Title: The Mexican Revolution
1The Mexican Revolution
The Mexican States
2Latin America After independence
- Latin American economies devastated by wars of
independence. - Creole upper class continued to dominate society
and economy. - Caudillos (strong men) ruled most countries.
- Military was the only way for men to advance in
social standing
3Mexico After Independence
- Military dominated politics.
- Catholic Church kept its role as major economic
force - Largest banking system in the country
- General Antonio López de Santa Anna dominated era
- President 9 different times lost it after the
Mexican War - Liberal Government took over after Santa Anna
- Stripped the Church of power forced to sell land
4Mexico After Independence
- In the War of Reform (1857-1861) Liberals under
Benito Juárez gained control of Mexico. (Mexican
Civil War) - 1863-1867 Napoleon III of France controlled
Mexico with help of Mexican conservatives. - Left Ferdinand Maximilian in charge
- Liberals ruled until 1876, but little was done to
modernize Mexico.
5Mexico under Porfirio Diaz
- Diaz ruled Mexico 1876-1911. Ruled as a
caudillo. - Mexicos inefficient economic system revolved
around the hacienda. To achieve his goal of
economic development Diaz allowed foreigners to
control much of Mexicos wealth. - Diazs rule was harsh with an iron fist
- Pan o palo (bread or the club)
6Mexico Under Diaz
- Imprisoned opponents used army to keep peace at
any cost - Rurales
- Diaz helped modernize Mexico by encouraging
foreign investment - Suppressed political rights for economic
development - Exports boomed railroads expanded quickly yet
most remained poor - Wealth concentrated in hands of foreign
investors, Mexican elite - Offered share of the spoils
7Mexico under Diaz
- Catholic Church became a pillar of Diazs
dictatorship - Reestablished all monasteries and nunneries
- Reestablished church schools
- Wealth began to accumulate in the hands of the
church in return for turning a deaf ear to the
complaints of the masses
8Social Causes of the Revolution
- Land policy of Diaz a small minority
owned/controlled most of the land (elite
landholders). - Indians held 2 of the nations land
- Nonnative's allowed to take property from
indigenous populations. - Standards of living for most Mexicans declined.
- Production shifted to export crops (sugar and
coffee) Mexico was less able to feed itself! - Harsh working conditions for people long hours,
low wages, dangerous conditions.
9Economic Causes
- Diaz developed an industrial economy with large
subsidies from the United States and other
foreign powers. - Transportation, mining, oil foreigners owned 90
of the value - Mexico, the mother of foreigners and the
stepmother of Mexicans. - Economic recession / U.S. depression 1906-1907.
- Food crisis 1907-1910 (crop failures) led to
inflation and declining wages - Workers strikes
10Political causes
- In 55 years between Mexican Independence in 1821
and Diazs rise to power (1877), the presidency
changed hands 75 times. - Diaz rigged elections, bribed officials, bullied
press - Friends and family were promoted or given
governmental positions
11The overthrow of Diaz
- ? Reasons for the overthrow of Diaz
- Lack of upward mobility.
- Foreign domination of industry.
- Concentration of agricultural land in few hands.
- Economic recession teamed with Inflation
- Disparity between rich and poor
- Governmental Corruption
- Diazs ineptitude in the presidential election
of 1910. -
Francisco Madero
12Eve of the Political Election
- Peasant uprisings, workers strikes, Mexican
Liberal Party- equality among the sexes, low
wages, abusive working conditions - Dictator Porfirio Diaz welcomes change and said
Mexico was ready for a democracy - Anti-Reelectionist Party Francisco Madero (from
Coahuila- cattle, wheat, vineyards, mines) took
the challenge and looked to create an oligarchy - Early June Diaz had him arrested, he was later
freed from jail and fled to Texas - Diaz and his VP Ramon Corral win the election
13October 7- Plan of San Luis Potosi
(Madero)
- October 4th 1910 he escapes from prison
- Called the election null and void
- Provisional President- eventually hold free
elections - Return of Peasants lands and political reforms
- Called for an armed rebellion against Diaz on
November 20th
14Overthrow of Diaz
- Madero returned to Mexico, found rebellion
spreading. - Pascual Orozco led a mixed group of rebels in
Chihuahua, who fought for their freedoms while
the federal troops were ill-trained and reluctant
to fight - Pancho Villa, a rebel general from Chihuahua,
became the military hero of the Revolution using
guerrilla warfare. - Madero saw him as the perfect military hero
15Overthrow of Diaz
- Emiliano Zapata led the Revolution in Morelos.
