Francisco Largo Caballero | |
Order: | Prime Minister of Spain |
Term Start: | 4 September 1936 |
Term End: | 17 May 1937 |
President: | Manuel Azaña |
Predecessor: | José Giral Pereira |
Successor: | Juan Negrín López |
Order1: | Minister of War |
Primeminister1: | Himself |
Term Start1: | 4 September 1936 |
Term End1: | 17 May 1937 |
Predecessor1: | Juan Hernández Saravia |
Successor1: | Indalecio Prieto |
Order2: | President of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party |
Term Start2: | 12 October 1932 |
Term End2: | 1 July 1936 |
Predecessor2: | Remigio Cabello |
Successor2: | Ramón González Peña |
Order3: | Minister of Labour and Social Security |
Primeminister3: | Manuel Azaña |
Term Start3: | 14 April 1931 |
Term End3: | 12 September 1933 |
Predecessor3: | Gabriel Maura Gamazo |
Successor3: | Carles Pi i Suner |
Order4: | Member of the Congress of Deputies |
Term Start4: | 14 July 1931 |
Term End4: | 31 March 1939 |
Constituency4: | Madrid |
Term Start5: | 18 May 1918 |
Term End5: | 1 June 1919 |
Constituency5: | Barcelona |
Birth Date: | 15 October 1869 |
Birth Place: | Madrid, Kingdom of Spain |
Death Place: | Paris, France |
Party: | PSOE |
Francisco Largo Caballero (15 October 1869 – 23 March 1946) was a Spanish politician and trade unionist, who served as the Prime Minister of the Second Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War. He was one of the historic leaders of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) and of the Workers' General Union (UGT). Although he entered into politics as a moderate leftist, after the 1933 general election in which the conservative CEDA party won the majority, he took a more radical turn and began to advocate for a socialist revolution.
Born in Madrid, as a young man he made his living stuccoing walls. He participated in a construction workers strike in 1890 and joined the PSOE in 1894. Upon the death in 1925 of party founder Pablo Iglesias, he succeeded him as head of the party and of the UGT.
Moderate in his positions at the beginning of his political life, he advocated maintaining a degree of UGT cooperation with the dictatorial government of General Miguel Primo de Rivera, which permitted the union to continue functioning under his military dictatorship (that lasted from 1923 to 1930). This was the start of his political conflict with Indalecio Prieto, who opposed all collaboration with the dictatorial regime.
He was Minister of Labor Relations between 1931 and 1933, in the first governments of the Second Spanish Republic, headed by Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, and in that of his successor Manuel Azaña. Caballero attempted to improve the conditions of landless labourers (braceros) in the rural south. On 28 April 1931 he introduced a decree of municipal boundaries to prevent the importation of foreign labour while there remained unemployed workers within the municipality. In May he established mixed juries (jurados mixtos) to arbitrate in agrarian labour disputes, and introduced an eight-hour working day in the countryside. Alongside these, a decree on obligatory cultivation prevented owners from using their land however they wanted.[1] He enjoyed great popularity among the masses of workers, who saw their own austere existences reflected in his way of life.
In the elections of 19 November 1933, the right-wing Spanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right (CEDA) won power in Spain. The government nominally led by the centrist Radical Alejandro Lerroux was dependent on CEDA's parliamentary support. Responding to this reversal of fortune, Largo abandoned his moderate positions and became more openly far left. In the January 3, 1934 edition of El Socialista, the PSOE newspaper, he wrote "Harmony? No! Class war! Hatred for the criminal bourgeoise to the death!" A few weeks later, the PSOE compiled a new platform that called for the nationalization of all land, dissolution of all religious orders and the confiscation of their property, and the dissolution of the army, to be replaced by socialist militias. In early October 1934, after three CEDA ministers entered the government, he was one of the leaders of the failed armed rising of workers (mainly in Asturias) which was forcefully put down by the CEDA-dominated government.
He defended the pact of alliance with the other workers' political parties and trade unions, such as the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) and the anarchist trade union, the Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo (CNT). Once again, this placed him at odds with Prieto. He declared, that he, Largo Caballero "shall be the second Lenin", whose aim is the union of Iberian Soviet republics.[2] After the Popular Front won the elections in February 1936, president Manuel Azaña proposed that Prieto join the government, but Largo blocked these attempts at collaboration between PSOE and the Republican government. Largo dismissed fears of a military coup, and predicted that, were it to happen, a general strike would defeat it, opening the door to the workers' revolution.
In the event, the coup attempt by the colonial army and the right came on 17 July 1936. While not immediately successful, further actions by rebellious army units sparked the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), in which the republic was ultimately defeated and destroyed.
A few months into the civil war, after the Republican Left Party government of José Giral resigned on 4 September 1936, President Manuel Azaña asked Largo Caballero to form a new government.[3] There resulted a broader-based Popular Front cabinet.[4] Largo Cabellero served as Prime Minister[5] and also took the post of Minister of War. Besides conducting the war, he also focused on maintaining military discipline and government authority within the Republic. On 4 November 1936 Largo Caballero persuaded the anarchist Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT; "National Confederation of Labour") to join the government, with four members assigned to junior ministries including Justice, Health and Trade. The decision was controversial with the CNT members.
The Barcelona May Days of 3 to 8 May 1937 led to a governmental crisis that forced Caballero to resign on 17 May 1937. Juan Negrín, also a member of the PSOE, was appointed Prime Minister in his stead.
Largo Cabellero's cabinet, formed on 4 September 1936 and reshuffled on 4 November 1936, consisted of:
Ministry | Start | End | Officeholder | Party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prime Minister and War | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | Francisco Largo Caballero | PSOE (left) | ||
State (Foreign Affairs) | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PSOE (left) | |||
Finance | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PSOE (moderate) | |||
Interior | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PSOE (left) | |||
Industry and Commerce | 4 September 1936 | 4 November 1936 | PSOE (moderate) | |||
Industry | 4 November 1936 | 17 May 1937 | ||||
Commerce | 4 November 1936 | 17 May 1937 | CNT | |||
Navy and Air | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PSOE (moderate) | |||
Education and Fine Arts | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PCE | |||
Agriculture | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | PCE | |||
Justice | 4 September 1936 | 4 November 1936 | Mariano Ruiz-Funes García | |||
4 November 1936 | 17 May 1937 | CNT | ||||
Communications and Merchant Marine | 4 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | ||||
Labor and Health | 4 September 1936 | 4 November 1936 | ||||
Labor and Planning | 4 November 1936 | 15 May 1937 | PSOE (moderate) | |||
Health and Social Assistance | 4 November 1936 | 17 May 1937 | CNT | |||
Public Works | 4 September 1936 | 15 September 1936 | Vicente Uribe Galdeano (Interim) | PCE | ||
15 September 1936 | 17 May 1937 | IR | ||||
Propaganda | 4 November 1936 | 17 May 1937 | IR | |||
Without portfolio | 4 September 1936 | 15 May 1937 | IR | |||
Without portfolio | 4 September 1936 | 15 May 1937 | ||||
Without portfolio | 4 November 1936 | 17 May 1936 | ERC |
Upon the defeat of the Republic in 1939, he fled to France. Arrested during the German occupation of France, he spent most of World War II imprisoned in the Sachsenhausen-Oranienburg concentration camp, until the liberation of the camps at the end of the war.
He died in exile in Paris in 1946; his remains were returned to Madrid in 1978 after Franco's death in 1975.