National Alliance of Democratic Forces

Last updated

The National Alliance of Democratic Forces(ANFD) was an anti-francoist organization created in October 1944, during the first years of Francoist Spain, by ideologically diverse Spanish political and trade union organizations (republican, socialist and anarchist) who had fought together on the Republican side during the Spanish Civil War. Its founding objective was to end the Franco dictatorship and restore democracy.

Contents

History

Founding

Both the socialists and the anarchists rejected the Communist Party's (PCE) proposal to join the Spanish National Union. This opposition to the hegemony that the communists intended to impose, combined with the common struggle against the Franco dictatorship, brought the socialist and anarchist movements together, despite previous differences during the Republic and the Civil War. Thus, in autumn of 1943, representatives of the Libertarian Movement and the Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) started talks aimed at creating a united body of the non-communist left, which would be open to other anti-Franco forces from moderate political forces. In February 1944, a session of the regional committees of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT), the main organization of the Libertarian Movement, supported the talks by approving maintaining the "collaborationist position." [1]

Rafael Sanchez-Guerra one of the founders of the National Republican Committee that participated in the creation of ANFD. RafaelSG.jpg
Rafael Sánchez-Guerra one of the founders of the National Republican Committee that participated in the creation of ANFD.

The conversations between socialists and anarchists were joined by politicians from the Republican Left, the Republican Union and the Federal Republican Party, integrated into the so-called National Republican Committee founded and headed by Rafael Sánchez-Guerra and Régulo Martínez. An agreement between the three parties was reached in June 1944, although it was not made public until October. In the founding manifesto, the "accidentalism" of the anarchists regarding the form of government —and the open rejection of the Republic that had persecuted them harshly— was resolved by resorting to the expression "republican order" to refer to the Second Republic. [2]

The objective of the ANFD was the formation of a provisional government that would restore democratic freedoms and call general elections. To attract the support of the allies, a commitment was established that under the new government Spain would join the Atlantic Charter. However, a secret agreement was reached between the three signatory forces, which considered that the 1931 Constitution would be replaced and that, after the overthrow of the Franco dictatorship, there would open a process to define the new constitution. [3]

To direct the ANFD, a national council was created, chaired by the Republican Régulo Martínez, who had been released from prison a few months earlier, and which also included the socialist Juan Gómez Egido and the anarchist Sigfrido Catalá. [4]

The ANFD did not include the entire anti-Francoist opposition since the communists were left out (contacts maintained with the PCE did not bear fruit) as well as the Catalan, Basque and Galician nationalists. This fact, added to the fact that it lacked the open support of a foreign power lead to some not considering ANFD "strong enough to bring about a change in the internal situation of the country". [5]

Negotiations with monarchists

The victories of the Allies in World War II were changing the international position of the Franco regime, which is why certain monarchist sectors that had supported Franco's regime until then, began contacts with representatives of the ANFD. Conversations between ANFD members and monarchists during the last months of 1944 considered more the type of regime that would replace the Francoist than how to bring the existing regime down since both parties were convinced that it would not survive the imminent allied victory in the war. [6]

Arrests

A wave of arrests was carried out by the Francoist police at the end of 1944 and beginning of 1945. On the night of December 21–22, thanks to the denunciation of a confidant of the police, the president of the ANFD Régulo Martínez and other members of the executive committee of the ANFD and the Republican National Committee were arrested, as well as prominent monarchists who had maintained contacts with them, such as Gregorio Marañón, Cándido Casanueva y Gorjón and the political adviser of General Aranda. In March 1945, Sigfrido Catalá, an anarchist representative on the ANFD board, and other members of the national committee of the Libertarian Movement were arrested. Almost at the same time, the entire PSOE executive from the interior fell, including Juan Gómez Ejido, president and socialist representative on the ANFD board, and Sócrates Gómez, general secretary, as well as a significant number of militants. [7]