- Small farmer villagers vs. owners of sugarcane
plantations - 17 owners of Haciendas controlled 25 of the land
- Captured Morelos in May of 1911 essential to
defeating Diaz - Zapata became the hero of the Mexican peasant
with his demands for land reform in his Plan of
Ayala.
16Overthrow of Diaz
- Villa and Orozco capture Cuidad Juárez
- Gained access to U.S. arms dealers
- In May 21st 1911, under the Treaty of Ciudad
Juárez, Diaz went into exile but the same
institutions exist- Francisco Leon de la Barra,
Mexican ambassador to US, interim president
17Research Assignment
- How did your topic help to contribute to the
Mexican Revolution? - Social Causes
- Economic Causes
- Political Causes
- Role of the Porfiriato regime
- Create a PowerPoint to share with class tomorrow
18Mexico Citys Complot de Tacubaya
- Protection of indigenous rights, agrarian reform,
eight hour workday, equal pay for equal work,
equal education - Unsuccessful but linked to Diaz departure
- Madero makes two mistakes before the elections
- Demobilized the revolutionary armies of the North
- Leon de la Barra- still Porfirismo without
Porfirio
19Resolve?
- A breach opened-up between the Zapatistas in the
South and Madero and his followers from the
North. - With the existing government, tensions were still
present. Leon de la Barra continued to fight
with Zapata. Zapata began taking large estates
and distributing wealth to the villages - Although people began to question Maderos
ability to rule and control the tensions he was
elected president in 1911
20Mexico under Francisco Madero (1911-1913)
- Madero was too idealistic to be a good president.
- Conservative nature alienated many
revolutionaries, especially Zapata and his
followers. - Democracy to Madero- Masses had the illusion of
power but the elite made all the major decisions - Economic and Social Democracy He believed in
unions and the ability to strike. Wanted to
purchase land and provide it to the landless
workers. However, he believed that haciendas were
vital to modernization. - Violence and oppression still existed
21Mexico Under Madero
- Lost support of Industrial workers
- Wages, hours, working conditions
- Unions and the right to strike
- Women and children protection
- Lost Support of the Peasantry
- Land reform
- Conservatives
- Missed the rule of Diaz
22Zapata vs. Madero
- Emiliano Zapata unhappy- Madero refuses to listen
and orders Zapata to get rid of his troops - Madero sent the army into Morelos to destroy
Zapata. Zapata could avoid destruction, but he
was too weak to defeat the federal forces
altogether - Turned to haciendados to fund campaign or burnt
sugarcane - The Plan of Ayala- Zapatista Movement Nov. 28
1911 - Return the land from the haciendas to the people
- Mexico would be a land of small independent
landowning farmers
23Mexico under Madero
- Maderos failure to carry out land reform lost
him the support of the revolutionary peasants - United States foreign policy turned against him
after watching his inability to rule. US
Ambassador Henry Lane Wilson was against the
military operations in Mexico City because it
threatened US life and property and if it wasnt
handled than US intervention was necessary
24Conflict under Madero
- In March 1912 Pascual Orozco with the assistance
of the conservatives led a revolution against
Madero. Orozco was looking for wealth and
political power - Villa and Victoriano Huerta defeated Orozco.
