Social conflicts in the Portuguese Revolution, 1974-1975.
Varela, Raquel ; Alcantara, Joana
The Portuguese Revolution, the process popularly known as the
"Carnation Revolution" that lasted from 25 April 1974 to 25
November 1975, took place against a backdrop of military humiliation in
defeat by peasant guerilla movements in the Portuguese colonies of
Guinea-Bissau, Angola and Mozambique. However, an analysis of four
distinct types of social conflicts strikes; demonstrations; occupations
of factories, other workplaces, and public services; and occupations of
vacant houses--suggests that class struggle within Portugal was the
essential dynamic of the Revolution. Revolution came to Portugal through
an active workers' movement against fascism within the context of a
global economic crisis. Working people had decided it was time for
democratic change.
La revolution portugaise, populairement appelee << revolution
des ceillets >>, qui a dure du 25 avril 1974 au 25 novembre 1975,
est survenue dans un contexte des defaits militaires humiliantes aux
mains des mouvements de guerilla paysanne dans les colonies portugaises
de Guinee-Bissau, d'Angola et du Mozambique. Cependant, une analyse
de quatre types de conflits sociaux --greves; manifestations;
occupations d'usines, d'autres lieux de travail et des
services publics; et occupations de maisons vacantes--laisse penser que
la lutte des classes au Portugal a ete le moteur essentiel de cette
revolution. La revolution est survenue au Portugal par le biais
d'un mouvement ouvrier actif contre le fascisme dans un contexte de
crise economique mondiale. Les travailleurs ont decide a ce moment que
le temps etait propice a la democratie.
Introduction
IN THIS ARTICLE, WE SURVEY and analyze social conflicts during the
Portuguese Revolution--the process popularly known as the
"Carnation Revolution" that lasted from 25 April 1974 to 25
November 1975. We describe and analyze the principal social and
workers' movements, arguing that it was the dynamic of social
conflicts that determined the institutional and governmental changes of
the revolution and that these in turn affected continuing social
struggles.
Our analysis focuses on four distinct types of social conflicts: 1)
strikes; 2) demonstrations; 3) occupations of factories, other
workplaces, and public services; 4) and occupations of vacant houses. We
base our arguments on a wide range of sources, many of which have never
been consulted, housed in Portugal, Spain, the Netherlands, and the
United Kingdom: the Hemeroteca Municipal de Lisboa, the Arquivo
Historico das Comisiones Obreras em Espanha (Fundacao 1. de maio,
Madrid), the Centro de Documentacao 25 de Abril, the Centro de
Intervencao para o Desenvolvimento Amilcar Cabral, the historical
archives of Portuguese Television (RTP), the archives of the
International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, and the National
Archives in London.
The Last European Revolution of the 20th Century
ON 25 April 1975, a coup led by the Movement of the Armed Forces
(MFA) against the thirteen year old war in Portugal's African
colonies put an end to the Portuguese dictatorship that had lasted for
38 years under the direction of Antonio Salazar and, after 1968, of
Marcelo Caetano. Defying the young military officers leading the coup
who utilized radio broadcasts to urge the population to stay at home,
thousands of people immediately took to the streets in the two principal
cities of the country, Lisbon and Porto. In the latter, demonstrators
congregated in the port area, shouting "Death to Fascism." In
the capital city, Lisbon, protestors surrounded the government buildings
in the Quartel do Carmo. Many others forced open the prisons of Caxias
and Peniche and released political prisoners en masse. The political
police apparatus, PIDE/DGC, was dismantled, censorship was abolished,
and demonstrators attacked the offices of the regime's newspaper, A
Epoca.
Three days later, on 28 April, poor residents of the Boavista
neighborhood in Lisbon occupied vacant houses and refused to leave,
despite intimidation by the police and the military. Bank workers almost
immediately moved to control the exit of capital from the country and on
April 29 established picket lines at entrances to financial
institutions. On the same day, office workers occupied their union
headquarters, expelling the leaders of their regime-controlled labour
organization. The following day, various unions occupied the Ministry of
Corporations and Security, which then became known as the Ministry of
Labour. Construction workers dismissed their union leaders while public
transit workers struck and a Women's Liberation Movement (WLM) was
founded. Ten thousand students assembled at the Instituto Superior
Tecnico, the most important engineering university in the country.
The May Day demonstration became a national holiday, known as
Worker's Day, and united half a million people in Lisbon. As
Medeiros Ferreira shows, more than one million people listened to 200
speakers in the 100 different May Day demonstrations organized across
the country. (1) The housing occupations continued while there were
strikes and occupations of dozens of factories and workplaces in the
first two weeks of May. Various demonstrations organized chiefly by the
radical left condemned the colonial war in a series of May 1974
demonstrations. The Portuguese Revolution had begun, the last revolution
of the 20th century in a western European country in the geographically
strategic political space of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO). It came as a surprise to everyone.
The Portuguese Empire collapsed late, in 1974, after it had
mobilized almost two million forced workers (2) (in South African mines
and Angolan cotton plantations among others) and fought a bloody
thirteen-year-old war (1961-74) to impede the independence of the
Portuguese African colonies of Angola, Cape Verde, Mozambique, and
Guinea-Bissau. Overall, the country's ossified political and
economic structure would lead to the most important social rupture in
postwar European history: the MFA coup unleashed a social explosion so
deep and lasting that until today historians have not been able to
completely account for the thousands of diverse mobilizations that
emerged across the country in the first weeks of the April-May 1974
upheaval. (3)
Suffering from a brutal colonial war and acute limitations on
social mobility, the country could offer little to its youth. Indeed, a
million and a half people emigrated from Portugal, especially to Central
Europe, between 1960 and 1974. (4) The Empire, collapsing on so many
fronts, left the Portuguese state close to military and financial
collapse until a movement of military captains initiated a coup that
ended the colonial war. The overwhelming support for the end of the war,
and the possibility for social, political, and economic change is
reflected in the fact that there was little resistance to the coup; only
four deaths resulted when a relatively isolated instance of violence
erupted as political police were surrounded by demonstrators and
soldiers at their headquarters on Antonio Maria Cardoso Street in
Lisbon.
We argue that the Portuguese Revolution had four determining
characteristics that help explain the wide scope of the social rupture.
Even though it occurred in a small country, the 1974-75 struggle
represented an unprecedented moment of workers' control and
disruption of the accumulation process in the context of mid-1970s
Europe. To appreciate what was at stake, it is important to recognize
specific features of the revolutionary conflict:
1. It was a process born of the military defeat of a regular army
by revolutionary guerilla movements supported by the peasants of
Guinea-Bissau, Angola, and Mozambique.
2. This defeat combined with the gravest economic crisis of
capitalism in the postwar period initiated in 1973.
3. It was marked by the role of the workers' movement as the
central protagonist.
4. It reflected the specific characteristics of the Portuguese
workers' movement, distinguished by its youth (the great mass of
young peasants who moved to the city in the 1960s), its political
disorganization and lack of established unions, and its concentration in
the industrial belt in the capital Lisbon. The absence of free and
democratic trade unions, the Achilles' heel of the Portuguese
workers' movement during the dictatorship of the New State, was a
motivating factor in the radicalizaron of the revolution; the lack of
such organizations in the majority of the country's factories and
companies led to the spontaneous opening of spaces for the emergence of
democratic rank-and-file workers' commissions.
