sábado, 30 de noviembre de 2013

Tenth Lesson. From Liberal State to Dictatorship: Spain between 1923 and 1975


10.1. TIMELINE

1922,  22-29 October: March on Rome

1923                          

21 July. The Italian Chamber of Deputies approves a new election law ("Acerbo Law") 223 to 123.
13 September. Dictatorship of Primo de Rivera (until 1930)
8-9 November. Failure of the Beer Hall Putsch. Hitler is incarcerated.1923  

1924               

21 January. Death of Lenin. Kamenev and Zinoviev take control of the Party, with Trotsky (on their left) ("Permanent revolution") and Bukharin on their right.
10 June. Socialist deputy Giacomo Matteotti, a harsh critic of Mussolini's government, is kidnapped by fascist militia. His body is found on 16 August.

1929    

February. Stalin expels Trotsky from the Soviet Union.
24 - 29 (Thursday - Tuesday) of October. The New York Stock Exchange (Wall Street) collapses. Great Depression

1930  8 January     Primo de Rivera resigns.

1931   

14 April. Proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic. The same day the king Alfonso XIII leaves Spain.
28 June  General elections in Spain
9 December  Approval of the II Spanish Republic´s Constitution

1932    8 November. Franklin Delano Roosevelt is elected President of the United States, with 57.4% of the vote and winning 42 States; Herbert Hoover takes 39.7% of the vote and wins 6 States. (New Deal)

1933   

30 January. Hitler is appointed Chancellor. (NSDAP: 33% of the votes).
23 March Enabling Act (Ermächtigungsgesetz). Hitler imposes dictatorship.
19 November   Second elections in Republican Spain. Women vote for the first time. Right Parties wing wins.

1934 

June 30 to July 2: the Night of the Long Knives. Hitler kills leading figures of the Nazi Party.
October  Asturias Revolution. Socialist revolution in Spain, against right wing Government.

1936
   
16 February     Third elections in Republican Spain. Left wing parties (Popular Front) win.
25 August  Execution of Zinoviev. Beginning of Stalin’s Great Purge. Until 1939 more than one million Russians (mostly revolutionaries of 1917) are executed by political reasons.
18 July. Military revolt in Spain against the Republic. Beginning of the Spanish Civil War.

1938
           
9 march Franco approves the Labour Charter (Fuero de los españoles). The first of its Fundamental Laws of the Realm
12 March. Incorporation of Austria into the Third Reich (Anschluss).
September 30. The Munich Agreement. Chamberlain and Daladier give in to Hitler on the question of the Sudetenland.

1939
 
1 April. End of the Spanish Civil War, with the absolute victory of General Francisco Franco.
23 August. Ribbentrop and Molotov sign the Non-aggression Pact between           theThird Reich and the Soviet Union.
1 September. Germany invades Poland. Second World War begins.
7 September. Stalin invades Poland.

1940 
           
April - May. Katyn Massacre (Poland).  Soviet troops gun down 22,000 Polish soldiers in cold blood.
21 August. Leon Trotsky is assassinated in Coyoacán (Mexico) by Catalonian Ramón Mercader, at Stalin's behest.

1941     22 June. The Germans invade Russia (Operation Barbarossa).

1942

20 January. Wannsee Conference, at which the implementation of Jewish extermination, the "Final Solution" (Endlösung), is decided.
17 July Franco approves the Law Constituting the Cortes (Ley constitutiva de Cortes). Second of the Fundamental Laws of the Realm

1943    

31 January. Von Paulus surrenders at Stalingrad.
24 July. Mussolini is dismissed by the Grand Council of Fascism and replaced by Marshal Pietro Badoglio.

1944     6 June. Landing of the Allies at Normandy.

1945                          

12 April. F.D. Roosevelt dies and is replaced in office by Harry S. Truman.
28 April. Mussolini is shot, along with Claretta Petacci.
30 April. Hitler commits suicide in his Berlin bunker.
7 May. Unconditional surrender of Germany.
17 July  Franco approves the Charter of the Spanish (Fuero de los españoles). Third of the  Fundamental Laws of the Realm
2 September. Ho Chi Minh founds the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.
22 October Franco approves the National Referendum Law (Ley del Referendum Nacional). Fourth of the Fundamental Laws of the Realm       

1946               

5 March. Churchill coins the term "Iron Curtain" to refer to the separation between the Europe of Soviet influence and Western Europe.
2 June. In a referendum 54% of Italians vote against the monarchy. Proclamation of the Italian Republic (Constituted on 22 December, 1947).
December   The United Nations recommend retiring Ambassadors from Francoist Spain. 

1947               

5 June. George Marshall's speech at Harvard University.                 
Launch of the European Recovery Program (ERP), better known as the Marshall Plan.
26 July  Franco approves the Law of Succession (Ley de Sucesión en la Jefatura del Estado). Fifth of the Fundamental Laws of the Realm       
1948    25 June. Initiation of the Berlin Airlift (Luftbrücke) to rescue western Berlin from the blockade imposed by Stalin.

1949

4 April. Signing in Washington of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) agreement, forming a western alliance against Soviet expansionism.
23 May. Enactment of the Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany. The Federal Republic of Germany is born.
1 October. Mao Tse Tung proclaims the People's Republic of China at the Gate of Tiananmen Square (Forbidden City).
10 December. Final military victory of Mao over nationalist forces. Chiang Kai-Shek takes refuge in Taiwan.

1950                          

25 June. Start of the Korean War (Until 1953).
October. China invades Tibet.

1953   

5 March. Stalin dies. His legacy: 10 million dead Russians (4 million killed in political purges, 10 million dead from starvation).
17 July. End of the Korean War. Division between North Korea and South Korea (demilitarized zone). 4 km wide and 238 long.

1954     7 May. A French army surrenders at Dien Bien Phu. Ho Chi Minh is proclaimed President of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.

1956 

February. 20th Congress of the CPSU (Russian Communist Party). Condemnation of Stalinism (Nikita Khrushchev). 23 October –
10 November. The Hungarian Revolution against the Soviet Union is brutally put down by Soviet tanks.


1958  17 May    Franco approves the Law of the Principles of the National Movement (Ley de Principios del Movimiento Nacional). Sixth of the Fundamental Laws of the Realm.
           
1959     1 January. Triumph of the Cuban Revolution. (Flight of Fulgencio Batista. Fidel Castro seizes power).

1961    

15-19 April. Anti-Castro invasion of Cuba ends in disaster at the Bay of Pigs.
13 August. Building of the Berlin Wall (Berliner Mauer), which would stand until November 9, 1989.

1962   October. The Cuban Missile Crisis. President Kennedy is on the verge of declaring war on the Soviet Union (under Khrushchev).

1963      22 November. President John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas.

1964      2 August. The Gulf of Tonkin Incident. An American warship is purportedly attacked by a North Vietnamese patrol boat.

1965     6 February. President Johnson orders the bombing of North Vietnam. The Vietnam War begins.

1966     8 August. Mao launches the "Cultural Revolution," which seeks to eradicate traditional Chinese culture.  For 10 years the Revolution implements a series of radical policies.

1967               

10 January       Franco approves the Organic Law of the State (Ley Orgánica del Estado). Seventh of the Fundamental Laws of the Realm.

9 October.  Revolutionary leader Che Guevara is executed in La Higuera (Bolivia)                                 by order of Bolivian President Barrientos.

1968               

5 January - 20 August. Stage of political liberalization in Czechoslovakia (Prague Spring) with Alexander Dubcek emerging as a leader.  The invasion of Warsaw Pact troops puts down this attempt at reform.
May. A state of emergency is declared in France in response to student and worker protests (May 1968).

1973               

27 January. Signing of the Peace of Paris between United States and North Vietnam.
29 March. The last U.S. soldiers leave Vietnam.
16 October. The Nobel Peace Prize goes to Henry Kissinger.