- Huerta was a cruel, authoritarian drunk at the
age of 60 - Huerta became head of the army and Madero became
totally dependent upon the army for his survival. - Madero did not like Huerta
- At this time Huerta and Villa began to clash and
Huerta arrested Villa - Was sentenced to death but saved on Christmas day
of 1912 by a friendly army officer
25Conflict under Madero
- In February with coordination with the US
ambassador Henry Lane Wilson, a right wing coup
led a revolt on the palace - La decena tragica (ten tragic days)
- Huerta arrested the president along with other
top officials - US named him the head of the provisional
government with Felix Diaz (Nephew to the old
dictator) to succeed him once an election could
be held - Madero was murdered Feb. 22 as he was being
transported to the penitentiary (done by two
armed men)
26Huertas Dictatorship
- Huerta seizure of power fell in favor of the
landed aristocrats, the big capitalists, and the
church, he was eager to restore the dictatorship
similar to Diaz - Assassination of Madero not a positive for his
image - Felix Diaz was sent to Japan on a diplomatic
mission out of the way - Revolutionary wave rose even higher after the
Madero murder and the imposition of Huertas
terrorist regime
Victoriano Huerta
27The Opposition to Huerta
- Emiliano Zapata intensified his struggle against
local landowners, Huertas allies, and federal
troops. - This large focus of federal troops in the south
allowed the Northern resistance to take shape
28Venustiano Carranza
- Venustiano Carranza, Governor of Coahuila, led
the revolt against Huerta. - Called for the Plan of Guadalupe (March 26, 1913)
- Called for the overthrow of the dictator and the
restoration of constitutional government - Declared war to the death
- Villa joined with Carranza and won many
victories.
29The opposition to Huerta
- Pancho Villa- assumed leadership in the North
(The Constitutionalists) made up of middle
classes, miners, industrial workers, and
peasants. - He soon recruited an army of 3,000 men. Took
control of Chihuahua. - Started to attack hacienda if they did not join
him he took their land - Had to settle two scores
- Maderos Murder
- His firing squad sentence
30Villas Plan
- Executed all bandits that he could find and
protected US property - America sells arms and ammunition
- Regionalism vs. central government
- Revolutionary new order of the state
- Reduction of meat prices
- distribution of money, clothing, and other goods
to the poor - fifty new schools
- anticlericalism
- Robin Hood of Mexico?
31Villas Plan (cont.)
- Agrarian Program differed from that of Zapata,
he felt it should stay under the control of the
government until the victory of the revolution - The north was based around cattle raising which
required large economic units that would work
best under the control of the state. Cattle were
sold to the US in return for ammunition.
32Carranza and Villa
- Fearful of Villas success and power in the
north, Carranza promotes commander Alvaro Obregon - Brought up by Indians successful in recruiting
Apaches - Promised land for the Indians if they fought with
Carranza
33Intervention by the United States
- Wilsons government refused to recognize Huertas
regime because it came to power illegally.
However, he did allow an embargo on revolutionary
arms purchases while permitting US arms sales to
Huerta. - Wilsons biggest fear was that Huerta had cut a
deal with Britain and Germany to allow their
intervention into Mexican markets.
34Intervention by the US (cont.)
- With the verge of World War I- foreign interest
shifted towards the United States and led to a
lack of cooperation with Huerta - US set a uniform rate on all goods shipped
through the Panama Canal, which led to an end of
British support in Mexico - Carranzas agent in Washington said they would
respect foreign property rights which led to the
lifting of the embargo
35Intervention by the us (cont)
- US Sailors were arrested on the Dolphin,
(restricted area in Tampico) but were immediately
released with an apology. - Commander asked for a severe punishment for the
arresting officers, a written apology and a 21
gun salute to the US flag. - Huerta had to refuse or would commit political
suicide.
36Intervention by the US (cont.)
- April 21, 1914- Wilson sent fleet into Gulf of
Mexico, learned of a German ship heading for
Veracruz, he ordered for seizure of the city.
