The War Has Brought Peace to Mexico World War II and the Consolidation of the Post Revolutionary State By Halbert Jones 2014 P 17 Kirk Betty Covering the Mexican Front Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1942 Weston The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas p 400 fn 53 David Lorey Juan Andreu Almazan in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 p 41 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 a b c d MEXICO Cardenas amp Almazan Out TIME 25 November 1940 Archived from the original on 7 November 2012 Retrieved 15 October 2011 Lorey Juan Andreu Almazan p 41 Cline United States and Mexico pp 264 65 Hamilton Nora Lazaro Cardenas in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 p 194 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 a b Knight Lazaro Cardenas in Encyclopedia of Latin American History and Culture vol 1 p 555 Hamilton Lazaro Cardenas p 194 quoted in Krauze Mexico Biography of Power p 650 Krauze Mexico Biography of Power pp 658 660 Preston Julia and Sam Dillon Opening Mexico The Making of a Democracy New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2004 pp 68 69 quoted in Preston and Dillon Opening Mexico The Making of a Democracy p 74 Wolfe Mikael D Watering the Revolution An Environmental and Technological History of Agrarian Reform in Mexico Stanford Stanford University Press 2017 pp 163 170 CDMX Metro Lazaro Cardenas Metro CDMX in Spanish Retrieved 22 June 2022 Further reading EditIn English Edit Ashby Joe C Organized Labor and the Mexican Revolution under Lazaro Cardenas Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 1963 Bantjes Adrian A Cardenismo Interpretations in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 pp 195 199 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 Becker Marjorie 1995 Setting the Virgin on Fire Lazaro Cardenas Michoacan Peasants and the Redemption of the Mexican Revolution Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520084193 Cardenas Enrique The Great Depression and Industrialization The Case of Mexico in Rosemary Thorp ed Latin America in the 1930s The Role of the Periphery in World Crisis London 1984 pp 222 41 Cline Howard F The United States and Mexico second edition Chapter 11 The Cardenas Upheaval pp 215 238 Cambridge Harvard University Press 1961 Dulles John W F Yesterday in Mexico A Chronicle of the Revolution 1919 1936 Austin University of Texas Press 1961 Dwyer John Diplomatic Weapons of the Weak Mexican Policymaking during the U S Mexican Agrarian Dispute 1934 1941 Diplomatic History 26 3 2002 375 Hamilton Nora The Limits of State Authority Post Revolutionary Mexico Princeton Princeton University Press 1982 Hamilton Nora Lazaro Cardenas in Encyclopedia of Mexico vol 1 pp 192 195 Chicago Fitzroy and Dearborn 1997 Jolly Jennifer Creating Patzcuaro Creating Mexico Art Tourism and Nation Building Under Lazaro Cardenas Austin University of Texas Press 2018 ISBN 978 1477 314203 Knight Alan Cardenismo Juggernaut or Jalopy Journal of Latin American Studies 26 1994 Knight Alan The Rise and Fall of Cardenismo in Mexico Since Independence Leslie Bethell ed New York Cambridge University Press 1991 pp 241 320 417 422 Krauze Enrique Mexico Biography of Power New York HarperCollins 1997 ISBN 0 06 016325 9 Leonard Thomas M Rankin Monica Smith Joseph Bratzel John ed September 2006 Latin America during World War II Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9780742537415 Lucas Jeffrey Kent 2010 The Rightward Drift of Mexico s Former Revolutionaries The Case of Antonio Diaz Soto y Gama Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 0 7734 3665 0 Michaels Albert L The Crisis of Cardenismo Journal of Latin American Studies vol 2 May 1970 51 79 Powell T G Mexico and the Spanish Civil War Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 1981 Riding Alan 1986 Distant Neighbors New York City Vintage Books ISBN 9780679724414 Smith Peter H April 1996 Talons of the Eagle Dynamics of U S Latin American Relations 2nd edition USA Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195083040 Townsend William Cameron Lazaro Cardenas Mexican Democrat Ann Arbor 1952 Weston Jr Charles H The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas The Americas Vol 39 No 3 Jan 1983 pp 383 405 Published by Academy of American Franciscan History Stable URL https www jstor org stable 981231 Accessed February 26 2009 14 16 Whetten Nathan L Rural Mexico Chicago 1948 Weston Charles H The Political Legacy of Lazaro Cardenas The Americas Vol 39 No 3 Jan 1983 pp 383 405 Stable URL https www jstor org stable 981231 Weyl Nathaniel and Sylvia Weyl The Reconquest of Mexico The Years of Lazaro Cardenas London 1939 In Spanish Edit Anguiano Arturo El Estado y la politica obrera del cardenismo Mexico City Era 1975 Benitez Fernando Lazaro Cardenas y la revolucion mexicana vol 3 Historia de la revolucion mexicana Colegio de Mexico 1978 Cordova Arnaldo La politica de masas del cardenismo Mexico City Era 1974 Gilly Adolfo El cardenismo una utopia mexicana Mexico City Cal y Arena 1994 Gonzalez Luis Los Artifices del Cardenismo Historia de la Revolucion Mexicana vol 14 Mexico City El Colegio de Mexico 1979 Hernandez Chavez Alicia La mecanica cardenista Histora de la Revolucion Mexicana vol 16 Mexico City Colegio de Mexico 1979 Krauze Enrique Lazaro Cardenas General misionero Mexico City Fondo de Cultura Economico 1987 Lanni Octavio El estado capitalista en la epoca de Cardenas Mexico 1977 Leon Samuel and Ignacio Marvan En el cardenismo 1934 1940 Mexico 1985 Medin Tzvi Ideologia y praxis politica de Lazaro Cardenas Mexico City Siglo XXI 1972 13th edition 1986 Suarez Valles Manuel Lazaro Cardenas una vida fecunda al servicio de Mexico Mexico City 1971 Viscaino Rogelio Cardenas y la izquierda mexicana Mexico 1975 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lazaro Cardenas Newspaper clippings about Lazaro Cardenas in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPolitical officesPreceded byAbelardo L Rodriguez President of Mexico1934 1940 Succeeded byManuel Avila CamachoPreceded byJesus Agustin Castro Secretary of National Defence1942 1945 Succeeded byFrancisco Luis UrquizoPreceded byLuis Mendez Governor of Michoacan1928 1932 Succeeded byDamaso CardenasParty political officesPreceded byEmilio Portes President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party1930 1931 Succeeded byManuel Perez Trevino Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lazaro Cardenas amp oldid 1150159799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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