1974   8 August  President Nixon resigns (Watergate Scandal)

1975                 

17 April. The Khmer Rouge conquer Phnom Penh. Pol Pot (Saloth Sar) perpetrates genocide against all non-revolutionaries. 2 million Cambodians are killed.
30 April. North Vietnamese troops occupy Saigon.
 20 November. Francisco Franco dies in Madrid. 39 years, day by day, after the execution of José Antonio Primo de Rivera.


10.2 SOME WORDS

Proletariat
Communista Manifesto
Social Democracy
Bolshevism
Kommintern
Spartacist Uprising
March on Rome
Fascism
Acerbo Law
Giacomo Matteoti
Beer Hall Putsch (Munich, 1923)
National socialism
Enabling Act (Ermächtigungsgesetz)
Great Depression
New Deal (F. D. Roosevelt)
Welfare State
Night of Long Knives
Stalin’s Great Purge (Moscow Trials)
Anschluss
Munich Agreement
Endlösung
Marshall Plan
North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
Korean War
Bay of Pigs
Berlin Wall
Cultural Revolution
Prague Spring
Watergate Scandal
Disaster of Annual (1921)
Patriotic Union (Primo de Rivera)
Asturias Revolution (1934)
Frente Popular
Falange
Junta de Defensa Nacional
National Movement (Franco)
Fundamental Laws of the Realm (Francoist regime)
Partitocracy



10.3 SOME QUESTIONS

1. Explain briefly what is the “Social question” and why it started.

2. What was the constitutional consequence of the Social question as far as political institutions were concerned?

3.  What did Marx and Engels propose for solving the social question?

4. Is Social Democracy a revolutionary movement? Explain why or why not

5. Why the Soviet revolution was “International” and why fascism and Nazism were “national”? Think in terms of solving the social question

6. Name in chronological order the principle phases of Spanish Constitutional history between 1923 and 1939.

7.  What was the aim of the Marshall Plan?

8. Why Communists dictatorship’s were considered politically correct by European intellectual elites during the XXth century?

9. The totalitarian phase in XXth century European constitutional history has left any trace in our actual democratic regimes?

10. What is the Social Rule of Law model State? Why and where did it start?

11. What provoked in Spain the Primo de Rivera’s dictatorship?

12. What were the aims of Primo de Rivera? Think in economical, social and political terms.

13. Why did the Primo de Rivera’s dictatorship ended?

14. How did the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed, and why it ended with a Civil War?


10.4 TEXTS

10.4.1 The appearance of the "proletariat" and the origins of the “social question”

 “If after 1850 one can speak of the triumph of "Big Capitalism" it is because Europe enjoyed exponential economic growth. This dramatic expansion of production and trade volumes was, to a great extent, a result of the historic changes brought about by scientific progress and, more specifically, the appearance of new technical developments and inventions that radically altered the conditions of everyday life for Europeans. At the same time society experienced spectacular demographic growth due to higher standards of living and advances in nutrition, health, hygiene and medical science. As a result, Europe shifted from a focus on the individual to a “mass culture.” This radical transformation of Europe's social structure led, in turn, to major alterations to the constitutional system.

Just when the middle class had managed to penetrate the body politic, however, the social order was once again shaken up and blurred as a consequence of the momentous economic transformations spawned by Big Capitalism. Beneath the middle class arose a new European social strata: the proletariat (from the Latin proles, meaning "offspring"), so called because its members had no assets but their own children. The proletariat was also referred to as “the fourth estate” to differentiate it from the former tripartite estate system under the Ancien Régime: the two privileged classes (clergy and nobility) and the Third Estate, made up of the common people. From the point of view of constitutional history the proletariat burst onto the political scene in the mid-19th century, aiming to achieve the political influence necessary to alter a constitutional system in Europe which had relegated workers to a life of misery. This is what came to be known as "the social question."

10.4.2 From censitary to universal suffrage: the Communist Manifesto and the first mass parties (1848-1905)

Between 1814 and 1914 Europe abandoned absolutism as a state model, replacing it with a liberal model in which power was limited and controlled by a new oligarchy made up of the old nobility and members of the high bourgeoisie.

In the mid 19th century the European nation-states' swelling wealth allowed the middle class to achieve a degree of political influence as it was incorporated into the electoral base when censitary and indirect suffrage was abandoned, giving way to universal (male) suffrage. In the United States the transition to universal suffrage was a consequence of the incorporation of new, non-slave states into the union populated by many small property owners, a process that would be consolidated after the end of the Civil War in 1865. In Europe the expansion of suffrage came about progressively: in England between 1832 and 1918; in France it was introduced abruptly in 1848, though it would be consolidated after 1875; in Prussia, in 1850, at least formally; and in Spain, first between 1868 and 1875, and then on a permanent basis after 1890. These were clear signs that European politics was undergoing a historic shift.

Universal suffrage, despite being initially limited to men, swung open the doors to masses of workers who had become "class conscious" in the wake of the publication, on 21 February, 1848, of Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels' (1820-1895) Communist Manifesto (Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei) a powerful proclamation of communist principles, which ended in the following manner:

"The Communists disdain to conceal their views and intentions. They openly declare that their ends can only be attained by the forcible overthrow of all existing social conditions. Let the ruling classes tremble at the prospect of a Communist revolution. The proletariat has nothing to lose but its chains. They have a world to win. Working men of all countries, unite!"

Henceforth the Socialist movement's aim became to control the liberal state by legal means and to acquire power through the corresponding electoral processes (Social Democracy). In fact, it was at this time when the first mass parties were founded: the German Socialist Workers' Party (1875), the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (1879), the Italian Socialist Party (1892), the English Labour Party (1900), the Russian Socialist-Revolutionary Party (1901), and the French Section of the Workers' International (SFIO), created in 1905, the forerunner of the current French Socialist Party.


10.4.3 International proletarianism vs. the capitalism of the liberal nation-states

“The triumph of the Soviet Revolution and the establishment of a communist dictatorship in Russia utterly contravened the liberal model of the nation-state, based on government's non-intervention in bourgeois society (laissez faire) and, in fact, overturned the very principle of the nation-state itself.

When Lenin signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany (March 3, 1918), according to which the new Soviet Russia suffered important territorial losses, he did so because he considered the war a struggle between capitalists, and in this he was not  mistaken. The leader of the Soviet Russia held, this time in line with the purest Marxist orthodoxy, that German workers would not fight against their Russian comrades, but against German oligarchies that had enslaved them. Thus, in opposition to the nation-state arose the model of the totalitarian state, but with a view to international domination.

The Germans perceived too late the danger posed by the triumph of the Soviet Revolution and, as a result, ended up seeking the armistice to end World War I, signed on 11 November, 1918. A few months later the Third International, or Kommintern (of International Communism) met, its precise objective to extend the proletarian revolution throughout the world. In fact, in the year 1919 a wave of revolutionary processes swept through Europe. There was unrest in recently-defeated Germany, where in January of 1919 the Spartacist Uprising (January Strike) broke out, headed by Karl Liebknechtand and Rosa Luxemburg (December 1918 – January 1919), violently put down by the government of the Weimar Republic under the leadership of the socialist Friedrich Ebert. 

After Lenin's death in 1924 Stalin, from his post as General Secretary of the Communist Party, managed to gain power by killing off all the revolutionaries from the first stage (Kamenev, Zinoviev and Trotsky) through a set of kangaroo courts known as the "Moscow Trials" (1936-1939). Before his death (1953) Stalin went on to impose an iron dictatorship over a monolithic State, based on relentless police repression and terror. In fact, Stalin's purges and totalitarianism would be condemned even by the Communist Party at its 20th Congress (1956), led by Nikita Khrushchev”. 

10.4.4 The states of Europe react by defending "national socialism."

The Soviet Revolution was a real blow to the ruling classes of the western states, which did not hesitate to support the formation of parties appealing to the masses of workers with platforms of aggressive social reform in a desperate attempt to prevent the triumph of Bolshevism.