The fall of the regime would reveal a European colonial country
with a social structure that combined budding industrial development, a
ruling class that was taking the first steps toward
internationalization, and a workforce maintained through low salaries,
ignorance, and backwardness. Portugal was seen as a type of
"Atlantic Albania" where
divorce was suppressed, where (many) books, films and songs were
prohibited, where the arts were censured, where social communication was
muzzled, where many children walked around shoeless, where the majority
of the population did not have a refrigerator, telephone or bathtub,
where you could not tell jokes about the authorities or criticize the
powerful, where you did not have the right to demonstrate or strike,
where you needed a license to own a lighter or a transistor radio, where
agriculture was operated by medieval ploughs and animal traction, where
road traffic was crawling with wagons and ox carts, where ready-to-wear
clothes were almost non-existent, where Coca-Cola was contraband, where
the political police used torture in prisons, where there were no
highways nor ... elections. (5)
This was a country where 30 per cent of the population in the
capital city was illiterate, there was no universal suffrage, and no
system of equitable social welfare. Even going to the doctor required a
paternalistic and commercial relationship with charities controlled by
the Church. Cruz Oliveira, nominated as minister of health soon after 25
April, was proud to have ended the dependence of hospitals on charities,
the practice of charging a fee for family members to visit relatives in
the hospital, and the selling of blood to needy patients: "Blood is
not to be sold or bought, it's given!" (6) Finally, even
taking into account countries such as Greece and Spain, Portugal was at
the top of the list for the lowest wage rates in Europe. (7)
For these reasons listed above, 25 April was the most important
date in Portugal in the 20th century. It ended one country and
inaugurated another. This "other country" was captured by film
director Sergio Trefault, who utilized original footage from other
foreign directors and photographers from the Magnum photographic agency
who visited Portugal "in search of the revolution." They
revelled in depicting soldiers who wore beards and demonstrated on the
streets, recognizing that the images of the Portuguese Revolution
represented the "world turned upside down."
Social Conflicts in the Portuguese Revolution
THE PORTUGUESE REVOLUTION was marked by the centrality of a strong
workers' and social movement affecting all sectors of Portuguese
society, especially the working class. Beyond traditional industrial and
rural workers, the Portuguese Revolution was characterized by highly
radicalized social conflicts (strikes, demonstrations, and occupations)
involving students, workers in the modern service sector, employees in
the informal sector, women, sections of the middle class, and the rank
and file of the armed forces. The new social movements--formed by
ecologists, students, and feminists--also played an important part,
although they would be secondary in the general scenario of conflicts
marked by the preponderance of organized workers. Social conflicts in
Portugal in 1974-75 were noticeably national in scope, occurring in all
cities and rural areas. In those two years, there were 858 separate
conflicts in companies and factories, 300 of which occurred between May
and June of 1974. (8) With the exception of July and August 1974, every
month during that time witnessed at least 100 conflicts. According to
Munoz, the majority of social conflicts were organized by the
workers' movement: 19 per cent in the textile sector, 15 per cent
in machine production and among metal workers, 9 per cent in
construction and public works, and 7 per cent in the chemical and food
processing industry. Conflicts erupted particularly in the large
industrial belts of the three largest cities, Lisbon, Porto, and
Setubal, with emphasis on the capital city, which accounted for 43 per
cent of all conflicts.
Beginning in the 1970s, an intense historiographical production
that lasted for ten years critically analyzed the Portuguese Revolution
from the perspective of the centrality of the workers' movement,
social classes, and their leaders. This interpretative writing included
the still impressive studies of Santos et al., Dows, Mailer, and
Hammond, all of whom focused on the social history of the workers'
and residents' commissions. (9) One of the first social scientists
to attempt to understand the regime changes of Southern Europe was Nicos
Poulantzas, (10) whose theories were later developed by Loren Goldner,
who focused on the division of the diverse sectors of the Portuguese
ruling class such as the commercial bourgeoisie and an internationalized
and financial ruling fraction. (11) More recently, H. Chilcote studied
the relationship between Portugal and the colonies, the power of the
Portuguese state, and the political factionalism, which weakened the
left during the revolution. (12)
From the 1990s onward, various studies were published on the
revolution that focused on the representative subjects of social
classes, such as books by Medeiros Ferreira (13) and Josep Sanchez
Cervello (14) as well as Maria Inacia Rezola's Os Militares na
Revolucao de Abril. O Conselho da Revolucao e a Transicao para a
Democracia em Portugal (1974-76) (15) (Soldiers in the April Revolution.
The Revolutionary Council and the Transition to Democracy in Portugal),
and Tiago Moreira de Sa's Carlucci vs. Kissinger. (16) This
historiographic current has made important contributions on the mfa and
the international context of the revolution, but it has also
simultaneously revealed a bias toward the study of elites, almost
erasing social and workers' movements from the analysis. For their
part, political scientists influenced by the theories of Philippe
Schmitter (17) and Antonio Costa Pinto (18) tend to view the revolution
exclusively through the conceptual lens of "transition."
Theories of transition to democracy are often teleological--they assume
that the outcome of the revolutionary process opened by a military coup
on 25 April 1974 would necessarily be representative of democracy, which
was consolidated from late 1975 with the counterrevolutionary coup of 25
November 1975. This approach eliminates the history of the revolutionary
process itself by failing to explain its development and analyzing no
more than its final result.
Our study is inspired by a social history perspective of the
revolution based on the concept of "dual power" (workers'
and residents' commissions on the one hand and the state on the
other) and the tensions between these power centres. It is opposed to
the hypothesis defended by Sousa Santos (19) of a state divided in two,
between a socialist project and a capitalist project. We reinforce the
hypothesis that the social revolution was defeated, not by the absence
of forces, but by the inability of the workers' and social
movements to coordinate their struggles at a national level against the
state, a deficiency reinforced by the absence of a united front between
the parties and organizations of the left. This argument is developed
more fully in the book by one of the present authors, A Historia do Povo
na Revolucao Portuguesa (1974-1975) (A History of the People in the
Portuguese Revolution 1974-1975), (20) but in this article we focus
specifically on the nature and characteristics of social conflicts.
[GRAPHIC 1 OMITTED]
A survey of strikes, occupations (workplaces and housing), and
demonstrations shows that social conflicts peaked following the events
of 25 April 1974, again from February 1975, and finally from August 1975
onward.
Graph 1 represents a quantitative expression of social conflicts
divided into three types: strikes, demonstrations, and housing and
workplace occupations. Our qualitative analysis highlights strikes, the
movement of housing occupations and social struggles against the closing
of factories, and in support of 20 workers' control. Workers'
control refers historically to similar experiences, as in Petrograd in
1917 and Italy in 1919-20, in which workers do not exercise
self-management of the company. Instead, the company is run by its
owners under workers' control. Workers' control is a process
of dual power. This particular phenomenon is distinguished from
self-management (where workers become their own bosses) and
co-management (where workers participate, usually through the unions, in
the management of companies and/or factories in partnership with the
employers and/or the state). During the Carnation Revolution, a
significant number of strikes involved the direct questioning of power
within the workplace, management, and the ownership of factories and
companies; frequently, this resulted in occupations and, in some cases,
the "sanitation" or purging of workplaces by the kidnapping of
bosses and administrators.
The second half of May was marked by the radicalization of social
conflicts. The first provisional government was formed in mid-May 1974,
a popular front with the participation of communists, socialists, and
liberals. Despite successive appeals by the Portuguese Communist Party
for the working class to support this government, nothing calmed the
explosion of social conflicts. A government decision on 24 May to
approve a minimum monthly wage of 3,300 escudos fell well short of that
demanded by workers and provoked even more strikes and workplace
occupations. The majority of the workers' movement demanded minimum
monthly wages above 4,000 or even 6,000 escudos. (21)
In Table 1, we provide statistics based on Santos et al. (22)
related to strikes from 25 April to 1 June 1974. In just five weeks,
there were 97 strikes and 15 threats to strike, more than had occurred
in any previous one-year period, including the peak year of 1969 in
which there were 100 strikes or threats to strike in total. The
majority, 58 strikes, occurred in industry, and there were occupations
of workplaces in 35 of these strikes. In four of the work stoppages,
there were kidnappings of bosses or appropriation of equipment.
Research by Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. (23) demonstrates that
the majority of demands in these strikes revolved around wage increases,
minimum wages, access to company profits, and the right to thirteenth
and fourteenth monthly salaries. In Portugal, wages are paid monthly.
The thirteenth monthly payment is paid as an extra monthly wage for
holidays, which is the equivalent to one calendar month or 22 labouring
days, normally in the summer. The fourteenth monthly payment is--or
was--paid at Christmas. In 40 per cent of the cases, aspects of control
of the company were demanded. In almost 50 per cent of the strikes
studied, there were calls for purges, that is, the firing of bosses,
managers, and administrators with links to the fascist regime.
