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Answers -
Lázaro Cárdenas (1895-1970) was a
Mexican revolutionary leader and president. During his
administration he revitalized the people's faith in the
revolution by implementing extensive land reforms, expropriating
foreign-owned properties, and nationalizing the oil industry.
Lázaro Cárdenas was born of mixed white and Tarascan Indian
ancestry in Jiquilpán de Juárez, Michoacán, on May 21, 1895. In
order to support his family he worked in the local jail. When
the Madero revolution broke out, he released his prisoners and
together they went to join the maderistas.
After the Convention of Aguascalientes, Cárdenas fought briefly
in the army of Pancho Villa but in 1915 joined the
constitutionalists. In the revolt of Agua Prieta he took the
side of Álvaro Obregón. During the 1923 rebellion he commanded
loyal forces in Michoacán. The following year he was promoted to
brigadier general and given command of military operations in
the Huasteca, Michoacán, and the Isthmus. In 1928 he became
governor of Michoacán, serving until 1932. He actively supported
land reform. To his reputation for honest service in the
military he added a comparable reputation in civil
administration.
During the succeeding years Cárdenas served as president of the
government party, minister of interior, and secretary of war and
marine. In 1934 the Calles group, intending him to play the
straw man for their continued control of the government,
misjudged Cárdenas and selected him as the presidential
candidate. Cárdenas, however, won and entered office with a
radical mandate in the new Six Year Plan and proceeded to carry
it out. He gave the people personal attention and patience. His
6-year term was marked by a reaffirmation of revolutionary faith
and a revitalization of revolutionary processes.
When Calles challenged his leniency with labor, Cárdenas forced
him to leave
México.
Labor reached unprecedented power as it reorganized under
Lombardo Toledano in the Mexican Confederation of Labor.
Cárdenas expropriated 45 million acres of land and distributed
them to the ejidos, including new collective types with large
financial and technical support in the cotton region of La
Laguna and the henequén area of Yucatán. The nationalization of
the railroads was completed, and in 1938, in an action described
as Mexico's declaration of economic independence, foreign
petroleum holdings were expropriated and nationalized.
A Department of Indian Affairs was established, and Mexico
hosted the First Inter-American Indigenist Congress. After some
initial friction a conciliatory policy was adopted toward the
Church, and Bassol's strongly socialistic educational program
was moderated with greater stress on nationalistic goals. In
1938, Cárdenas crushed the last significant regional revolt
which was led by Saturnino Cedillo in San Luis Potosi. Mexico
opened its doors to political exiles, including
Leon Trotsky and
a considerable number of Republican Spanish refugees.
In the presidential election of 1940 Cárdenas backed moderately
conservative Manuel Á vila Camacho and served him as secretary
of defense in 1943. For more than a quarter century Cárdenas
remained a political force to be reckoned with. In 1960, at the
time of the Bay of Pigs episode, he took a strongly pro-Castro
position, consistent with his noninterventionist sentiments.
However, Cárdenas consistently confounded those who have tried
to associate his name with violence and the disruption of the
political process. In October 1968 he strongly urged the
students to end violence, and he remained an advocate of rapid
reform, but by peaceful means. He died on Oct. 19, 1970, in
México
City.
Further Reading
The definitive biography of Cárdenas remains to be written. A
sympathetic view is William C. Townsend, Lázaro Cárdenas,
Mexican Democrat (1952). An equally sympathetic account of the
early years of his administration, written from a Marxist
viewpoint, is Nathaniel and Sylvia Weyl, The Reconquest of
Mexico: The Years of Lázaro Cárdenas (1939). Frank Tannenbaum,
who was closely associated with Cárdenas, wrote one of the best
analyses of his character and achievements in Mexico: The
Struggle for Peace and Bread (1950). A specialized study of the
labor movement is Joe C. Ashby, Organized Labor and the Mexican
Revolution under Lázaro Cárdenas (1967).
Additional Sources
Townsend, William Cameron, Lázaro Cárdenas, Mexican democrat,
Waxhaw, N.C.: International Friendship, 1979.
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