This trend in Italy would lead to the rise of Benito Mussolini (1922-1943) and, in Germany, Adolf Hitler (1933-1945), populist leaders who ended up imposing two dictatorships which actually advanced policies of labor and economic reform. After coming to power in 1922 by way of a coup d'état (The March on Rome), Mussolini strengthened the executive, reorganized government administration and created public bodies to boost the economy through massive investment in public works and industrial consortia. As a result, Italy overcame its economic crisis and enjoyed an era of great prosperity.

In Germany Hitler, after failing to pull off his own coup (Beer Hall Putsch, Munich, 1923) rose to power ten years later via election in 1933, and quickly imposed a fierce dictatorship. In the economic arena Hitler, like Mussolini, also launched a policy of state economic intervention which alleviated the massive inflationary crisis which had consumed the country.

Both Mussolini and Hitler embraced a state model according to which the government actively intervened in the economy and adopted the measures necessary to prevent social injustice, but on a strictly "national" scale, soundly rejecting the kind of "international socialism/communism" forwarded by Lenin. It is highly significant that the party with which Hitler came to power was called the National Socialist German Workers Party (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, NSDAP), a political organization founded in 1920 months after the failure of the Spartacist Uprising and the foundation of the Kommintern.

But Hitler sought not only to take over the German state, but to redefine the very idea of the "nation," propounding a racist concept according to which the German people (Deutscher Volk) needed to be purified so as to contain only pure Aryan blood. This perverted notion of the nation led to the extermination of entire ethnic groups (genocide), including the Jews and Gypsies, in the "Final Solution" (Endlösung) and the elimination of persons with physical and mental defects to improve race through eugenics.


10.4.5 The Spanish Civil War as the prologue of the confrontation between communism and fascism

 From the point of view of constitutional history the triumph of totalitarianism in Russia, Italy and Germany ushered in an era characterized by brutal repression through the development of state security forces that crushed any attempts at dissent. Stalin, Hitler and Mussolini all killed or confined in concentration camps those who opposed their regimes. This system of terror was, however, "offset" by spectacular economic growth and concealed by propaganda which illustrated only the regimes' achievements. Thus, liberal parliamentary government spiraled into crisis as attempted military coups and revolutionary uprisings spread, in both cases aimed at overthrowing the constitutional order in order to impose dictatorships which promised to more effectively solve the social and economic crisis plaguing the era.

Europe was, thus, divided into two extremist and diametrically opposed camps: supporters of communist dictatorships and those who defended the triumph of the totalitarian, national socialist or fascist model.

In line with this trend, in Spain on September 13, 1923 General Primo de Rivera imposed a dictatorship suspending the Constitution of 1876, less than a year after the March on Rome (27-29 October, 1922) which had placed Mussolini in power. Dictatorship lasted until January 1930 and led to the fall of the Spanish Monarchy in April 14, 1931.  

The Second Republic saw the triumph of universal suffrage as the 1931 Constitution gave the Women the right to vote. But triumph of right wing parties in November 1933 general elections was never accepted by the Left parties, and the Socialist Leader Largo Caballero tried to rebel against the Government.  From 5-9 October, 1934, as reaction to the victory of the right-wing in the elections on 19 November of the previous year, PSOE Secretary General Francisco Largo Caballero led a revolution throughout Spain (which succeeded, ephemerally, only in Asturias) through which he sought to establish a Soviet-style regime.

The tension between communists and fascists swelled throughout Europe and ended up exploding in the form of the Spanish Civil War (July, 1936 - April, 1939) a grisly armed conflict which was long and devastating, as both sides were fueled by external support to wage it. While the democratic nations adopted policies of non-intervention, the totalitarian regimes sent aid to support their ideological allies. Stalin defended the Frente Popular (the Republic disappeared, de facto, in July of 1936) while Mussolini and Hitler supported the España Nacional (a term employed by those who carried out the military coup following the creation of the Junta de Defensa Nacional on July 24, 1936). 


10.4.6 Second World War and the end of fascism

The Spanish Civil war was, however, only the prologue to a new global confrontation which would originate in Europe: World War II. This conflict had its origins in the imperialist policies through which Mussolini, and especially Hitler, strove to expand their nations' territory, in Germany's case in search of Lebensraum, or "vital space." Both dictators initiated widespread rearmament, which portended the outbreak of a new worldwide conflict. After the 1938 annexation of Austria (Anschluss) and the Sudetenland (a German-speaking region of Czechoslovakia), accepted by England and France in the Munich Agreement (September 30, 1938), Hitler signed a "Non-aggression Pact" with Stalin on August 23, 1939, through which Germany and Russia effectively divvied up Poland.

On September 1, 1939, Wehrmacht troops crossed the Polish border, thereby igniting World War II. 16 days later, on September 17, it was the Russians' turn to invade Poland, which they did under the pretext of protecting the Ukrainians and Belarusians who lived in the eastern part of the country.  The Germans ultimately lost the war in the spring of 1945. The Russians would continue to impose and support communist dictatorships until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.

On 22 June, 1944 Hitler committed the fateful blunder of invading Russia (Operation Barbarossa), an offensive would end in absolute failure after the Germans' defeat at Stalingrad (June, 1942 - February, 1943). The surrender of Von Paulus (commanding 90,000 soldiers surviving from his initial force of 250,000) marked the beginning of the end for Hitler. The paradox was that Stalinist Russia emerged on the side of the victors, and during the early post-war years the communists touted themselves as the saviors of the world. 

The fragile alliance between the democratic nations and the totalitarian Soviet Union would end up rupturing after the launch of the Marshall Plan (June 5, 1947). Europe was split into two blocks: Western Europe, in which the democratic model of the state was recovered; and Eastern Europe, in which Soviet-style totalitarianism prevailed until 1989. In fact, the considerable importance which communist parties enjoyed in democratic European states all the way through the 1980s should not be overlooked. These parties were integrated into the Communist International, and their general secretaries continued to receive instructions from Moscow.  All of this crashed down like a house of cards after the Soviet Union's demise in 1991.


10.4.7 The Communist Dictatorships as totalitarian politically correct regimes

 The end of the Second World War did not mean the end of dictatorship. Stalin’s Soviet Union got stronger as ever before, and Communism saw the triumph of Revolution in Mao’s China (1949) and Fidel Castro’s Cuba (1959). In 13 August 1961 the beginning of the building of the Berlin Wall (Berliner Mauer), which would stand until November 9, 1989, was the symbol that the world was divided between Western Capitalists Countries and Countries dominated by Real Socialist Regimes.

The collapse of the Soviet Union (1991) and most of the countries with states integrated into the model of "real socialism" did not prevent communist dynamics from continuing to expand during the era of decolonization, above all in Asia: in 1945 Ho Chi Minh founded the Democratic Republic of Vietnam; in North Korea Kim II Sung created the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, which he would rule with an iron fist from 1948 to 1994; in China Mao Tse Tung rose to power in 1949. Communism would also cross the Atlantic thanks to the triumph of the revolution led by Fidel Castro in Cuba against the Fulgencio Batista dictatorship (January 1, 1959), while other Ibero-American leaders, such as Che Guevara, would also seek to spread it.

Hitler's defeat and the collapse of the Berlin wall and the Soviet Union did not, then, do away with totalitarian regimes. There still remain Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam and the People's Republic of China. In the latter case, however, the meaning of the dictatorial state has changed, as rather than attempting to suppress the market system it has actually ended up fomenting it, creating a state-guided form of capitalism coated with economic imperialism, and not devoid of a certain strain of “revanchism” in response to the colonial era during which China was dominated by the West.  It is, no doubt, an unprecedented model which, for now, has made China a superpower, respected by the leaders of democratic regimes even though it is a police state which continues to impose the death penalty and where the suppression of free expression and protest is relentless. China and states like it are, in short, autocratic states ruled by isolated elites which adopt euphemistic descriptions of themselves as socialist, democratic and popular, despite the glaring fact that they are, in fact, none of these things.