Maria Luisa Cristovam published a comparative study of strike
demands in 1979--after the end of the revolution--addressing the strikes
in 1974 and 1975. She concluded that during the two years of the
revolution between 15 per cent and 22.7 per cent of strike demands were
related to control and power in the workplace and the administration of
the company, while in 1979 only 3.7 per cent of strikes centred on such
considerations of power in the workplace. (24) Moreover, in the 1974-75
strikes related to wage increases, almost 40 per cent of the total
number of strikes exhibited a profoundly egalitarian character, with
demands for equal increases for all workers, reduction in the range of
wage levels, and constitution of a national minimum wage. (25) New
demands typical of revolutionary periods arose such as equal work, equal
salary, and the abolition of privileges in the workplace.
Examples of such strike processes are varied. In May 1974, the 2000
workers at Timex, an American watch factory located on the southern
margin of the Tejo River in Charneca da Caparica, presented 23 demands
that included, among others, paid holidays, reduction of the workday,
compensation for sickness, and abolition of any type of performance
bonus. They ended their list of demands with the following:
22. The maximum salary for all workers [including managers] at
Timex will be 16,000 escudos. All salaries higher than this figure will
be frozen until they are affected by the new [salary] grade.
23. There will be a general increase in salaries when the workers
and the Commission decide it is necessary according to rises in the cost
of living and the level of inflation.
Note: The workers also wish to demand a daycare centre (...)
The measures presented will enter into effect functioning in an
unequivocal form and as clearly expressed by the workers of Timex from 9
a.m. on 27 May 1974.
When the deadline is reached, if these measures mentioned in the 23
points have not been enacted, the workers at Timex reserve the right to
a collective, dignified and civic reaction. (26)
One type of strike that arose in this period was the solidarity
strike, which the government would prohibit in the Strike Law of August
1974, alleging the defence of the "national economy." Beyond
the symbolic strikes of August 1974 (at the newspaper Jornal do
Comercio, the airline tap, and the Lisnave shipyards), there were also
solidarity strikes. They emerged above all against companies in the same
corporate economic group or in companies in the same economic sector
such as the press, transportation, and municipal construction. Yet,
solidarity strikes also occurred in distinct companies and among
different professional groups in the same company. An example of this
was in May 1974 when 350 metal and concrete workers at the shipyards of
Alverca-Intento in the industrial zone of Vila Franca de Xira, north of
Lisbon, struck their employer. Soon after, administrative workers in
Lisbon, Revim, Porto, and Portimao in the same company paralyzed
activities, elevating the total number of workers on strike to 700. The
solidarity strikers declared, "No return to work if the company
does not correspond to their desire for a salary increase." (27)
On the very same day, fare collectors and bus drivers in the Joao
Belo company in the south of the country stopped collecting tickets in
"virtue of the firm not respecting until midnight last night
demands for monthly salary increases to 8,000 and 7,000 escudos
respectively." In this case, transit workers showed solidarity to
the public at large. (28)
It is important to emphasize that in these strikes during the
revolution, the poorest and most oppressed sectors of the working class
participated fully. In Miraflores Industrial Park, 800 construction
workers, half of whom were African immigrants from Cape Verde, struck on
14 May 1974. Their list of demands was detailed: "Minimum monthly
salary of 6,000 escudos, 40 hours of work in a 5-day week, 30 days of
100 per cent paid holidays, right to strike, Christmas bonus paid 8 days
before, classification of all employees with the obligation to
immediately integrate them in the union as effective members." (29)
Workers in the Miraflores complex earned 2,600 escudos per month before
the strike. As in other strike mobilizations, the workers noted
explicitly that they had been "inspired by the process of the
workers of Torralta (Troia)" and that they aimed "to spread
the strike movement to other companies in the sector, notably in the
Alges zone." (30)
The central role of workers' movements in the Portuguese
Revolution is not only confirmed by the impressive numbers of
participants and actions but also by the dynamic of conflicts. Workers
suddenly questioned the hierarchical structures of the factory and
workplace, went beyond strictly economic issues, and directly confronted
the productive mechanisms of the capitalist mode of production. The
majority of strikes were considered "wild," were voted on in
democratic assemblies of workers, and directed, for the most part, by
workers' commissions that arose spontaneously in the political
space created after 48 years in which democratic workers'
organizations were prohibited. They were organized mainly outside of the
Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) and the Socialist Party (PS)--both of
which formed part of the government--and in the absence of unions, which
only officially arose after these actions by the workers'
commissions.
Paradoxically, the main weakness of the Portuguese workers'
movement during the decades-long dictatorship--the absence of the right
to democratically organize--became its main force during the
revolutionary years of 1974-75. In impeding workers' organization
and in the attempt at the capitalist modernization of the country,
without the threat of social revolution experienced during the
essentially unstable Republican regime of 1910-26, the Portuguese
bourgeoisie built up its own political and economic authority, but it
also created the very social force that would threaten its power. The
coup occurred in the context of a vacuum of organization which allowed
the rare and immediate emergence of rank-and-file organizations--first
the workers' commissions, later residents' committees, and
finally the soldiers' commissions --that quickly fanned out across
the country in the first weeks after the coup.
The majority of strikes in 1974-75 were organized by the
workers' commissions, led by democratically elected leaders subject
to recall at any moment, resembling in many aspects the Italian and
Hungarian workers' councils of 1919-20 and 1956, respectively. On
25 and 26 April, workers went to their jobs elated with the end of the
dictatorship but with little sense of what would happen next. As tens of
thousands of workers arrived at hundreds of different workplaces, as the
newspapers amply confirmed in the first days of the coup, the nature of
the social turmoil, labouring people, and their supporters met and
avidly discussed politics in a country where a popular saying was
"You never discuss religion nor politics."
Who were these people? They certainly included industrial and
service workers, as well as students. What were they talking about? In
the first place, "support for the Junta of National Salvation and
the MFA for having overthrown fascism." Gradually, social groups
began to raise a series of demands related to their own particular
situations. Organizations arose as a necessity, with no defined
interlocutors with the exception of workers in large industrial and
communications enterprises who had already established democratic unions
before the coup. As Miguel Perez, a scholar of the workers'
commissions, writes,
The Workers' Commissions were affirmed as the essential
structure of the organizations of workers. Arising in the heat of
struggle, in assemblies with workers presenting their demands, they
appeared as a natural form to overcome a very particular union situation
and became a part of the traditional repertory of forms of working-class
struggle. It is a proven fact that in the process of struggle that we
analyzed the old corporate union structures had a limited role, acting
as the leader in only two occasions. These cases, that of the Textile
and Metal Workers, were in two sectors where unions already existed with
a strong tradition of struggle and with opposition leaderships who
enjoyed the confidence of workers. (31)
Perez further argues that in 1976,
[In regard to] the number of commissions, the only reliable study
is that done by the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) cited by Alvaro
Cunhai in the Report to the VIII Congress of the Party. There were 1,250
CTs [Workers' Commissions] in the country as a whole (excepting the
districts of Braga and Braganca), about half in the Lisbon district.
According to these data, the PCP line dominated in 56% of them and
unitary proposals with the participation of the PCP in another 26%.
Other authors (P. Robinson, P. Mailer) suggest even higher numbers [of
workers' commissions] oscillating between 2,500 and 4,000, probably
because they referred to moments before November 25, 1975.... (32)
We should also highlight the issue of justice in relation to the
dictatorship. In the strike wave of the first few months of the
revolution, a crucial demand was the refusal to work with administrators
or managers who had denounced workers to the political police. Such
"sanitations" or purges were acts of vengeance for the
humiliation and fear caused by such people, the importance of which was
borne out by the number of purges and even strikes and workplace
occupations that began with calls for the firing of administrators
linked to the old regime. The very term saneamento (sanitation) in
Portuguese does not literally refer to a purge, but has positive,
hygienic connotations.
Political purges climbed to 20,000 people in the nineteen months of
the revolution (see Table 2). They occurred in companies that
constituted the vertebral column of the workers' movement: naval
industries, air transport, and communications, but were also common in
hundreds of small companies in employment sectors like laundering and
tailor/seamstress shops. In February 1975, official sources counted
12,000 people who had been suspended or fired from their previous
positions by legal or illegal means. These saneamentos were largely
prompted by workers' commissions and developed against the official
and more moderate recommendations of the PCP and the PS. (33) Such
purges rippled throughout various social sectors, with a particularly
strong presence in the universities and schools.
