Upon his return to Cuba after the Spanish–Cuban–American War (known in the U.S. as
Spanish–American War), he became acting mayor of
Havana. He was a member of the Constitutional Convention of 1901 and became its secretary. A vocal leader of the opposition against the
U.S. annexation of
Cuba, he voted against the
Platt Amendment and against granting naval bases to the
United States in
Guantánamo and
Bahia Honda. From 1906 to 1909, Zayas served as one of six Cuban lawyers on the Advisory Law Commission for the
Provisional Government of Cuba, under
Colonel Enoch H. Crowder. Zayas became leader of the
Liberal Party (left-wing) and was elected Vice-president 1908. In the contested, 1916 presidential election in which the populist Liberal Party used violent tactics, he obtained more votes than the pro-U.S. candidate, Cornell graduate General
Mario García Menocal. The
Chambelona War ensued, which, after some reverses, was won by the Conservative Forces of Garcia Menocal with the covert support of the
United States. Zayas surrendered in Cambute near
Guanabacoa where it was said he was hiding. The United States provided military support to García Menocal from
Guantánamo Naval Base, without formally invoking its right of intervention pursuant to the
Platt Amendment, incorporated in the U.S.-Cuba Treaty of 1903. However, the United States only deployed forces in
Oriente Province. Receiving the most votes in the
1920 Cuban general election, which was marred by accusations of election fraud. Zayas was inaugurated as president on May 20, 1921. obtained a US$50 million loan from
J.P. Morgan, and for the first time allowed full freedom of expression and of the press. On 10 October 1922 he launched PWX, the first Cuban
radio station. Although his administration was systematically defamed by the opposition as corrupt, it actually was less corrupt than preceding and subsequent administrations, and Zayas refrained from censoring the press or arresting critics, unlike prior and later Cuban presidents. This brought him the nickname "el Chino" (the Chinaman), because of his stoicism ("la flema de Zayas") and his "oriental patience". Sometimes he was also nicknamed "pesetero", because since his imprisonment in
Madrid he had always carried a
Spanish Peseta coin in his
vest pocket. When he took office in 1921, the country was in bankruptcy, with debts exceeding US$40 million, and sugar prices plummeting from 22 cents to 3 cents per pound. In spite of this, he carried out a number of reforms, particularly in the field of education. President Zayas, as well as other Cuban administrations, had to struggle with the implications of the
Platt Amendment, which resulted in significant U.S. meddling in Cuban's financial affairs. Particularly, under the terms of the Platt Amendment, the Zayas administration needed either the implicit or the outright explicit approval of the U.S. when it came to securing large financial loans.
Presidential Cabinet members Source: •
José Manuel Cortina, Executive Secretary •
Rafael Montoro Valdés, Secretary of State •
Demetrio Castillo Duany, Secretary of War and the Navy •
Francisco Zayas y Alfonso, Secretary of Education and Art •
Orlando Freyre y Cisneros, Secretary of Public Works •
Juan Guiteras, Secretary of Health •
Francisco Martínez Lufriú, Secretary of the Interior •
Erasmo Regüeiferos, Secretary of Justice •
José María Collantes, Secretary of Agriculture, Trade, and Labor ==Family life==