Fighting took place till the 27th when the US
occupied Veracruz. - 19 Americans vs. 200 Mexican casualties
- Action led to a wave of anti-Yankee sentiment and
Carranza denounced the US action
37Intervention by the US (cont.)
- Led to a Conference at Niagara Falls in May 1914
- Carranza was Wilsons choice to put into power but
he was too nationalist and didnt attend the
conference but instead sent representatives with
no real power - Wilson stops funding Villa and starts funding
Carranza (against one another) - Wants a weak pro-American government
- July 15, 1914- Huerta, recognizing the presence
of Villas and Obregons army, flees to Europe - August 15th Obregons troops enter Mexico City
38Carranza with Obregon
- Carranza took the title first chief of the
constitutional Army of 40,000 men - Villa joined under his command and his troops
were renamed the Northern Division - Alvaro Obregon, who led the anti-Huerta forces in
Sonora was named commander of the Army of the
Northwest - Within Mexico City Huerta also faced opposition
of the intellectuals and the feminist Loyalty
club which protested the regimes brutality
39Fighting Among the Victors
- Carranza and Villa began to have two different
views - Villa, implant a democratic regime to secure
the well-being of the workers to emancipate the
peasants economically, making an equitable
distribution of lands or whatever else is needed
to solve the agrarian problem - Carranza agreed out of fear of losing Villa and
his followers - Carranza and Zapata
- Zapata kept to the plan of Ayala- wanted removal
of old regime - Constitutional Convention at Mexico City
- Only Obregon attends gains support
40Zapatas and Villas Fight against Carranza
- The Constitutional Convention at Aguascalientes
declared Carranza in rebellion because he
refused to share power. - In November 10th, 1914 Villa and Zapata
controlled Mexico City. A reign of terror ensued
that greatly discredited both men. Obregón and
Carranza formed an alliance against them. - Established a provisional government with the
hope of the United States backing - Eulalio Gutierrez interim president
- Could not unite the interests of the middle
class, industrialists, and the peasants- No real
plan set in place
41Problems Confronting Zapata
- Lacked resources to reach the deep south
- Hacienda
- Bandits committed the same actions as Zapatistas
- Hurt his image
- What to do with the Hacienda?
- Who does he side with?
- Conflict of ideology with Villa
- Zapata focused on land ownership
- Villa focused on a political revolt with power to
regional centers
42Zapata and Villa
- Dec. 4th 1914- neither wanted the presidency and
were certain of only wanting to control their
respective provinces - Zapata believed in localism
- Villa appeared lazy and lack of will power
- President must be loyal to the revolution
- Mistake no president
Villa and Zapata
43Villa raids Mexico City
- Reign of Terror- December 1914
- Targeted Zapatistas
- 200 murders, thousands of rapes
- Ordered the execution of intern president Eulalio
Gutierrez - Issued a manifesto against Villa and Zapata
- Sided with Carranza
- Failure of Villa and Zapata to cooperate while
Carranza and Obregon lead to their ultimate defeat
44Back to Power
- Carranza issued the Adiciones which addressed
the plan for land reforms and a secret promise to
the return of hacienda lands taken by the
revolutionaries. He gained labor support by
creating minimum wage and rights of workers.
Womens equality. - By July 1915 Obregón had defeated Villa, and in
October the US recognized the Carranza
government. - Obregon offered amnesty to Villistas
- 40 generals, 5,046 officers, and 11,128 soldiers
agreed
45Back to Power (cont.)