The following example from the postal and communications sector is
indicative of the larger movement:
For more than an hour, in the front of the administrative building
of the CTT (on Sao Jose street) employees of this public company
demonstrated
in mass yesterday demanding the firing of the administrative corps
from the old regime. Maintaining themselves in the interior of the
building, the administrators only left after a military force came to
get them. (34)
Another case, which had its hilarious moments, occurred in The
Telephones of Lisbon and Porto (TLP). The TLP had been formed in 1968
after the end of the concession of the Anglo-Portuguese Telephone
Company and was responsible for telecommunications services in the
metropolitan areas of Lisbon and Porto. Filmed in its entirety by
RTP--the public television network--the confrontation between labour and
capital unfolded with a vehemence that also managed to convey
uncertainties of a new situation that might provoke laughter. Surrounded
by many spirited workers who circled the administrative building, a
manager, facing the insults and foul language of the crowd, tried to
give an interview but was interrupted by a worker who told the reporter,
"Interviews given by these fascist sirs are very dubious." The
manager responded softly that this "was the first time that they
called me such a thing." (35)
The settling of scores with the old regime also resulted in the
reintegration of those who were politically persecuted during the
dictatorship. In May, workers in the financial sector demanded the
rehiring of "fired bank workers." (36) Less than one week
later, various plenary meetings at the universities--where the extreme
left constituted a vanguard and counted on thousands of activists and
sympathizers--promoted the readmission of professors and students
expelled during the fascist regime. On 29 April 1974, a meeting of the
Council of the Faculty of Letters presided over by one of the most
distinguished Portuguese geographers, Professor Orlando Ribeiro, decided
"to propose the immediate cancellation of all pending disciplinary
processes and the reintegration of all students affected by such
sanctions." (37)
The majority of purges after 25 April 1975 were decided by
workers' and/ or residents' commissions, in general assemblies
of students or schools, and in most cases were voted on in open
plenaries. Almost all of those purged had links to the regime and were
often police informants, the famous bufos (snitches) who were easily and
clearly identified. In the great majority of these cases, the government
and the company administrations reacted quickly to ratify the decisions
of the workers. The same workers who showed themselves willing to
negotiate complex and long-ranging agreements, even, for example, wage
and salary demands beyond the norm, always remained firm in not
accepting the employment or presence of bufos in locales where they
worked, lived, or studied. This empirical fact suggests interesting
future avenues of research on the weight of moral questions in labour
relations and social and political conflicts.
Housing Occupations
Dirt roads, potholes, children playing on the street, shacks
crammed together--this scenario describes the Quinta das Fonsecas, but
it could be any other shantytown neighbourhood in Greater Lisbon or
Porto. The massive proletarianization of the 1950s and 1960s, essential
for the growing industrialization of the period (and partially resulting
from the mechanization of agriculture (38)), was accompanied by an
impressive population movement from the country to the city and an
increase in the economically active population. This resulted in large
residential areas of poor workers known as the "shack
neighbourhoods" (shantytowns) with poor urban services and
amenities. Even before 25 April, the public exposure of such
poverty--even when many of these neighbourhoods were located far from
the central zones of the cities --had a political impact. "It was a
small hell of isolation, discomfort, lack of hygiene, in short, an
abandonment," as one reporter from RTP would later say on a visit
to Quinta das Fonsecas. (39) Only 40 per cent of the country's
residents enjoyed indoor plumbing while shantytowns lacking basic
sanitary conditions proliferated in the peripheral areas of Lisbon and
Setubal. In Porto, poor neighbourhoods were known as
"islands," a traditional form of housing that the poorest
families were relegated to since the first surge of industrialization of
the city. The precariousness of such shantytown housing was brutally
exposed on 25 November 1967 when flooding caused hundreds of deaths.
(40)
The residents' commissions also arose out of the basic
necessity to guarantee decent housing among the poorest workers. The
first occupation movement surged in Porto with the takeover of vacant
public housing previously distributed by local municipalities only to
those loyal to the regime or those who bribed officials to secure
shelter. After 25 April, the movement quickly spread to the
neighbourhoods of Cheias, Relogio, Casalinho, Curraleira, Caxias, and
Oeiras in the greater Lisbon region, and eventually to Setubal and other
neighbourhoods in Porto. Maria das Dores, an itinerant street peddler,
was involved in the occupations in Chelas:
If you had seen the dung heap of the shack where I lived with water
and slime leaking everywhere ... We needed at least a house to live in,
we're not going to live all our lives like pigs in a sty. Is it
right for my children to sleep in the same bed as I? Is it right to have
such misery? (41)
At least a quarter of the Portuguese population lived in such
conditions, but even established and relatively stable working-class
neighbourhoods were distinguished by inadequate roads, deficient
plumbing and sewage, and the lack of basic services such as pharmacies.
There was also scandalous speculation and subletting in the housing
market for the few available vacancies, practices that would generate
popular protests during the revolution.
The 1965 Law of the Land (42) guaranteed the private appropriation
of land and set off a process of super-appreciation of land values.
Before this period, the difference in value accrued when a rural,
agricultural lot was urbanized and remained in the hands of the state
through a tax. With the great movement from country to city, the Salazar
government opened up a new space for business through the "private
capture of surplus values" 43 in land, an extraordinary
privatization initiative in the European context that massively
increased housing costs. It was not construction costs that boosted
housing prices but land values. As Pedro Bingre do Amaral affirms,
"Considering that Portugal since 1970 has experienced at least four
decades of urban expansion --more than 60 per cent of buildings in the
country are less than 40 years old --urban land values have not ceased
to increase between 1965 and 2005." (44)
The result of the appropriation of surplus land values was
speculation, illustrated in Table 3, which in the case of Setubal, the
third largest city in the country, saw a 140 per cent increase in
housing rents from 1970 to 1975.
The revolution stopped this process of land speculation and housing
price increases through the emergence of "dual power"
expressed through the housing occupations and the construction of
residents' commissions that arose in the first days after the coup
and quickly spread. In the following section, we survey housing
occupations in 1974-75, as well as the vacant units that were later used
to shelter families and house cultural centres, party headquarters, and
workers' and residents' commissions.
As Perez has demonstrated, the residents' commissions were
normally launched through the organization of an assembly or plenary of
local residents in a determined area, usually on the initiative of
groups of residents who were activists or linked to left-wing parties.
These first meetings elected a commission and mounted an organizational
structure, approving a list of demands that were most urgent to local
residents. (45) The residents' commissions were organizations of
"local decision-making" that acted as a parallel power to the
municipal governments that were being reconstituted at the same time.
The latter were dominated by the PCP and its front organization, the
Portuguese Democratic Movement/Democratic Electoral Commission
(MDP/CPE). Indeed, despite the pressure of their allies in the PS, (46)
the PCP resisted throughout this whole process the introduction of
independent elections at the municipal level. In any case, the cities
had little power in the area of housing, and frequently there were
heightened tensions between local governments and the residents'
commissions. The new municipal governments ended up serving in the
recomposition of the overall state apparatus and as a source for
recruits and financing for the principal political parties (above all
the PS and the PCP).
The majority of the demands raised by the residents'
commissions were of an immediate and basic nature: the right to housing
(maintaining residents in the same neighbourhood), infrastructure, child
care, and basic sanitation. The commissions were organized by
neighbourhood on a political and not necessarily an administrative
basis, (47) uniting forms of solidarity and conflicts that revolved
around everyday lives outside the workspace.
The occupations began among public housing estates whose scarce
distribution of houses was subject to corruption. From the middle of
1975, however, the occupations were directed at empty houses and began
to question the price of rents, arguing for limits on rents based on the
average workers' salaries.
There were various forms of the coordination of residents'
commissions, but these were the first organizations of dual power to
organize among themselves even before the workers' commissions
developed forms of regional, sectoral, and national coordination. (48)
Between January and March of 1975, due to the increase in occupations
and the growing crisis of the state, the first coordinated organizations
emerged: on 13 December 1974, Porto residents created the Central
Commission of Residents' Commissions of Public Housing of Porto.