10.4.8 From Dictatorship to Partitocracy

As for Soviet Russia, the October Revolution generated a very curious totalitarian state featuring successive constitutions (1918, 1924, 1936, 1977) containing a peculiar version of public law, including provisions such as an election rule whereby only the workers were allowed to vote (appearing in Lenin's first constitution), which deprived all other social groups, from the middle class up, of political representation. It was, one might say, a kind of proletarian censitary suffrage. As with Stalin's constitution of 1936, the constitutions underwent constant changes, as they were modified to govern aspects which would normally be dealt with by ordinary laws, or even regulations. The Soviet constitutions were not, thus, lasting and stable foundational texts, but rather legislative hodgepodges undergoing constant change - not to mention the Brezhnev Constitution of 1977, which officially gave up on the ''dictatorship of the proletariat." These were all constitutional regulations which established a legal framework suitable for a regime in which the important thing was not the government, nor the legislatures, nor the courts, but the power of the sole party (Communist Party of the Soviet Union), which constituted the core of the state. One only came to form part of the Party after a long and careful selection process for which it was necessary to spend several years as a candidate before joining the new dominant class.

All of these classes of totalitarian states certainly merit a more detailed study, as they are extremely germane and valuable towards an understanding of the extent to which law did not serve as a limiting force, but rather a legitimizing instrument of power after the collapse of the Ancien Régime. Above all they illustrate how each new autocratic regime ended up creating its own legitimacy and legal framework, which came to be accepted by the democratic nations, as is now the case with the Chinese dictatorship. Moreover, specific aspects of these totalitarian regimes still form part of our democratic states in the 21st century. Without going any further, one can cite the power structure prevailing in our current mass parties, whose leadership is determined by conventions at which cadres of elites are elected which end up enforcing party discipline, particularly when it comes to drawing up electoral lists. These practices have led specialists in public law to expressively designate our contemporary political parties as "New Princes " which have turned our democracies into "Partocracies." Massification obliges.


10.4.9 The social reaction of Western democracies: Roosevelt's New Deal and Welfare State. Towards the Social Rule of Law model State.

The liberal model of the state did not disappear, but it did have to be adapted to address new circumstances, even in the world's most liberal regime: the United States of America. This was the work of the nation's 32nd president, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR), the longest-serving president in the country's history, in office from March 4, 1933 until April 12, 1945. Elected four times, he died in office, cutting short his final term. 

FDR, a Democrat, triumphed in the election of 1933 with a platform whose central tenet was protection for the common man from the ravages of the Great Depression. To this end he proposed a "New Deal" based on the premise the state should intervene to stimulate the economy and, in general, to alleviate the situation of the needy. This program was carried out in two phases. Immediately after taking office Roosevelt began to take steps to revive the U.S. economy in the short term ("The 100 Days.") In 1935 a second, more ambitious, longer-term phase began. The New Deal included federal aid to farmers, public assistance to the homeless, and established the nation’s first social welfare system (Social Security Act, August 14, 1935), agricultural protection legislation (Agricultural Adjustment Act, 12 May, 1933) and an ambitious initiative known as the National Recovery Administration (NRA), a government body created via the National Industrial Recovery Act of June 16, 1933, a bill encapsulating the very essence of the New Deal. Its aim was to regulate economic affairs, including work hours, minimum wages and guaranteed prices. The federal government strove to bolster the economy through a bold policy of public works, including the creation of a government agency for the exploitation of the Tennessee River (Tennessee Valley Authority Act, May 18, 1933), featuring major investments to improve its navigability, control floods and generate electricity. Also undertaken was the construction the Hoover Dam and the Colorado River Dam, on the border between the states of Arizona and Nevada, which took five years to build (1931-1936) and whose workers founded the nucleus of what is today the city of Las Vegas.

 The policy of economic interventionism initiated by Roosevelt in the United States had repercussions in Europe, where democratic governments also began to implement interventionist policies in the defense of workers. The most significant example is that of France, where in 1937 a coalition of leftist parties, the Popular Front, won the elections,  placing socialist León Blum at the head of the government. The most important achievement of Blum’s government were the social benefits for the first time granted French workers, including a reduction in work hours, guarantees of paid vacation time (15 days per year) and a 40% reduction in railway prices. In the summer of 1936, some 600,000 French workers went on vacation. The following year the number soared to 1,800,000.

It was the first step of a new model of State, that was between the pure Liberal Laissez faire model and the totalitarian regimes: the Welfare State. Power was submitted to the Rule of Law principle, but one of the main aims of the State is to provide protection and promotion of the economic and social well-being of its citizens.


10.4.10 The first interventionist State experiment in Spain: The Primo de Rivera’s Dictatorship (1923-1930)

a) The Disaster of Annual (22 July 1921)

The Battle of Annual was fought on July 22, 1921, at Annual in Spanish Morocco, between the Spanish Army of Africa and Berber combatants of the Rif region during the Rif War. The Spanish suffered a major military defeat, almost always referred to by the Spanish as the Disaster of Annual, which led to major political crises and a redefinition of Spanish colonial policy toward the Rif.

The Spanish lost more than 20,000 soldiers at Annual. German historian Werner Brockdorff states that only 1,200 of the 20,000 Spanish escaped alive. Rif casualties were 800. Materiel lost by the Spanish, in the summer of 1921 and especially in the Battle of Annual, included 11,000 rifles, 3,000 carbines, 1,000 muskets, 60 machine guns, 2,000 horses, 1,500 mules, 100 cannon, and a large quantity of ammunition. Abd el Krim remarked later: "In just one night, Spain supplied us with all the equipment which we needed to carry on a big war." Other sources give the amount of booty seized by Rif warriors as 20,000 rifles (German made Mausers), 400 machine guns (Hotchkisses), and 120–150 artillery pieces (Schneiders).

The political crisis brought about by this disaster led to the Primo de Rivera’s Dictatorship.


b) Establishment of Dictatorship

On September 13, 1923, the indignant military, headed by Captain General Miguel Primo de Rivera in Barcelona, overthrew the parliamentary government, upon which Primo de Rivera established himself as dictator. In his typically florid prose, he issued a Manifesto explaining the coup to the people. Resentful of the parliamentarians' attacks against him, King Alfonso tried to give Primo de Rivera legitimacy by naming him prime minister. In justifying his coup d'état, Primo de Rivera announced: "Our aim is to open a brief parenthesis in the constitutional life of Spain and to re-establish it as soon as the country offers us men uncontaminated with the vices of political organization." In other words, he believed that the old class of politicians had ruined Spain, that they sought only their own interests rather than patriotism and nationalism.

Although many leftists opposed the dictatorship, some of the public supported Primo de Rivera. Those Spaniards were tired of the turmoil and economic problems and hoped a strong leader, backed by the military, could put their country on the right track. Others were enraged that the parliament had been brushed aside. As he travelled through Spain, his emotional speeches left no doubt that he was a Spanish patriot. He proposed to keep the dictatorship in place long enough to sweep away the mess created by the politicians. In the meantime, he would use the state to modernize the economy and alleviate the problems of the working class.

Primo de Rivera began by appointing a supreme Directory of eight military men, with himself as president. He then decreed martial law and fired civilian politicians in the provinces, replacing them with middle-ranking officers. When members of the Cortes complained to the king, Alfonso dismissed them, and Primo de Rivera suspended the constitution and dissolved the legislative body. He also moved to repress separatists, who wanted to make the Basque provinces and Catalonia independent from Spain.

Despite some reservations, the great Spanish philosopher and intellectual, José Ortega y Gasset, wrote: "The alpha and omega of the task that the military Directory has imposed is to make an end of the old politics. "The purpose is so excellent, that there is no room for objections. The old politics must be ended." Nevertheless, other intellectuals such as Miguel de Unamuno and Vicente Blasco Ibáñez criticized the regime and were exiled.