- Villa resorted to guerrilla warfare with 200
troops - Obregon used trench warfare that he studied from
Europe to defeat Villa for the first time and
eventually lead to his demise - United States extended a de facto recognition of
his government but they wanted to have a say on
important governmental matters- Carranza declared
this unacceptable
46Mexico under Carranza (1915-1919)
- July of 1915 Zapatas support dropped
- Amnesties from Carranza
- April 1919- Military General Pablo Gonzalez had a
conflict with a Calvary commander (Jesus
Guajardo) - Zapata tried to smuggle a note to Guajardo that
was intercepted by Gonzalez - Guajardo had to kill 50 ex-Zapatista Soldiers
- Earned his trust and was eventually shot
47Mexico under Carranza
- In March 1916 Villa attacked Columbus, New Mexico
- 17 American casualties
- Worked with Vera Cruz
- President Wilson sent the army under General John
Pershing into Mexico to catch him. - Sent 7,000 Men and 8 planes
Pershing, Villa, and Obregón
48The Chase for villa
- Wilson sends John Pershing to pursue Villa in
Mexico with 50,000 on his head - US expected Carranza to support this but instead
he demands they withdraw and began to prepare for
war - Villa was viewed as the national hero
- Late 1916 Villa began raiding Chihuahua
- Middle class objected forced loans
- Peasantry objected forced military service
- Early 1917, Villa kills wife of Carrancista
paymaster - Troops kill 90 women in Torreon
- Troops also rape women
49Zimmerman Note
- January 16th, 1917
- Participation for land lost in Mexican-American
War (Gadsden) - Carranza issued a General in charge of evaluating
the risks - Certain war with the US
- Germany would not be able to supply a feasible
amount of arms - The territory had a large English speaking
population - Fear of other Latin American Countries
50Mexico under Carranza (1915-1919) (cont.)
- War almost broke out between Mexico and the US.
Because neither side wanted war and the US wanted
to focus on Europe, war was avoided and US troops
left Mexico in February 1917. - Mexican Nationalist Victory
- The Constitution of 1917 increased Carranzas
power and gave the Mexican government the power
to take private property. The Catholic Church was
restricted.
Obregón
51Constitution of 1917
- First draft did not accommodate the radical view
points - Increased power of the President past Diaz
- Appointment of officials
- Article 3 and 130- not a legal entity, limited
church control of education, property of the
state - Articles 34 and 35 were geared towards womens
rights however they were denied citizenship and
political rights - Article 123- A true labor code- eight hour work
day, child birth benefits, right to organize,
bargain collectively, and strike
52Constitution of 1917 (cont.)
- Article 27-the nation could expropriate the
original owner of all lands with compensation to
the owner (nation owned land) - Most advanced law codes of its time massive
assault on the hacienda, the power of the church,
and foreign capital in Mexico - Carranza became the first legally elected
president since Madero - Serve one six-year term
- Look it up online!!!
53Carranzas Presidency
- Only returned a small portion to the villages,
most land returned to previous owners or
Carranzas generals - Peasants cry- Tierra y libertad (land and
liberty) - Severe repression for the working class, free
education was ignored - Poor relationship with trade unions
- Mexico remained neutral during WWI limited
diplomacy with Western Hemisphere (Independent) - Law of Family Relations (April, 1917)- Women
exercise guardianship and child custody, file
lawsuits, and sign contracts
54Fall of Carranza
- When Carranzas term came to an end he tried to
extend his power by implementing a puppet
president. Unsuccessful- Obregón turned against
him - Issued the Plan of Agua Prieta
- In May of 1920 he stole 5 million pesos in gold
and silver (national treasury) and set off for
Veracruz with 60 railway cars. He was slain on
the 21st of May
55End of the Revolution?
- Devastated land- crops and cattle mines and
factories were closed - Hundreds of thousands missing or dead- population
declined by 1 million since 1910 - Famine and Disease
- September 1920- Obregon agreed to Villas request
for amnesty of 759 men - Villa granted a hacienda with 50 armed men
- Assassinated in 1923
- Carranzas death and Villas surrender
effectively ended the revolution
56Summary of the Revolution
- Wide range of causes- Nationalism, land reform,
workers rights and anarchism - Greatest challenge was to secure enough popular
support - Ultimately, the constitutionalists were able to
satisfy enough sections of Mexican Society - Middle class nationalists, wealthy
industrialists, labourers - Villistas and Zapatistas failure to unite and
create a central government is their downfall
57Mexican Revolution Bio
- Create a bio page for one influential leader
during the Mexican Revolution to showcase on the
General Mexico website - Date of birth/death how?