The Inter-Commissions of Poor Neighbourhoods and Shantytowns of Lisbon
was formed in January 1975 and was comprised of eighteen residents'
commissions; in Setubal, the Inter-Commissions of Shantytowns was
established in February 1975. By March 1975, there were 57 separate
residents' commissions in Lisbon, mobilizing thousands of
residents.
As with all phenomena of dual power in revolutionary situations,
the development of residents' commissions was punctuated by
struggles for leadership associated with specific political programs. It
is difficult to know exactly which were the most mobilized sectors and
which political parties were most influential, but there certainly was a
struggle between the more institutionalized sector linked to the
state--the Service of Local Follow-Up Support (SAAL) is a reflection of
this--and other areas more closely aligned to forms of dual power that
questioned the very system of land ownership. However, the SAAL also
integrated many of the most radical residents' commissions, which
often experienced ups and down in terms of popular mobilization. Based
on the existing sources, it is difficult to delimit precisely the
degrees of radicalism of the movement. Pedro Ramos Pinto calculates that
one third of the commissions adopted truly radical stands. (49)
The government reacted to the occupations with threats. Newspaper
headlines declared, "More abusive occupations of houses will not be
admitted by the Junta of National Salvation." (50) Yet the
population continued to disobey. One representative of the residents of
a Lisbon neighbourhood with 400 shanties lacking water and electric
light delivered the following letter to the Junta of National Salvation:
The people who occupied the neighbourhood of the Salazar Foundation
consider this occupation an act of justice since every worker has the
right to housing and to not live in miserable shacks at the same time as
those who do not work live in luxury and opulence.
Construction of houses should be reinitiated.
Construction of drains, drinking water and, finally, in order of
priority, electricity by the company, should be initiated by the
Municipal government. (51)
The residents' movement acted both in the occupations of
houses and around the question of rental prices. From May 1975 onward,
housing activists in Setubal generalized a campaign to impose a maximum
price of 500 escudos for a one-bedroom apartment (at this time, the
monthly minimum wage was 4,400 escudos). This struggle involved more
than 1,500 families and resulted in the formation of a broad-based
Council of Residents that would call private property into question. On
1 September 1975 this council, composed of tens of thousands of workers
organized by workers', residents', and soldiers'
commissions, approved one of the most radical demands in the struggle
for decent housing, directly challenging the Land Law of 1965. The
following was included in the approved proposal:
1. Nationalization or municipalization of urban land with the
socialization of the large and medium-sized companies of civil
construction. These nationalizations will be done without any
compensation.
2. Total elimination of new licenses for luxury constructions.
3. Immediate development of social housing construction.
4. Immediate socialization of housing with the exception of
family-owned houses. (52)
These more radical proposals would not be enacted, but there was a
decrease and then a freeze in rental prices. The government soon
legalized the majority of the occupations.
Self-management
"Who needs bosses?" (53) was a frequent question posed in
January 1975. Nine months earlier, the question would have been
considered heresy. The idea that the factory or company could be
organized by the self-management of workers --or from April 1975 onward
the question of complete workers' control of the factories and
workplaces--would have appeared to many workers as an impossibility
before the revolution.
The Sousa Abreu textile factory was occupied in September 1974. The
history of the Sousa Abreu occupation is representative of all
occupations in the period. Yet in this case, the determinant issues
would be layoffs and the galloping rate of unemployment that increased
from 40,000 in April 1975 to 100,000 in December 1975. (54) Daily
newspapers contained entire sections called "Work" that
detailed the "fight against layoffs" (such coverage in the
newspapers was abandoned in the 1990s and replaced with sections
designated "Economics" and later "Economics and
Business").
With the threat of layoffs due to companies withdrawing capital and
dismantling their plants, unionized workers often picketed and occupied
the factory to guarantee their jobs and to ensure that the boss did not
abscond with the machinery. In unorganized factories, the absence of
hierarchical structures and leadership associated with traditional
unions meant that workers often decided to proceed with the means at
hand: they met in the factory and began to discuss and debate. Almost
spontaneously, they would decide to elect representatives and form a
workers' commission.
At the Sousa Abreu factory, labour was confronted with the
necessity of organizing its workplace and deciding on whether to follow
what workers did in other factories and companies. The presence of a
union may well have guided them somewhat, but the process of
self-realization was paramount. On 30 July 1975, the public television
network RTP visited the factory for a detailed story. (55) The video
reveals the dynamics of plant occupations during the Portuguese
Revolution. A smiling woman worker with a strong northern Portuguese
accent explained for the camera how she did her job, where the thread
came from, detailing the nature of the labour process. "I work here
in the loom," she says with an open smile, slightly embarrassed by
being filmed. Another factory operative says that the idea to occupy the
factory came from the union: "the president of the union, knowing
that the [factory] would close, told us to occupy the installations
because if not the boss would take away the raw material and would not
pay overdue salaries nor severance."
In July 1975, the following notice was posted at the factory
entrance: "Work is not a commodity, it's a right. We want to
work to live and not live to work. For the capitalist, the worker is a
machine. The capitalists are only interested in the workers because they
produce profit ... Against exploitation, right to work!" (56)
Everything began in earnest on 8 September 1974. When they learned
of the layoffs, workers met at the factory, occupied it, and called a
general assembly for 15 September when they elected three members for a
workers' commission. Clara, a factory operative, told her story to
the reporters: "In the beginning it was complicated, [pause] We
were few, on the first night were very few. But we gradually increased,
even gathering workers from other factories. We occupied the factory on
September 8 and began to work starting on the 16th."
The philosopher Jean Paul Sartre, along with his companion, the
feminist philosopher Simone de Beauvoir, both of whom at the time were
strongly influenced by Maoist ideas, were part of the multitude of
painters, intellectuals, film makers, and photographers who visited the
factory. Others who came included the journalist and writer Vasquez
Montalban, the future Nobel laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, and the
Brazilian photographer Sebastiao Salgado, who travelled throughout
Portugal in 1974-75. After his March 1975 tour of the Sousa Abreu
factory, where he witnessed the functioning of the workers'
commission, Sartre wrote,
The thing that most interested me was certainly having visited the
self-managed factory Sousa Abreu. It's a factory of about 30
textile workers. The workers were abandoned by the boss for six months
and the greatest part of the factory equipment, except for the machines,
was taken away by the boss to mount a factory on another site.
They were therefore alone, and decided to continue to work by
self-managing themselves. They continued the jobs that they did before
and the same workers continued who worked there before, with the
exception of the secretaries and, evidently, the boss and a few workers
who left of their own free will. Even so they increased production
relative to the last period of the bosses since the factory was in
crisis and full of debts.
A group of three to six workers was constituted to make general
decisions. These decisions were made in the following way: the less
important decisions were made by the group in question; the more
important decisions were taken by an assembly of the whole factory which
met and consulted about the decisions to be taken. (57)
Another heralded occupation, in which self-management was also
introduced, occurred at the Sogantal factory. Owned by the French group
A. Lammont, the plant produced track suits. It had been characterized in
the period before April 1974 by low salaries and the absence of a union,
factors contributing to what was described as a "very repressive
work environment with traces of paternalism." (58)
The occupation at Sogantal began in May 1974. The women factory
workers began to reduce the pace of work as a form of pressure to
achieve their demands against the company: one month of paid holidays;
wage parity among various sectors of the factory; and increases for all
workers of 1,200 escudos monthly. The company management reacted by
closing the factory at the end of May. The workers immediately responded
by demanding that the Ministry nationalize the factory and that the
state pay their wages.
On 13 July, the administration and its Portuguese representative
abandoned the installations. The factory was in the hands of the women
operatives, who continued to work and sell the track suits they produced
to schools and sympathetic unions. They received the support of parties
and groups on the extreme left such as MES and the MRPP, as well as the
local section of the PS and the Textile and Clothing Union of the South.
Cultural icons including the popular musician Jose Afonso who endorsed
the Sogantal women operatives.