The detained monarchists and those from the ANFD organizations did not receive the same treatment. Thus, when the court martial against the ANFD leaders was held on January 9, 1947, the monarchists who had participated in the talks were not even called to testify, and when the defense proposed General Aranda as a witness, he did not attend because precisely the day before he had been exiled to the Balearic Islands. Another general called by the defense was ordered to plead health reasons for not appearing. The defendants were sentenced to prison terms, between four and twelve years, whereas Sigfrido Catalá in a previous trial for his membership in the CNT had been sentenced to death. [8]

In May 1945 the institution was also established in Catalonia, with the participation of a large part of nationalist organizations and the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), which would catalyze the organization in December of the National Council of Catalan Democracy. However, once the first few years had passed since World War II, the hope that the Allies would help bring down the Franco dictatorship faded. [9]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuel Azaña</span> Spanish Republican prime minister (1880–1940)

Manuel Azaña Díaz was a Spanish politician who served as Prime Minister of the Second Spanish Republic, organizer of the Popular Front in 1935 and the last President of the Republic (1936–1939). He was the most prominent leader of the Republican cause during the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Santiago Carrillo</span> Spanish politician

Santiago José Carrillo Solares was a Spanish politician who served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) from 1960 to 1982. His role in the Paracuellos massacres during the Civil War was particularly controversial. He was exiled during the dictatorship of Francisco Franco, becoming a leader of the democratic opposition to the regime. His role as leader of the PCE would later make him a key figure in the transition to democracy. He later embraced Eurocommunism and democratic socialism, and was a member of the Congress of Deputies from 1977 to 1986.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Augusto Barcía Trelles</span> Spanish politician (1881-1961)

Augusto Barcia y Trelles was a Spanish politician, several times member of the Congress of Deputies, who served as acting Prime Minister of Spain from 10 May 1936 to 13 May 1936 due to former PM Manuel Azaña being elected as President of the Republic. He was also a lawyer and a Freemason.

<i>Hispanidad</i> Term for the cultural unity of Hispanic peoples

Hispanidad is a Spanish term alluding to the group of people, countries, and communities that share the Spanish language and Hispanic culture. The term can have various, different implications and meanings depending on country of origin, socio-political views, and cultural background.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">White Terror (Spain)</span> Assassinations during the Spanish Civil War

In the history of Spain, the White Terror describes the political repression, including executions and rapes, which were carried out by the Nationalist faction during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), as well as during the first nine years of the regime of General Francisco Franco. In the 1936–1975 period, Francoist Spain had many official enemies: Loyalists to the Second Spanish Republic (1931–1939), Liberals, socialists of different stripes, Protestants, intellectuals, homosexuals, Freemasons, Romanis, Jews, and Basque, Catalan, Andalusian and Galician nationalists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Francoist concentration camps</span> Aspect of the Spanish Civil War

In Francoist Spain at least two to three hundred concentration camps operated from 1936 until 1947, some permanent and many others temporary. The network of camps was an instrument of Franco's repression.

Alberto Assa was an Ottoman-born Colombian educator, translator and humanist of Sephardi descent.

Events in the year 1944 in Spain.

The so-called Geneva Manifesto is a term referring to the declarations made by Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona in the Swiss newspaper Journal de Genève published on 11 November 1942, in which he called for the formal restoration of the Spanish monarchy with him as King, as he was Alfonso XIII's legitimate heir. King Alfonso died a year earlier.

The Sabaté brothers Quico and Pepe were among the famed Catalan Spanish maquis and urban guerrilla of the Francoist post-Civil War period. They participated in an anarchist guerrilla vigilante group of expropriators before the war. Afterwards, as maquis, they turned their focus from unlikely anarchist mass insurrection to converting others to anti-Francoism. The maquis descended from exile in the French Pyrenees to the Barcelona area, attacking Francoists and continuing vigilante robberies as a form of propaganda by deed. Their youngest brother, Manolo, rode with another maquis in defiance of his brothers' request that he pursue other work. Manolo was quickly caught in a police trap and executed by firing squad in 1949 at Barcelona's El Camp de la Bóta, the notorious execution grounds of the Franco period.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">José Solís Ruiz</span> Spanish politician (1913–1990)

José Solís Ruiz was a Spanish politician, known for his role in Francoist Spain, during which he occupied a number of important posts.