- Significant events (chronological)
- Be sure to include social and political
ideologies - Stances on the government, land, labor and the
church - Alliance systems
- Support Groups
- Anything else you find interesting...
58Reconstructing the State
- Alvaro Obregon became president in November 1920.
- Originally had been a mechanic and farmer grew
up in an area with US intervention - Set out to lay the economic, political, and
ideological foundations of a Mexican national
capitalism - Agrarian Reform and Industrial Reforms
- Power in government was held by wealthy generals,
capitalists, and landlords
59Obregon as President
- Obregon provided some land to the peasants-
however, he did not provide the means necessary
for upkeep - 3 million acres were distributed 320 still in
private hands - United States and Obregon
- Tensions still high over article 27- he would not
recognize the United States rights to land owned
before 1917 - However, he renewed foreign debt payments and
returned National Railways to private ownership - US formally recognized the Mexican Government in
1923
60Obregon as President
- Indigenismo- reassessment of indigenous cultural
heritage - Wanted to study the indigenous people to
understand their past and present conditions so
that they can be incorporated into
reconstruction. - Believed that school was the most important
institution to reunite the nation - Women took charge of this movement, some 4,000
rural teachers taught the past and implemented
capitalist ideas - Public School led to a divide with the church-
some teachers were attacked and killed by
supporters of the church
61Mexico after the Revolution
? When Villa refused to recognize Plutarco Elias
Calles as Obregóns successor, Obregón had Villa
murdered in 1923. Obregón froze the status-quo. ?
Between 350,000 and one million deaths during
eight years of warfare.
? The economy of Mexico was modernized. The
hacienda no longer dominated the Mexican economy.
? The Catholic Church lost power. ? New elites
from the urban and industrialized middle-class
arose. Upward mobility became available to men
without family connections. The mass of people
gained little.
62Mexico After the Revolution
- Four main forces of the revolution
- Progressive Capitalists rising middle class
- Madero, Carranza and Obregon
- Landed Elite- Hacienda
- Diaz and Huerta
- Agrarian Movement- redistribution of land
- Zapata
- Overthrow of the oligarchy
- Villa
63Plutarco Elias Calles became president on
November 30th, 1924
- Goals
- promote Mexican national capitalism
- strengthen the fiscal and monetary system
- established the Bank of Mexico
- national road commission
- national electricity code
64Calles and the Land
- Doubled the distribution of land that Obregon had
started - Usually wasnt arable land, did not make a
serious effort to provide fertilizer, and the
governmental bank designed to promote production
for the peasants usually provided loans to the
Hacendados instead - In 1930 grain production turned below the levels
of 1910. - Abandoned land distribution
- Calles introduced machinery and other modern
agricultural techniques
65Calles
- Calles did little to advance the rights of Women-
opposition arose against him. - In 1925 Mexican Congress passed laws to implement
Article 27- 50 year concessions for oil leases in
Mexico - United States not happy- refuses to follow and
moves them to the thought of war - Dwight Morrow (ambassador)- negotiated with
Calles in September of 1927 and was able to get
rid of the time constraints - Catholic Church went against the constitution in
1926 militant Catholics, in alliance with
hacendados, attacked and killed many of the
teachers in rural areas
66Calles and the Church
- January 1926- Church declared the constitution of
1917 wounds the most sacred rights of the
catholic church - Education
- Calles responsed with The Calles Law-
registration of priests with civil authorities
and the closing of religious primary schools - Catholics guerrillas, Cristeros, responded with
the slogan, Viva Cristo Rey (long live Christ the
King) - Put down by the summer of 1927
67Working together
- Obregon and Calles worked together to amend the
constitution and extend the presidential term to