There was total surprise at midnight on 24 August when the manager,
Pierre Lardat, invaded the factory with a group of two dozen men and
tried to seize the machines. Workers and supporters reacted furiously,
battling the intruders. They forced open the entrance to the company and
kept the boss and his men inside the factory. The Republican National
Guard (GNR) found it difficult to calm the situation. Eventually,
"the company intruders abandoned the factory protected by troops
and booed and insulted by the demonstrators." (59) From that point
on, the factory was under the complete control of the workers, as
self-management took a more aggressive turn:
From this point (August 24) we began to sleep inside the factory
... We picketed while some workers remained in the factory and others
went to sell the production to diverse companies and offices in various
parts of the country. We published notes to divulge our struggle and due
to this we were supported by diverse unions. It generated solidarity
such that, even though they didn't need track suits, many people
bought our product to help us. And all this money together was enough to
pay our salaries. We managed to maintain the factory for more than a
year, and meanwhile the self-management scheme was promoted to good
effect, that is, other companies gave us work and we utilized materials
to produce. (60)
According to a count made by the Confederation of Portuguese
Industry (CIP) and systematized by the historian Miguel Perez, "24
company occupations were registered in the last trimester of 1974 and
83, 55 and 14, respectively, in the first three trimesters of
1975." (61) These are numbers that deserve to be analyzed with some
caution since other sources show that the totals were much higher; many
companies with five, twelve, or twenty workers were not registered by
the CIP. Yet, there is an evolution in the number of occupations from
July 1974 to March and April of 1975. After this period, many of the
occupations were officially recognized by the state, adopted
self-management (frequently in conjunction with the state), and some
arrived at a situation of workers' control, more likely to be
realized within nationalized companies. In the private sector, metal
working firms seemed particularly prone to be the site of
self-management and workers' control.
Between 1974 and 1978, 626 companies were reconfigured along
self-management lines; in addition, 319 cooperatives formed. (62)
Occupations of companies and factories by workers were characterized by
four determining developments:
1. Resistance to the decapitalization of companies threatening
layoffs in the context of the worst economic crisis in the postwar
period and an escalating rate of unemployment.
2. The absence of solid representative structures of workers with a
defined hierarchy (unions) leading to the existence of a vacuum of power
that created spaces for the emergence of rank-and-file workers'
commissions.
3. The limits to the repressive power of the state in defence of
private property due to the general crisis of the state and the revolt
in the Armed Forces.
4. The existence of political groups with revolutionary programs,
that is, an encounter between "utopia" and "history"
through the impressive influence of leaders with Marxist ideas. Such
figures, regardless of their different political currents, could be
found in the universities, professional schools, and other educational
and artistic milieu. They were, in general, strongly influenced by May
1968, the Cuban Revolution, and the Cultural Revolution in China. Such
groups and their leaderships were theoretically "prepared" for
revolution, or to be more realistic, enthusiastically
"desired" revolution.
Agrarian Reform
The theme of agrarian reform has produced the greatest number of
studies in the historiography of the Portuguese Revolution. Scholars
have focused on the geography, the chronology, the scope, the general
politics of agrarian reform, and, especially, the dominant role of the
PCP that organized the process. Highlights in this literature include
the studies of Oliveira Baptista, (63) 64 the agronomist and minister of
agriculture in the fourth and fifth provisional governments in 1975;
works by Antonio Barreto, the sociologist and Minister of Agriculture
for the PS in the first Constitutional Government who was responsible
for the so-called Barreto Law (64) that began the process of dismantling
agrarian reform; and research by Constantino Picarra, who studied
agrarian reform in the district of Beja, where the majority of land
occupations occurred in 1974-75. (65)
There was frenetic activity on the land after the April coup of a
kind that had not been seen since a wave of struggles in 1962. (66) The
policy of the state, initially without a minister of agriculture and
counting on a mere secretary, was directed by Esteves Belo and aimed to
establish an efficient profit-producing capitalism on the land. (67)
Yet, the state confronted massive resistance in the agricultural lands
in the south of the country: demonstrations, strikes, and economic
sabotage forced the government to seek out social peace, to intervene in
conflicts, to implement legislative reforms enacted in October and
November 1974, and, above all, through Law Decree 660/74 of 25 November
1974, to partially guarantee work for rural labourers. According to
Constantino Picarra, this dynamic generated a strong consciousness that
agrarian reform was the only means of securing the stability of
employment. Baptista wrote "situations related to unemployment,
many times associated with the inefficient economic use of the land or
still overdue salaries or attempts at decapitalization are at the base
of the occupations." (68)
Barreto shows that the first sporadic occupations occurred in
November 1974. More occupations followed in January 1975, but still at a
slow pace. Nonetheless, by February, seven times more land was occupied
than in January. (69)
The great surge of occupations began in September 1975, when 60 per
cent of all occupations occurred (see Table 4), leading to the
consecration of what was known as the "Collective Units of
Production" (UCP). The political principle that was the objective
of the movement after ample debate was "to divide the workers on
state land" instead of dividing the land by workers. Under this
formula, agrarian reform was accomplished in Portugal under the
direction and coordination of the PCP. The creation of the UCPS and the
struggle for their financing was one of the concrete measures won by the
PCP in their mobilizations during the fourth provisional government
between September and October 1975.
In 1975-76, this agrarian reform increased the permanent number of
hired workers from 11,100 to 44,100. The number of eventual jobs went
from 10,600 to 27,800. Rain-fed cultivated land increased from 85,000
hectares before the occupations to 255,000 hectares one year later.
Irrigated lands grew from 7,000 to 16,000 hectares. The number of
tractors employed on the land rose from 2,630 to 4,150 and harvesting
machinery from 960 to 1,720. (70)
Taking into account all the difficulties, especially the lack of
access to financing, this was certainly the most important agrarian
reform in the history of Portugal, provoking a central, yet partial,
change in the mode of production: the maximization of employment
substantially increased production, bringing cultivation to thousands of
unused lots. This process also occurred in combination with advances in
land rental politics, the extinction of free land concessions, and the
devolution of common lands.
Conclusion
Today, there are many more sources on the Portuguese Revolution
than were available and scrutinized in the 1970s, when the first studies
of the workers' movements in this era of Portugal's history
were published. The central question, however, is not the availability
of sources, but how historians have interpreted the events. As Eric
Hobsbawm argues in his essay on "History from Below,"
Many sources for the history of popular movements were only
recognized as such because somebody asked a question and afterwards
desperately searched for some material--any material--to respond to it.
We cannot be positivists, believing that the questions and the answers
naturally arise from the material studied." (71)
To investigate and understand the Portuguese Revolution on the
basis of the social history of the workers' movement, the backbone
of the revolution, in the words of Chris Harman, (72) is an option that
in itself derives from a choice: the acceptance of the relative autonomy
of theory, that is, the assumption that the documents do not "speak
for themselves," as positivists would suggest or as postmodernists
sometimes postulate. In other words, the historian begins with a theory
to verify, ascertaining if it conforms or not to reality, aiming to
explain historical developments, and elaborate on the factors that
contributed to how events and processes unfolded.
The Portuguese Revolution was born out of the entrails of the
military defeat of a regular army by guerilla movements supported by the
peasants of Guinea-Bissau, Angola, and Mozambique. This defeat, combined
with the worst crisis in the history of postwar capitalism, beginning in
1973, set the stage for an intensification of class struggles. The
workers' movement thus became a central actor in this moment of
potential social transformation as the mid-1970s developed in a unique
context of revolutionary possibility. To understand the revolution from
a historiographical point of view implies recentring it in its real
dimensions, that is, recuperating, investigating, knowing, cataloguing,
and interpreting the myriad social conflicts that comprised the
revolutionary process. This recentering also demands that we see social
subjects (classes and their fractions) as the protagonists as opposed to
approaches that see history through the prism of representative subjects
(elites) that obscure social development and excise collective conflict
from the historical process.
In centring our analysis on social conflicts and on the
relationship between the stability of the state and workers' and
social movements (anchored in a non-restrictive notion of class as all
those who live from work), we identify four periods which are central to
understanding the Portuguese Revolution in 1974-75:
a. Between April and September 1974, the revolution was
distinguished by waves of social struggles in Portugal and in the
colonies, including strikes or threats to desert by demoralized troops.