The dictator enjoyed several successes in the early years of his regime. Chief among them was Morocco, which had been festering since the start of the 20th century. Primo de Rivera talked of abandoning the colony altogether, unless sufficient resources were available to defeat the rebellion, and began withdrawing Spanish forces. But when the Moroccans attacked the French sector, they drove the French and Spanish to unite to crush the defiance in 1925. He went to Africa to help lead the troops in person, and 1927 brought victory to the Franco-Spanish forces. Grateful Spaniards rejoiced to think that decades of North African bloodletting and recriminations were over.

c) The era of reforms

Primo de Rivera deeply believed that it was the politicians who had ruined Spain and that governing without them he could restore the nation.This is why he worked to build infrastructure for his economically backward country.

Infrastructures: Spain had few cars when he came to power; by 1930, it possessed Europe's best network of automobile roads. The Barcelona Metro, started many years earlier, opened in 1924. His economic planners built dams to harness the hydroelectric power of rivers, especially the Duero and the Ebro, and to provide water for irrigation. For the first time, electricity reached some of Spain's rural regions. The regime upgraded Spain's railroads, and this helped the Spanish iron and steel industry prosper. Between 1923 and 1927, foreign trade increased 300%. Overall, his government intervened to protect national producers from foreign competition. Such economic nationalism was largely the brainchild of Primo de Rivera's finance minister, José Calvo Sotelo. While Spain benefited from the European post-World War I boom, its economic growth also came from Primo de Rivera's policies and the order his regime gave the country.

Social reforms: The tranquility was, in part, due to the dictatorship's ways to accommodate the interests of Spanish workers. Imitating the example of Benito Mussolini in Italy, Primo de Rivera forced management and labor to cooperate by organizing 27 corporations (committees) representing different industries and professions. Within each corporation, government arbitrators mediated disputes over wages, hours, and working conditions. This gave Spanish labor more influence than ever before and this might be the reason why the Spanish Socialist Party and UGT where quick to cooperate with the government and its leaders affiliated themselves with the committees mentioned before.[4] Individual workers also benefited because the regime undertook massive public works. The government financed such projects with huge public loans, which Calvo Sotelo argued would be repaid by the increased taxes resulting from economic expansion. Unemployment largely disappeared.

Repression: But Primo de Rivera brought order to Spain with a price: his regime was a dictatorship, albeit a mild one. He censored the press. When intellectuals criticized the government, he closed El Ateneo, the country's most famous political and literary club. The largely anarchist CNT was decreed illegal and, without the support of the Socialist Party, the general strikes organised by the organisation where dismantled violently by the army. To suppress the separatist fever in Barcelona, the regime tried to expunge Catalan culture. It was illegal to use Catalan in church services or to dance the sardana. Furthermore, many of the dictator's economic reforms did not actually help the poor as huge public spending led to inflation, which the rich could cope with more easily. This led to a huge income disparity between the wealthy and working classes in Spain at the time.

 Yet despite his paternalistic conservatism, Primo de Rivera was enough of a reformer and his policies were radical enough to threaten the interests of the traditional power elite. According to British historian Gerald Brenan, "Spain needed radical reforms and he could only govern by the permission of the two most reactionary forces in the country—the Army and the Church." This is why finally Primo de Rivera dared not tackle what was seen as Spain's most pressing problem, agrarian reform, because it would have provoked the great landholding elite. Writes historian Richard Herr, "Primo was not one to waken sleeping dogs, especially if they were big."

d) A new political system?

Primo de Rivera chiefly failed because he did not create a viable, legitimate political system to preserve and continue his reforms. He seems to have sincerely wanted the dictatorship to be as brief as possible and initially hoped that Spain could live with the Constitution of 1876 and a new group of politicians. The problem was to find new civilian leadership to take the place of the military. In 1923, he began to create a new "apolitical" party, the Patriotic Union (UP), which was formally organized the following year. Primo de Rivera liked to claim that members of the UP were above the squabbling and corruption of petty politics, that they placed the nation's interests above their own. He thought it would bring ideal democracy to Spain by representing true public opinion. But the UP quite obviously was a political party, despite the dictator's naive protestations. Furthermore, it failed to attract enthusiastic support or even many members.

 On December 3, 1925, he moved to restore legitimate government by dismissing the military Directory and replacing it with civilians. Still, the constitution remained suspended, and criticisms of the regime grew. By summer 1926, former politicians, led by conservative José Sánchez Guerra, pressed the king to remove Primo de Rivera and restore constitutional government. To demonstrate his public support, Primo de Rivera ordered the UP to conduct a plebiscite in September. Voters could endorse the regime or abstain. About a third of those able to vote declined to go to the polls.

Nevertheless, buoyed by his victory, Primo de Rivera decided to create an entirely new political system. On 10 October 1927, with the king in attendance, he opened a National Assembly. Although they met in the Cortes chamber, members of the regime-appointed assembly could only advise Primo de Rivera. They had no legislative power. In 1929, following guidance from the dictator, the assembly finally produced a new constitution. Among its provisions, it gave women the vote because Primo de Rivera believed their political views less susceptible to political radicalism. He intended to have the nation accept the new constitution in another plebiscite, to be held in 1930.

As Spaniards tired of the dictatorship, the economic boom ended. The value of the peseta fell against foreign currencies, 1929 brought a bad harvest, and Spain's imports far outstripped the worth of its exports. Conservative critics blamed rising inflation on the government's spending for public works projects. Although no one recognized it at the time, the final months of the year brought the international economic slump which turned into the great depression of the 1930s.

e) End of the dictatorship

 When Primo de Rivera lost the support of the king and the armed forces, his dictatorship was doomed. The Spanish military had never unanimously backed his seizure of power, although it had tolerated his rule. But when Primo de Rivera began to inject politics into promotions for the artillery corps, it provoked hostility and opposition. Troubled by the regime's failure to legitimize itself or to solve the country's woes, the king also began to draw away.

 Alfonso, who had sponsored the establishment of Madrid's University City, watched with dismay as the country's students took to the streets to protest the dictatorship and the king's support for it. A clandestine pamphlet portrayed Alfonso as Primo de Rivera's dancing partner. Yet the king did not have to remove Primo de Rivera. On 26 January 1930, the dictator asked the military leaders if he still had their support. Their lukewarm responses, and his recognition that the king no longer backed him, persuaded him to resign two days later. Primo de Rivera retired to Paris, where he died from fever and diabetes on 16 March 1930.

f) The aftermath: From Dictatorship to Republic and Civil War

In the early 1930s, as most of the western world, Spain fell into economic and political chaos. Alfonso XIII appointed General Dámaso Berenguer, one of Primo de Rivera's opponents, to govern. But the monarch had discredited himself by siding with the dictatorship. Social revolution fermented in Catalonia. In April 1931, General José Sanjurjo informed the King that he could not count on the loyalty of the armed forces. Alfonso XIII suspended the monarchy on 14 April 1931, leaving the royal family in Madrid. The act ushered in the Second Republic.

 Two years later Primo de Rivera's eldest son, José Antonio, founded the Falange, a Spanish fascist party. Both José Antonio and his brother Fernando were arrested in March 1936 by the republic, and were executed in Alicante prison by republican forces once the Spanish Civil War began in July 1936. The Nationalists led by Francisco Franco won the Civil War and established a far more authoritarian regime. By that time, many Spaniards regarded Primo de Rivera's relatively mild regime and its economic optimism with greater fondness.


From Wikipedia


jueves, 21 de noviembre de 2013

Ninth Lesson. The rise and crisis of the Liberal State in Spain (1814-1923)


 9.1 TIMELINE

9.1.1 Europe From 1815 to 1914

9.1.1.2 The foundations of the Restoration (1814-1820)
1814               

                        4 June. Louis XVIII grants La Charte.
                        1 October. First meeting of the Congress of Vienna.

1815                9 June. Last session of the Congress of Vienna.
                        18 June. Battle of Waterloo.
                        18 July. Napoleon definitively exiled.
                        14 September. Russia, Prussia and Austria sign the Holy Alliance.