from 4 to 6 years and allow reelection after one
term out of office - Hoped to rotate the presidency
- Plan took a halt after Obregon was elected in
1928 but was assassinated in July of 1928 by a
Crisero
68The future of Mexico
- In response Calles organizes the National
Revolutionary Party (PNR later PRI)- takes down
the last of the powerful military caudillos. - Puppets (3) of Calles ruled during Obregons
six-year term - Jefe maximo- maximum chief of the revolution
- Revolutionary Family began to obtain more
wealth- ignored agrarian reform, hostile to
strikes and unions - More corrupt than Porfirista regime
- Controlled Mexico until the election of Vicente
Fox in 2000
69The Great Depression
- Led to a new generation of young, middle-class
reformers (intellectuals) - Called for implementation of the constitution of
1917 - Liked Marxism and the model of the soviets
- Advance the bourgeois
- National Congress of Women Workers and Peasants
(1930s) - Expand indigenous rights, protect women workers,
raise the minimum wage, increase land reform,
promote womens suffrage
70Progressive Lazaro Cardenas
- His honesty and compassion made him famous, spent
half of his money on education as governor of
Michoacan - Part of the Revolutionary Family able to win
the election 1934 through this support and Calles
blessing - Land distribution to villages- aimed to raise
agricultural productivity and improve quality of
life - To end corruption he set an example and cut his
pay in half - Answers questions from the peasants himself
- These ideas angered Calles and he denounced the
labor movement - Cardenas had Calles deported to the US in 1936
71Land Reform
- Ejido- communal landholding system
- Distributed land to villages, 45 million acres
- Rancho- land provided to the individual in
northern Mexican states - Land also set aside for scale cultivation of
commercial crops- sugar, coffee, cotton, rice - Organized by profit sharing (oversaw by
government)
72Land Reform (cont.)
- Land Reform, schools, medical care, roads led to
the modernization of Mexican life and society by
1940. - Led to the growth of the internal Mexican market
- 1939-1941- highest production during the
revolution - However, the land in the Ejido was usually poor
for farming with limited amount of resources to
help production - By 1940, government oversee led to a decline in
the ejido system and a growth in large landed
property
73Labor Reform
- Workers were aware of the sympathetic view of the
new regime - 642 strikes in 1935- more than twice the number
in the six years before - Reforms centered around raising of wages
- Reform weakened the power of the generals
- Negatives- Labor lost independence to government
oversight which eventually lead to corruption and
control of trade unions
74Economic Reform
- Cardenas supported labors efforts for higher
wages along with favoring Mexican industry with
government loans and protective tariffs - Nacional Financiera- government bank that funded
industrial loans, public welfare projects - WWII helped the economy- fewer imports
- March 18, 1938- Dispute over oil between the US
and Britain - Cardenas expropriated the companies in the
interest of the public - Oil Nationalization- provided cheap, plentiful
fuel for Mexican industry - 90 of mining industry still rested in foreign
hands
75Womens rights
- Cardenas pledged to grant women equal rights
- Saw little in the governmental sector, more
workers rights - Womens suffrage started in 1939 but wasnt put
into effect until 1953
76Legacy
- Material and cultural condition of the masses had
improved - Peasants and workers managed to secure a larger
share of the total national income - Promotion of education in rural areas
- By the end of his presidency Cárdenas had
abandoned reform. The conservative general Manuel
Ávila Camacho succeeded Cárdenas and all pretence
of reform ended
77Outcome of the Revolution
- 350,000 to a million deaths
- Country economically devastated
- Fall of the Hacienda and the Hacendado
- Caudillo Rule
- Redistribution of Land
- Capitalist Economy and a Functioning Democracy-
Oil - Catholic Church lost economic and political
influence - Poverty and economic inequality
7891 The Mexican Revolution Timeline