In conjunction with the opposition of the MFA to continuing a
debilitating thirteen year war in Portugal's African colonies,
these insurgencies finally led to the fall of Spinola in September 1974.
After this period, the popular front strategy of the PCP and the MFA,
which dominated the third provisional government (a Popular Front
government with social democratic, communist, and armed forces
representation), aimed to stabilize the spreading workers' and
social movements. This whole period was characterized by the conquest of
democratic freedoms, by the permanence of social mobilization where the
strike was the determinant form of action, and by the beginning of
struggles against layoffs.
b. Between September 1974 and February 1975, a second revolutionary
period was marked by the struggle against layoffs that resulted in the
generalization of workplace occupations and the formation of
workers' commissions as a parallel form of power to the state.
Factory and company occupations obliged the state to mobilize capital to
maintain production, deepening the economic crisis.
c. From February 1975 to September 1975, the period of
workers' control was consolidated. The PS tried, through
self-management and by reinforcing electoral legitimacy (elections for
unions, regions, and municipalities, and the politics of convoking a
Constituent Assembly) to subvert workers' control. The majority of
the extreme left supported workers' control while the PCP attempted
to counter it through nationalizations of companies and the
militarization of popular movements with its manifesto "Document of
the People-MFA Alliance." All governmental parties tried to end
workers' control through the politics of the "battles for
production," "reconstruction politics," and
"national unity." Frustrated by their lack of success, in
August these forces formalized the necessity for a rupture in the ailing
government. Workers' control in this period would be characterized
by the birth of embryonic structures of national coordination of organs
of workers' and popular power such as the Revolutionary Committee
of Workers, Soldiers and Sailors, the Committee of Struggle of Setubal,
the Coordination of Workers' Commissions in Metalwork, and the
Workers' Commissions of the Industrial Belt of Lisbon. The
coalition government formed in August 1975--the fifth provisional
government during the revolution--fell on September 19.
d. September to November 1975 was a period of revolutionary crisis
known as the "political-military crisis," that is, the
historical period of the revolution in which the workers take power or a
coup ends the revolutionary process. This period was marked by the
refusal of the bourgeoisie to accept what was expropriated from them,
leading to a possible civil war. The state was unable to govern due to
the strikes, demonstrations, and occupations, which defeated all their
legislative and political measures. Dual power was generalized at all
levels.
We consider that the revolutionary crisis only began in September
1975 since the crisis of the MFA, a phenomenon of the summer, resulted
in a situation of dual power within the Armed Forces. The PS, allied
with the right and the Group of Nine (moderate anti-socialist military
leaders), decided to organize a coup to end the revolutionary process.
The PCP tried to mobilize agrarian reform and (possibility) the
independence of Angola under the leadership of the Popular Movement for
the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). The revolutionary left in the Armed
Forces was based on the generalization of dual power within the military
barracks, reflecting a general transformation of society. Neither they
nor the organizations of workers' and popular power were
centralized enough at the national level or had a coherent political
project sufficiently strong to organize "soviets" capable of
resisting a coup. Thus, the revolution was defeated with the coup of 25
November 1975 when the only force with national power--the trade union
federation Intersindical dominated by the PCP--failed to resist.
Table 1--Strikes in Portugal between 25 April and 1 June 1974.
Forms of Struggle
Threats to Strikes Workplace Kidnapping
strike occupations of bosses
or equipment
Industry 8 42 26 4
Gas, Electricity, 6 15 8
Water, Transport,
Commercial, and
Communications
Banks, Insurance, 1 1 1
Services
TOTAL 15 58 35 4
Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. 0 25 de abril e as Lutas Sociais nas
Empresas
Table 2--Political purges in the revolution (private and public
sectors).
Total number of persons suspended or fired (by legal and illegal
means)
April 1974 to February 1975 12,000
March 1975 to November 1975 8,000
By sector
Armed Forces (April to 60 generals, 103 Navy officials, 300
September 1974) other officials of various ranks
Public Sector Workers 4,300
(April to December 1974)
Ministry of Justice (April 42 judges
1975 to the middle of 1975)
Ministry of Education Setting for the majority of
spontaneous purges. All university
rectors and directors were fired by
the Junta for National Salvation.
Pinto, "Saneamentos Politicos e Movimentos Radicais de Direita na
Transicao para a Democracia, 1974-1976"
Table 3--Monthly housing rental prices in Setubal 1970-75.
1970 1975 Percent increase
2 bedroom 1,330 escudos 3,160 escudos 137.6
3 bedroom 1,540 escudos 3,730 escudos 142.2
4 bedroom 1,870 escudos 4,500 escudos 140.6
Average increase 142.9
per room
Chip Dows, Os Moradores a Conquista da Cidade (Lisboa: Armazem das
Letras, 1978)
Table 4--Land occupation movement in the rural south, 1975 *.
Beja (1) Evora (2) Portalegre
Phases of the Area Area (2)
occupation occupied in occupied in Area
movement hectares hectares occupied in
hectares
1st Phase 30,783 53,461 40,144
To 31/07/75
2nd Phase 53,915 213,098 9,910
01/08/75-
30/09/75
3rd Phase 233,420 164,232 183,857
01/10/75-
31/12/75
Total 318,118 430,791 233,911
Alentejo (1) Zira (2)
Phases of the (total) (total)
occupation Area Area
movement occupied in occupied in
hectares hectares
1st Phase 124,338 156,353
To 31/07/75 (12.7%) (13.5%)
2nd Phase 276,923 309,338
01/08/75- (28.1%) (26.6%)
30/09/75
3rd Phase 581,509 696,743
01/10/75- (59.2%) (59.9%)
31/12/75
Total 982,820 1,162,434
(100%) (100%)
Constantino Picarra, As Ocupacoes de Terras no Distrito de Beja,
1974-1975; Afonso Barros, Do Latifundio a Reforma Agraria: o caso de
uma freguesia do Baixo Alentejo (Lisboa: Fundacao Calouste
Gulbenkian, 1986)
* Separate figures are given for Beja in Alentejo as well as the
total area occupied for the Alentejo region. Figures are also
included for the areas occupied in the districts of Evora and
Portalegre as well as the totals for Zira (Zone of Intervention of
the Agrarian Reform) of which they formed part.
(1.) Antonio Medeiros Ferreira, "Portugal em Transe
(1974-1985)," in Jose Mattoso, ed., Historia de Portugal (Lisboa:
Circulo de Leitores, 1993), 35.
(2.) Basil Davidson, Revolution en Afrique: la Liberation de la
Guinee Portugaise (Paris : ed. Seuil, 1969); "Forced labour system
in Portuguese Africa," London, October 25, s/d, Reuters in
Anticolonialismo internacional, 1961-63, CIDAC, H34-5.
(3.) In the survey we organized with Alejandro Lora and Joana
Alcantara, we registered hundreds of meetings in the first week after
the coup, but it was based solely on the principal newspapers leaving
out various other regions of the country and probably hundreds or
thousands more small companies.
(4.) Antonio Barreto, "Mudanca Social em Portugal:
1960-2000," in Antonio Costa Pinto, ed., Portugal Contemporaneo
(Lisboa: D. Quixote, 2005).
(5.) Editorial, revista Visao, Especial 25 de Abril, 15 de abril,
2004: 1.
(6.) Interview by the author, 24 February 2012.
(7.) Antonio Barreto and Clara Vaiadas Preto, Portugal 1960/1995:
Indicadores Sociais (Mirandela: Publico, 1996).
(8.) Duran Munoz, Contencion y Transgresion. Las Movilizaciones
Sociales y el Estado en las Transiciones Espanola y Portuguesa (Madrid:
cppc, 2000).
(9.) Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. O 25 de abril e as Lutas Sociais
nas Empresas (Porto: Afrontamento, 1976), 3 voluntes; Chip Dows, Os
Moradores a Conquista da Cidade (Lisboa: Armazem das Letras, 1978); John
Hammond, "Worker Control in Portugal: The Revolution and
Today," Economic and Industrial Democracy 2 (December, 1981):
413-453; Phil Mailer, Portugal: The Impossible Revolution (Oakland, CA:
pm Press 2012) [1978].