1818                1 October -15 November. Congress of Aix-la-Chapelle. France joins the Holy Alliance                             .


9.1.1.3 Revolution and counter-revolution (1820-1830)


1820                1 January. Colonel’s Riego’s Revolt in Cabezas de San Juan.
                        8 March. Ferdinand VII endorses the Constitution of Cádiz.

1821                5 May. Napoleon dies on St. Helena.

1822                22 November. Congress of Verona.

1823                7 April. Entry into Spain of the Hundred Thousand Sons of St. Louis.
                        31 August. The French take the Fort of Trocadero (Cádiz).
                        30 September. Surrender at Cádiz. End of the Liberal Triennium.
                        7 November. Hanging of Riego.

1824        

9 April. Lord Byron dies in Mesolonghi fighting for the independence of Greece               
9 December. Battle of Ayacucho. End of Spanish presence in the Americas.

1825                26 December. The Decembrist Revolt in St. Petersburg.

1826                22 June-15 July. Congress of Panama. Simón Bolívar fails in his                        attempt to form a federation comprised of the recently-founded Latin American states.

1829     14 September. The Ottoman Empire recognizes Greek independence (Treaty of               Adrianople).


9.1.1.4 The July Monarchy as a model (1830-1848)

1830

 27, 28, 29 July. Revolution in Paris. Fall of Charles X.
 August. The Netherlands  Revolution breaks out. Belgium is born.
 29 November. The Polish revolt against Russian occupation.

1831   7 February. Adoption of the Belgian Constitution.

1832               

7 June. Electoral Reform Law in England.
26 December. Poland is incorporated into Russia via the Organic Statute and s
subjected to an autocratic, Orthodox and pro-Russian regime.


9.1.1.5 The Revolution of 1848 and its consequences


1848                12 January. Revolution breaks out in Palermo (Sicily).
                        22-25 February. Revolution breaks out in Paris. (II French Republic).
                        4 March. Charles Albert of Savoy promulgates a constitution (Albertine
                      Statute).
                        13 March. Revolution breaks out in Vienna. Metternich flees.
                        18 March. Revolution breaks out in Berlin.
                        18 May. The Frankfurt Parliament is constituted in Prussia.
                        October. A rebellion is quelled in Vienna.
                        2 December. Ferdinand I of Austria abdicates in favor of Francis Joseph.

1849               

9 February. Promulgation of the Republic in Rome (Mazzini).
24 March. Charles Albert of Savoy hands the throne to his son, Victor Emmanuel II.
27 March. The Frankfurt Parliament proclaims the German Empire's first constitution.
3 April. Frederick IV of Prussia refuses to be appointed king by the Frankfurt Parliament.
31 May. Dissolution of the Frankfurt Parliament.

1850   

31 January. Frederick William IV grants a new constitution for the Kingdom of Prussia, which would remain in force until 1918.
20 March - 29 April. Failure of the first attempt at a German federation, led by Prussia            (Erfurt Union).
29 November. Frederick IV of Prussia yields to Francis Joseph of Austria (Punctation of Olmütz).


9.1.1.6 Italian unification (1852-1861)


1852          Camillo Benso (Count of Cavour) becomes Víctor Manuel II’s prime minister.

1858         Cavour meets with Napoleon III at Plombières. Franco-Sardinian Alliance.

1859    

May - July. Austria is defeated by Franco-Sardinian forces in Magenta and Solferino.
August-September. Tuscany, Parma, Modena and part of the Papal States are
incorporated to the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia.

1860               

11 May. Garibaldi lands at Marsala (Sicily), leading of force of 1,000                                             “redshirts.”
 September. Victor Emmanuel II’s troops occupy Naples.

1861               

14 March. Proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy (tricolor flag).
6 June.  Cavour dies (at age 50).
                                                                            

9.1.1.7 German unification (1862-1871)


1862     23 September. Bismarck heads the Council of Ministers.

1866     3 July.  The Austrians are defeated by the Prussians at Königgrätz (Sadowa).                   
1868    19 September. Glorious Revolution in Spain. Dethronement of Queen Elizabeth II.

1870               

13 July. The Ems Dispatch.
19 July. The beginning of the Franco-Prussian War.
2 September. French defeat at the Battle of Sedan. Napoleon III is taken prisoner.
19 September. Beginning of the siege of Paris by the Prussians.

1871 
     
18 January. William I is proclaimed the kaiser of the German Empire in the Palace of Versailles (Hall of Mirrors). The Germans take revenge for the humiliations inflicted on them by Louis XIV and Napoleon .
28 January. End of the siege of Paris.
18 March - 28 May. Paris Commune.



9.1.1.8 The Armed Peace (1882-1914)


1882                Bismarck forges the Triple Alliance with Austria and Italy.

1888                9 March. Death of William I, who is succeeded by his son, Frederick III, who dies of cancer on June 15. William II, age 29, becomes kaiser upon his father’s death.

1890                 20 March. Bismarck resigns.

1892                17 August.  Franco-Russian Alliance. Ratified in 1893 and in 1894             by Russia and by France.

1904                8 April. Non-aggression and colonial expansion pact signed between France and England (Entente cordiale).

1912                The Titanic sinks. 1,517 passengers perish.

1914                28 June. Assassination of the Archduke Ferdinand in Sarajevo.




9.1.2  Spain from 1814 to 1923


9.1.2.1 Fernando VII’s reign (1814-1833)


1814-1820 Absolutist repression.

1824  December 9 The defeat in the battle of Ayacucho marks the end of 3000 years presence of Spain in the American continent. 

1820-1823 The Liberal Triennium: Constitutional period (1812 constitution reenacted)

1823-1833  The Ominous Decade

1830, 9 March. Ferdinand VII abolishes the Salic Law (Pragmatic Sanction).               Future Elizabeth II is born on 10 October.

1833   29 September. The death of Fernando VII.


9.1.2.2 Elisabeth II’s reign (1833-1868) 


Regency of Maria Cristina  (1833-140)


1834                10 April. Enactment of the Royal Statute.

1836                12 August. La Granja Uprising.

1837     17 June. The liberals enact a new Constitution in Spain.

1839     31 August. Convention of Vergara (Maroto and Espartero). End of the First
Carlist War.
                       
Regency of General Espartero (1840-1843)
                        .
1840     12 October. The beginning of Espartero’s Regency. The progressive liberals take power.

1841   Treaty Law of Navarra that enables its full integration the Spanish State

1843       10 November. Elizabeth II is declared of age.


Elisabeth II’s majority (1843-1868)

1845     23 May. Narváez promulgates a new constitution in Spain.

1846-1849   Second Carlist War

1859-1860      African War. Spain conquers part of Northern Morocco to protect its historical territories of Ceuta and Melilla.

1868,  9 September. Glorious Revolution in Spain. Dethronement of Queen Elizabeth II.



9.1.2.3 The Six-Years Democratic Period (1868-1874)

1869    First democratic constitution in Spain.

1870-1873  Reign of Amadeo I of Spain

1872 Beginning of the Third Carlist War (1872-1876)

1873-1874 The First Spanish Republic

1874                December. Alfonso XII is proclaimed king in Sagunto (Martínez Campos).

9.1.2.4 The Restoration (1874-1923)


1874-1885   Reign of Alfonso XII of Spain

1876  New Spanish constitution (Cánovas del Castillo)

1878  Basque Economic Agreement, enables full integration of the Basque provinces in the Spanish State.

1885                25 November. Death of Alfonso XI from o tuberculosis.

1885-1902  Regency of Maria Christina of Austria

1893   An anarchist kills 22 persons with a bomb in a opera performance in Barcelona.
1897    The former Spanish Prime Minister Cánovas del Castillo is assassinated by an anarchist.
1898    Spanish-American War. Spain loses its last colonies in America (Cuba) and Asia (Philippines).