In the history of Spain, the White Terror was the series of assassinations realized by the Nationalist faction during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939), and during the first nine years of the régime of General Francisco Franco. Thousands of victims are buried in hundreds of unmarked common graves, more than 600 in Andalusia alone. The largest of these is the common grave at San Rafael cemetery on the outskirts of Málaga. The Association for the Recovery of Historical Memory says that the number of disappeared is over 35,000.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ramón Rufat</span> Anarcho-syndicalist, spy, writer (1916–1993)

Ramón Rufat Llop (1916–1993) was a Spanish anarcho-syndicalist, agent of the Republican secret services, and anti-Franco fighter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women in exile during Francoist Spain</span>

Women in exile during Francoist Spain were a result of their being on the wrong side during the Spanish Civil War. The repression behind nationalist lines during the war and the immediate years that followed left many politically active women with few choices but to leave or face death. The exact totals of women who were murdered, fled or disappeared is unknown, as it was only possible to make estimates.

Women in Partido Comunista de España in Francoist Spain faced many challenges. Partido Comunista de España (PCE) had been made illegal by the new regime, which banned all political parties and trade unions. In the final days of the Civil War and during the first days of Francoist Spain, women were imprisoned just for being related to "reds". They were also investigated, harassed, imprisoned and executed for expressing sympathy for Republicans or belonging to any leftist organization. Many women in PCE were caught up in this. PCE women's organization Agrupación de Mujeres Antifascistas survived the war, and shifted their priorities to assisting political prisoners in Francost jails.

Women in Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT) in Francoist Spain played important roles in the union dating back to the Second Republic period, even as their specific needs like maternity leave, childcare provisions and equal pay were subverted for the improvement of better overall working conditions. Women UGT leaders in the Civil War period included María Lacrampe and Claudina García Perez.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Invasion of Val d'Aran</span>

The Invasion of Val d'Aran, known under the code name Operación Reconquista de España, was a military operation launched in October 1944 by the Unión Nacional Española (antifrancoist) (UNE). In October 1944, with the Spanish Civil War over and the Axis powers in World War II in retreat, guerrilla fighters loyal to the Republic tried to conquer Val d'Aran in Catalonia and establish a provisional Republican government presided over by Juan Negrín in order to later overthrow the dictatorship of Francisco Franco. The invasion, led by communist militant and French resistance member Vicente López Tovar, managed to overrun a number of Civil Guard outposts and take over several hamlets in the high areas of Arán, but was eventually repelled by the Francoist army, led by General José Moscardó, the defender of the Alcázar during the civil war.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anarchist insurrection of January 1933</span>

The anarchist insurrection of January 1933, also known as the January 1933 revolution, was the second of the insurrections carried out by the National Confederation of Labor (CNT) in the Second Spanish Republic, during the First Biennium.

José Penido Iglesias was a Galician anarcho-syndicalist and military commander during the Spanish Civil War.

The Spanish Libertarian Movement was a Spanish anarcho-syndicalist organization founded at the end of the Spanish Civil War by the CNT, the FAI and the FIJL to develop a joint clandestine activity in the interior of Spain, under the Francoist dictatorship, and legal activity in exile, where it dealt with the thousands of anarcho-syndicalist refugees in France. The MLE national council settled in Paris, with Germinal Esgleas acting as general secretary after the death of Mariano Rodríguez Vázquez on June 18, 1939.

References

  1. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 244–246. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  2. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 247–250. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  3. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 248–249. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  4. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. p. 249. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  5. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 249–250. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  6. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 250–251, 288. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  7. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 288–291. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  8. Heine, Hartmut (1983). La oposición política al franquismo : de 1939 a 1952. Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. pp. 291–292. ISBN   84-7423-198-1. OCLC   11846069.
  9. Mestre i Campi, Jesús (1992). Diccionari d'història de Catalunya. Josep M. Salrach i Marés, Josep Termes (1st ed.). Barcelona. p. 28. ISBN   84-297-3521-6. OCLC   27528441.