(10.) Nicos Poulantzas, Poder Politico e Classes Sociais (Sao
Paulo: Martins Fontes, 1976).
(11.) Loren Goldner, Ubu Saved from Drowning: Class Struggle and
Statist Containment in Portugal and Spain, 1974-1977 (Cambridge MA:
Queequeg Publications, 2000).
(12.) Ronald Chilcotte, The Portuguese Revolution: State and Class
in the Transition to Democracy (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield
Publishers, 2010).
(13.) Ferreira, "Portugal em Transe (1974-1985)."
(14.) Josep Sanchez Cervello, "El Proceso Democratico
Portugues (1974-75)" in Hipolito de la Torre, ed., Portugal y
Espana en el Cambio Politico (1958-1978) (Merida: UNED, 1989), 149-166.
(15.) Maria Inacia Rezola, Os Militares na Revolucao de abril: o
Conselho da Revolucao e a Transicao para a Democracia em Portugal
(Lisboa: Campo da Comunicacao, 2006).
(16.) Tiago Moreira de Sa, Carlucci vs. Kissinger (Lisboa: D.
Quixote, 2008).
(17.) Philip Schmitter, Portugal: Do Autoritarismo a Democracia
(Lisboa: les, 1999).
(18.) Antonio Costa Pinto, "Saneamentos Politicos e Movimentos
Radicais de Direita na Transicao para a Democracia, 1974-1976," in
Fernando Rosas, ed., Portugal e a Transicao para a Democracia (Lisboa:
Edicoes Colibri/IHC, 1999); Antonio Costa Pinto, "Political Purges
and State Crisis in Portugal's Transition to Democracy
1975-76('Journal of Contemporary History, 43, 2 (2008): 305-332.
(19.) Boaventura Sousa Santos, "A Crise e a Reconstituicao do
Estado em Portugal. 1974-1984," Revista Critica de Ciencias
Sociais, 14 (November 1984): 7-29.
(20.) Raquel Varela, A Historia do Povo na Revolucao Portuguesa
(Lisboa: Bertrans, 2014).
(21.) Francisco Rodrigues, ed., O Futuro era Agora (Lisboa:
Dinossauro, 1994).
(22.) Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. O 25 de abril e as Lutas
Sociais nas Empresas.
(23.) Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. O 25 de abril e as Lutas
Sociais nas Empresas.
(24.) Maria Luisa Cristovam, Conflitos de Trabalho em 1979. Breve
Analise Sociologica (Lisboa: Ministerio do Trabalho, 1982), 74.
(25.) Cristovam, Conflitos de Trabalho em 1979, 76.
(26.) "Caderno reivindicativo dos trabalhadores da Timex
Portugal, Lda" in Maria de Lurdes Santos et al. O 25 de abril e as
Lutas Sociais nas Empresas, 161-164.
(27.) Diario Popular, 14 May 1974, 23.
(28.) Diario Popular, 14 May 1974, 23.
(29.) Diario Popular, 14 May 1974, 23.
(30.) Diario Popular, 14 May 1974, 23.
(31.) Miguel Perez, "Contra a Exploracao Capitalista.
Comissoes de Trabalhadores e Luta Operaria na Revolucao Portuguesa
(1974-75)," Master's Thesis, Faculdade de Ciencias Sociais e
Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, August 2008, 47; Miguel Perez,
"Comissoes de trabalhadores," in Dicionario de Historia da
Revolucao (Porto: Figueirinhas) in press.
(32.) Miguel Perez, "Comissoes de trabalhadores."
(33.) Pinto, "Saneamentos Politicos e Movimentos Radicais de
Direita na Transicao para a Democracia, 1974-1976," 32.
(34.) Republica, 4 May 1974, 1.
(35.) "Cerco aos TLP," 1974, Arquivo da RTP, accessed on
January 10, 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d4mSP--gyYw&list=PLEF504D728EFCCA3C.
(36.) Diario de Lisboa, 12 May 1974.
(37.) Republica, 4 May 1974, 2.
(38.) Joao Castro Caldas, Terra e Trabalho (Oeiras: Celta, 2001).
(39.) Noticiario Nacional, September 9, 1975, Arquivo da RTP.
(40.) Miguel Perez, "Comissoes de moradores" in
Dicionario de Historia da Revolucao (Porto: Figueirinhas) in press.
(41.) Diario de Lisboa, 20 May 1974.
(42.) Lei dos Loteamentos (D.L. 46673), 1965.
(43.) Jose Carlos Guinote, "Urbanismo e corrupcao: as
mais-valias e o desenvolvimento urbano" Le Monde Diplomatique,
Edicao portuguesa, 6 August 2008.
(44.) Pedro Bingre do Amaral, "Analise das relacoes da
politica de solos com o sistema economico," Preparacao da nova lei
do solo, Documento Tecnico DGOTDU 5/2011, Direcao-Geral de Ordenamento
do Territorio e Desenvolvimento Urbano (Portugal 2011).
(45.) Perez, "Comissoes de moradores."
(46.) On the dispute between the PS and the PCP around the question
of municipal governments, see Raquel Varela, A Historia do PCP na
Revolucao dos Cravos (Lisboa: Bertrand, 2011).
(47.) Perez, "Comissoes de moradores."
(48.) Perez, "Comissoes de moradores."
(49.) Pedro Ramos Pinto, "Urban Social Movements and the
Transition to Democracy in Portugal, 1974-1976," The Historical
Journal, 51 (No. 4 2008): 1025-1046.
(50.) Diario Popular, 11 May, 1974.
(51.) Diario Popular, 10 May 1974.
(52.) Dows, Os Moradores a Conquista da Cidade, 50.
(53.) Esquerda Socialista, 14 January 1975.
(54.) Eugenio Rosa, A Economia Portuguesa em Numeros (Lisboa:
Moraes Editora, 1975).
(55.) Programa "Temas e Problemas," 30 July 1975, Arquivo
da RTP.
(56.) Programa "Temas e Problemas", 30 de julho de 1975,
Arquivo Historico da RTP
(57.) Revista Historia, April 2004.
(58.) Perez, "Contra a Exploracao Capitalista. Comissoes de
Trabalhadores e Luta Operaria na Revolucao Portuguesa (1974-75),"
47.
(59.) Perez, "Contra a Exploracao Capitalista. Comissoes de
Trabalhadores e Luta Operaria na Revolucao Portuguesa (1974-75),"
98-100.
(60.) Perez, "Contra a Exploracao Capitalista. Comissoes de
Trabalhadores e Luta Operaria na Revolucao Portuguesa (1974-75),"
98-100.
(61.) Perez, "A mobilizacao operaria anticapitalista na
Revolucao de 1974-75," 6.
(62.) Comissao Coordenadora das Empresas em Autogestao, A Realidade
da Autogestao em Portugal (Lisboa: Perspetivas e Realidades, s/d).
(63.) Oliveira Baptista, Portugal 1975. Os Campos (Porto:
Afrontamento, 1978).
(64.) Law n. 77/77, September 29, was approved in the Assembly of
the Republic on August 10, 1977 with votes in favour by the PS, the
Popular Democratic Party (PPD) and the Democratic and Social Centre
(CDS) with votes against by the PCP and the Popular Democratic Union
(UDP).
(65.) Constantino Picarra, As Ocupacoes de Terras no Distrito de
Beja. 1974-1975 (Coimbra, Almedina, 2008).
(66.) Antonio Barreto, Anatomia de uma Revolucao. A Reforma Agraria
em Portugal (Lisboa: Europa-America, 1987).
(67.) Picarra, As Ocupacoes de Terras no Distrito de Beja.
1974-1975.
(68.) Baptista, Portugal 1975. Os Campos, 25.
(69.) Barreto, Anatomia de uma Revolucao. A Reforma Agraria em
Portugal, 215.
(70.) B Oliveira Baptista, "O 25 de abril, a sociedade rural e
a questao da terra," in O Pais em Revolucao, J. M. Brandao de
Brito, ed., (Lisboa: Editorial Noticias, 2001), 183.
(71.) Eric Hobsbawm, Sobre Historia (Sao Paulo: Companhia das
Letras, 1998), 220.
(72.) Chris Harman, A People's History of the World (London:
Bookmarks, 1999).