1902-1923   Constitutional reign of Alfonso XIII of Spain

1909    July 25 to 2 of August:   Tragic Week of Barcelona. The Spanish Army and Police fight an anarchist rebellion. 150 workers are killed.

1910    The Socialist Spanish Party (PSOE) get its first deputy in a General election for the the Spanish Congress: (Pablo Iglesias).

1912   The Spanish Prime Minister José Canalejas is assassinated by an anarchist.

1921, 22 July   Disaster of Annual. Thousands of Spanish soldiers are brutally killed by the Moroccan tribes of the Rif, because of the ineptitude of their officers and commanders.


9.2. SOME WORDS

La Charte (Louis XVIII)
Congress of Viena
Holy Alliance
Metternich System
Hundred thousand sons of Saint Louis
Ayacucho (Battle of)
Decembrist Revolt (St Petersburg)
July Monarchy
Risorgimento
Albertine Statute (1848)
Red Cross
Ems Dispatch (1870)
Sedan (Battle of)
Second Reich (1871)
Mitteleuropa
Paris Commune
Duma (Russia)
Armed Peace
Entente Cordiale
Sarajevo Assasination (June 28, 1914).
Censitary suffrage
Liberalism
Liberal Triennium
Salic Law (Pragmatic Sanction)
Royal Statute (1834)
Carlist Wars
Glorious Revolution (1868)
Revolutionary Sexennial
Restoration (1874)
Spanish American War (1898)
Disaster of Annual (1921)



9.3. QUESTIONS

1. What was the Holy Alliance? What was its purpose? In what considerations was it based?

2. Why the Metternich System could be considered a forerunner of European integration?

3. What happened in Spain in 1820? Why this event was constitutionally relevant all over Europe? Give some concrete examples.

4. Why the Spanish constitutional model of 1820 was obsolete by 1830?

5. What countries did follow the liberal model of State between 1830 and 1848?

6. Why is 1848 a crucial year in European constitutional history? Think of two different kinds of events that happened simultaneously.

7. What are from a constitutional point of view the differences between Italian unification (1852-1861) and German unification (1862-1871)?

8. What are the essential principles of the Liberal State model? From this point of view was the Napoleonic State a liberal State?

9. In 1900 the parliamentary regime became the rule in most of European liberal states. They were nevertheless some exceptions. Concretely Russia, Prussia and Spain. Explain why, bearing in mind that in every case the reasons were different.

10. Why did the Liberal model of State led to the Armed Peace and to World War I?


9.4. TEXTS.

9.4.1 Excerpt taken from Article 2 of the Holy Alliance Convention

“The three sovereigns, proclaiming that the Christian nation, of which they and their peoples form part, in reality has no other monarch but God, their Majesties accordingly recommend, with the most heartfelt appeal to their peoples, the only way to enjoy the peace, through a clear conscience, which is the only true one, and that they become stronger every day in their support for the principles and their fulfillment of those duties which the Divine Savior taught to men.”

9.4.2 The Metternich System: a forerunner of European integration? 

“At Metternich's initiative, on 20 November, 1815 the four victorious powers which had defeated Napoleon - England, Austria, Russia and Prussia - signed a Grand Alliance in Paris to maintain a “protectorate ” in France which would legitimize the occupation of French territory. In response to a proposal by the British Minister, Lord Castlereagh, a clause (the sixth) was introduced in the pact according to which the signing powers pledged to meet regularly to discuss issues of common interest and to ensure the preservation of order and peace.

The Quadruple Alliance was forged to prevent any revolutionary movement from arising in France. Thus, when the monarchy under Louis XVIII seemed to be well-established, the allies, meeting in Aachen in 1818, agreed to withdraw their troops from the country, which was admitted into the alliance. In an additional, secret protocol, Metternich succeeded in adding to the principle of legitimate intervention to prevent revolutionary disorders a call for regular “congresses” by which the powers were to examine the situation in Europe and make decisions, depending upon circumstances, regarding the adoption of appropriate measures.

What came to be called the “Metternich System” was thus established, a pact which can be considered a kind of first attempt at European integration. In the years that followed Napoleon's fall, through 1823, the European powers acted jointly and in concert, though not  to maintain a common economic policy, but to preserve the order established at the Congress of Vienna, an action they had been forced to take as liberals from all over Europe were anxious to restore the nation-state.”

9.4.3 The revolutionary Liberals

The ultimate aim of many revolutionary liberals, however, was to seize power through a military coup, a practice which initially spread in Spain after the end of the War of Independence and which came to be termed a pronunciamiento. In 1814, General Elío, Captain General of Valencia, had defied Las Cortes (Parliament) and put his troops at the service of Ferdinand VII. However, after the restoration of absolutism, in May of that year it was the liberals who opted to resort to this maneuver to introduce a constitutional regime. Coronel Rafael del Riego, a prominent Mason, was the first to succeed. In early 1820 he managed to orchestrate a revolt at Cabezas de San Juan (Seville) of the troops that Ferdinand VII intended to send to America to subjugate pro-independence rebels.

The triumph of the “Spanish Revolution” had important repercussions. Firstly, it prevented the deployment of reinforcements to Spanish America, thereby ensuring the rebels’ victory there. Most important was that Riego inspired European radical liberals to undertake the same defiance of their absolute monarchs: three months after Riego's success a liberal revolution broke out in the Kingdom of the two Sicilies as a result of a rebellion by troops occupying Naples, in 1822 the Greeks rose up against the Ottoman Empire, and in December 1825, taking advantage of the death of Alexander I and the accession to the throne of Nicholas I, a group of progressive Russian officials managed to lead a rebellion backed by 3,000 soldiers against the Tsar (Decembrist Revolt).

9.4.4 The French Monarchy of July

“The model of the liberal revolution based on a military uprising, inspired by the coup led by Colonel Riego, was succeeded by another approach: “popular revolution” through which, in July of 1830, the people of Paris took to the streets to overthrow the absolutist Charles X and impose a constituent assembly, from which emerged a new regime: the constitutional monarchy of Louis Philippe of Orléans (“the July Monarchy.”)

The triumph of the July Monarchy triggered a new revolutionary wave across Europe. The rebellions in Italy, the German territories and Poland, however, would fail, as the reactionary powers, essentially Austria and Russia, were fierce in their stamping out of subversive activities. Liberalism, however, prevailed elsewhere in Europe: the Netherlands, Spain, Portugal and Switzerland. It also had major repercussions in England, where it inspired historic electoral reform in 1832.”

9.4.5  The triumph of the Liberals in Spain and Portugal

Liberalism also triumphed in Spain and Portugal, although this had less to do with the French Revolution of 1830 than it did with two civil wars.

In Spain, the death of Fernando VII (1833), who left no male heir, sparked the dynastic conflict known as the “Carlist Wars.” When the absolutists endorsed the dynastic rights advanced by Carlos María Isidro, a brother of the deceased king, regent María Cristina, in order to place her daughter Isabel II on the throne, had no choice but to ally with the liberals. After an attempt to grant a royal charter in the form of the Estatuto Real de 1834 was foiled by a rebellious a group of Royal Guard sergeants (the 1836 Mutiny at La Granja), the Constitution of 1837 was ultimately approved, clearly inspired by the Belgian Constitution of 1831, definitively consolidating the constitutional principle in Spain. With the rise of the conservatives to power in 1843, however, the principle of the constitutional state would be replaced by a Napoleonically-inspired administrative state, a system which would endure all the way down to 1923, with the constitutions of Narváez in 1845 and Cánovas in 1876 (save for the “Revolutionary Sexennial” from 1868-1874).

In Portugal, after 1834 the political struggle pitted moderates, defenders of the Constitution of 1824, against “Septembrists,” or progressives, supporters of the Constitution of 1822. The latter group managed to seize power thanks to a September 1836 coup, although they were removed in 1842 by the Conde de Tomar, who established a much more authoritarian regime than that introduced by Narváez in Spain, which led his political opponents to ally and triggered several dramatic overthrow attempts, such as the Oporto Revolt (1846). The Conde de Tomar was eventually forced to stepped down, although he would return to power from 1849 to 1851.


9.4.6 On  Italian unification

Despite the fact that France had signed a truce with Austria (Armistice of Villafranca), the army of the Italian patriots continued military operations, annexing the Kingdom of Sardinia and central Italy after the Piedmontese army’s occupation of Tuscany, Modena, Parma, and part of the Papal States. The conquest of these territories was legally formalized through the convocation of the corresponding constitutional assemblies which, once elected, approved their incorporation into the Sardinian Kingdom (August-September 1859). One should bear in mind that the new state was based on the constitutional regime of Piedmont-Sardinia, which since 1848 had been grounded on the Albertine Statute, based on the principle of national sovereignty. In this way “Italian unity” was legitimized by the free consent of its people (the “Italian nation”), who had been consulted via referendum.

By way of successive additions the small Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia, which in July of 1859 had a population of just 5 million, two years later boasted over 22 million. The next constitutional step was to convene an Italian Parliament. Meeting in Turin, this body proclaimed Victor Emmanuel II King of Italy “by the grace of God and the will of the nation” (March 14, 1861),  with the new Italian State promptly adopting its tricolor flag. Three months later (June, 1861) Cavour died, but not before he had realized his objective of Italian unification, with only Venice and Rome missing . In the meantime Florence became the capital of Italy (1864).

9.4.7 On German unification

 If the “Italian nation” became a unified through a democratic movement from the bottom up, which took shape from the outset through the adoption of a parliamentary regime, the “German nation's” integration into a single state came about in the opposite way, from the top down, advanced by the princes of the various Germanic states, led first by the Emperor of Austria and later by the King of Prussia, who in 1871 became the German Emperor. In this case integration was legitimized through a diplomatic agreement between sovereigns rather than a popular vote.

 By 1871 German unity had been achieved although, unlike Italian unity, it was the work of the rulers of the various German states, led by Prussia, and not something brought about by a popular vote. Thus, parliamentary government was not consolidated in the German Empire, as its emperor continued to unilaterally control the government. Another important difference, largely a consequence of the above, was that, unlike in Italy, where a unitary state was created, the German Empire continued to be a federation. In fact, the integration of the German nation into a single state would not come about until after World War I and the foundation of the Weimar Republic (1919-1933).

9.4.8 Imperial Russia as a final bastion of autarky

At the end of the 19th century the last absolutist regime standing in Europe was Russia, headed by its Tsar, Alexander II (1855-1881), who had failed to liberalize the country, his life cut short by a terrorist bomb on March 13, 1881, the same day that he had granted a constitution.

The assassination led his successor, Alexander III (1881-1894), to reimpose autarky. Thus, political change in Russia would not come about until Nicholas II (1894-1917) in a process beginning with the Revolution of 1905, which established a constitutional monarchy in which the Tsar began to govern in concert with an Assembly (Duma). This liberal Russian regime was short-lived, however, as the outbreak of World War I triggered two revolutions (that of February and October) in 1917, which simultaneously did away with monarchy and liberalism in Russia.


9.4.9 The Liberal model of a State with limited powers, controlled by the richest

The seizure of power by the wealthy bourgeoisie was achieved by imposing representative, parliamentary-based regimes which replaced (as in the case of the French Republic) or at least restricted royal prerogative. These regimes, however, only represented the affluent, as delegates were elected through a system of censitary suffrage under which people were required to have a certain level of income or property in order to vote. In this way the financial and commercial bourgeoisie managed to control the state apparatus, enforcing its rules and policies. This meant that the new public power restricted itself to maintaining order, leaving everything else in the hands of the new ruling class, especially economic policy. It was the “liberal” principle of laissez faire which allowed the new European nation-states to achieve impressive levels of economic development.


9.4.10 The Liberal Revolution

Over the course of the 19th century, one by one all European countries would become “nation-states,” with a sole exception: Tsarist Russia, where the autocratic model of absolute monarchy would endure until the Revolution of 1905. This process of political transformation and its important economic consequences is what has been called the “Liberal Revolution.”

Of course, this phenomenon developed in a different way in each different country. In England, for example, although the monarchical principle was respected, the liberal model clearly triumphed, as the parliamentary regime was firmly entrenched, with the monarch reigning but not ruling. In other countries liberalism’s  triumph was more moderate, where despite the appearance of representative assemblies the Government remained in the hands of the king. Such was the case in Spain, with its model in which the Cortes shared sovereignty with the king, and in Prussia, where government was entirely entrusted to the monarch, with the representative assembly limited to legislative and budgetary functions. Finally, in other states the triumph of the liberal model marked a definitive rejection of monarchy, as in France, which in 1875 shifted to a republic featuring a powerful representative assembly and a weak executive - though the system functioned thanks to the existence of the all-powerful administrative state established by Napoleon.

The lack of a single approach when it came to carrying out the bourgeois revolution was due to the fact that European liberals were divided into two camps: those who sought to move gradually towards the limitation of monarchical power, from within the system (doctrinaire or moderate liberalism) and another, more extremist class whose members sought a radical break with the Ancien Régime (“revolutionary liberalism”).

9.4.11 Nationalism and confrontation: the Europe of the “Armed Peace”

The consolidation of nation-states weakened the European political model of stability through coalition which Metternich had striven to maintain from 1815 - 1848, replacing it with a dynamic in which powerful nations squared off against and competed with each other. The triumph of the nation-state in Italy and Germany precipitated successive wars. Italian unity was not achieved without bloody clashes between French-Sardinian and Austrian troops. In fact, the battles of Magenta and Solferino (1859) were particularly grim, not so much in terms of those killed in combat, but due to the fact that the medical services were so deficient that most of the men died as a result of preventable infections and treatable wounds. This appalling situation would inspire Swiss businessman and philanthropist Henri Dunant (1828-1910), to found the Red Cross.  Three years later, German nationalism, embodied and advanced by Bismarck, waged war to defeat Austria (1866) and, four years later, France (1870). Prussia’s triumph over Austria and France led to the 1871 founding of the Second Reich and the generation of serious resentment in France due to Prussia’s seizure of the Alsace and Lorraine regions. The Russians, meanwhile, after defeating Napoleon, also managed to gradually overpower the Ottoman Empire, thereby becoming another great colonial power.

All these wars, however, were nothing more than the beginning of an escalation which would end up taking on global dimensions in the first half of the 20th century. The root cause of the international tension that arose between the European states during the last third of the 19th century was that Italy and Prussia, the new European nation-states unified in the last third of the century, joined in relatively late on the process of colonial expansion, hitherto dominated by the British Empire and France, which in 1830 launched an ambitious colonial program. Meanwhile, colonial Russia and even Belgium (Congo) had joined the colonial game.

Italy, forged into a nation-state before Germany, moved to exploit territories in Africa: Somalia, Ethiopia, Abyssinia and Tripolitania (Libya). Prussia, however, barely managed to occupy Namibia. This meager achievement was all the more frustrating because the German Empire had become a major industrial power in need of raw materials and new markets. As a result, William II (1888-1918) launched an aggressively expansionist policy which collided head-on with the colonial interests of England and France. It was Bismarck’s aspiration for central Europe (Mitteleuropa) to overpower the English Empire through expansion to the east, to the detriment of Russia (Ostraum). The upshot was widespread rearmament and the constitution of defensive alliances aimed at regulating colonial expansion, such as that signed between France and Russia in 1892, or that between England and France in 1904 (Entente cordiale), a union which the United States would ultimately end up joining.


In response to these alliances William II’s German Empire signed others with the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires, which ratcheted up tensions, creating an international situation which historians have come to called the “Armed Peace.” Trade disputes and economic conflicts ended up degenerating into a military conflict which would spread throughout the world:  World War I (1914-1918).