First government of Juan Negrín (May 1937 – April 1938) The main objective of Negrín's government was to put an end to the "revolutionary stage" of the first ten months of the war. Therefore, the government no longer had the labor union nature of the previous one, presided over by Largo Caballero. Rather, it responded to the reconstruction of the
Popular Front based on the two main parties at the time in Republican Spain: the
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE)—which had reassembled after having disappeared as a frontline force of
caballerismo—and the
Communist Party of Spain (PCE). The latter was very far from the limited rollout it had had before July 1936, having demonstrated an enormous organizational capability during the chaotic first few months of the war—its symbol having been the
Fifth Regiment, cornerstone of the new
Spanish Republican Army—and having defended a moderate policy within the orbit of the Popular Front. In addition, it had the prestige derived from the military aid that the Soviet Union was providing to the Republic. Likewise, with this government, the discourse on the war changed from a "revolutionary war" to a "national war" against the German and Italian invaders and their Spanish Francoist allies. The new government was made up of three socialist ministers, who occupied essential positions—Negrín himself,
Indalecio Prieto, and
Julián Zugazagoitia—two left-wing republicans—one from the
Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) and the other from
Republican Left of Catalonia—and two communists. The trade unions
UGT and
CNT did not want to take part, although the possibility for their integration remained open. The key figure in the new government was Indalecio Prieto, as he had full responsibility for the conduct of the war by having been appointed head of the new Ministry of Defense. According to
Santos Juliá (1999), behind this government was
Manuel Azaña, who wanted: This influence by Azaña on the cabinet can also be seen in the presence of
José Giral—a man who had the full confidence of the president—at the head of the Ministry of State, a very important portfolio given the internationalization of the Spanish civil war. Thus, the policy of Negrín's government had two fundamental axes: to turn the
Spanish Republican Army into an armed force capable of winning the war, or at least capable of achieving a "dignified" peace. For this, it was also necessary to consolidate the reconstruction of the Republican State, in all areas, which would also serve to project abroad the image of a democratic republic comparable to other European parliamentary regimes. And secondly, to change the
policy of non-intervention of the United Kingdom and France, which until then had only served to strengthen the
Francoist faction. The great loser of this political line was trade unionism, both in the UGT and the CNT. According to
Julio Aróstegui (1997), these: The domestic policy of the Negrín administration, whose main objective was the reconstruction of the Army coupled with that of the Republican State, took shape in: • The culmination of the formation of the
Republican Army. Under the authority of Indalecio Prieto, a Central General Staff of the Armed Forces was established, headed by Colonel
Vicente Rojo Lluch, who took charge of the expansion of the Army and the organization and execution of military operations. • The continuation of the recovery by the central government of all powers, with the justification that the direction of the war demanded it. This policy was the most heavily criticized, since the government had no qualms in sending the
11th Division of communist commander
Enrique Líster to dissolve the
Council of Aragon, the last bastion of the
CNT, and to arrest its leaders. On the other hand, the occupation of the Cantabrian coast by the rebels, which was completed in November 1937, put an end to the autonomous political bodies operating there, especially the Basque government. When added to the loss of law enforcement powers by the
Generalitat de Catalunya after the
events of May 1937, it is clear that in late 1937, the Republic had a more unified power. • Law enforcement and security. With
Julián Zugazagoitia in the Ministry of the Interior and
Manuel Irujo in the Ministry of Justice, there was an attempt to re-establish the rule of law in the Republican zone, although they were unable to prevent the assassination of
POUM leader
Andreu Nin by Soviet agents and the persecution of the
Trotskyists by the Spanish Communists. What they did achieve was for the trial of the POUM leaders to be carried out with minimum legal guarantees and for it not to end in the death of the defendants. • Guarantees of small and medium-sized properties. The dissolution of the
Council of Aragon put an end to collectivized property, restoring private ownership of the lands of small and medium-sized landowners who so wished. As for international policy, at the express request of President Manuel Azaña, an attempt was made to change the
policy of non-intervention of the United Kingdom and France for one of mediation in the conflict, so that they would put pressure on Germany and Italy and stop supporting the rebels, with the final goal of reaching a "negotiated peace". However, nothing was achieved on this end. It soon became clear that this plan was doomed to failure. When in mid-1937 even the
Holy See wanted to mediate, General Franco—on the same day that British Foreign Minister
Anthony Eden met with a representative of
Pope Pius XI to discuss the matter—commissioned Cardinal
Isidro Gomá y Tomás: Those who were most strengthened by this were the communists—hence the accusation against Negrín of being a "
crypto-communist". They set for themselves the goal of "openly fighting for hegemony in the government and in the country", as acknowledged by a representative of
Communist International. To this end, they sought the unification of socialists and communists in a single party (as had already happened in Catalonia) following "
Marxist-Leninist [i.e.,
Stalinist] principles." The
PSOE, with Prieto in the lead, also openly opposed these aspirations. Moreover, the latter tried to put an end to the communist influence on the Republican Army by reducing the attributions of the
political commissariat vis-à-vis the commanders and prohibiting political
proselytizing.
March–April 1938 crisis: negrinistas versus anti-negrinistas All the efforts made by the new government to provide the Republic with a real Army had to reflect on the battlefield. After the defeat of the
War in the North (March–October 1937), the litmus test was going to be the
Battle of Teruel, which began on 21 December 1937. The reorganized
Republican Army had, for the first time, the opportunity to take a provincial capital from Franco's troops, to have a successful outcome of strategic and symbolic value. It was a matter of healing the wounds caused by the loss of the North and demonstrating the offensive capacity of the Republican Army, which had been slowly taking shape and perfecting itself throughout 1937. A victory in Teruel, in addition to its military value, would bring an obvious symbolic capital with unquestionable repercussions for a rearguard whose morale was shaken by the chain of defeats of the previous months. Apart from presenting to the international public opinion a different vision of a Republic with the capacity for military rejoinders that would transcend the merely defensive action. On his part, General Franco accepted the challenge and postponed his planned offensive on Madrid, because he was not willing to accept the slightest setback: he had to demonstrate to the adversary its permanent inferiority, apart from the fact that a defeat could put his absolute authority in question. The nationalists managed to
take back the city of Teruel on 22 February 1938, after two months of heavy fighting, and thus the Battle of Teruel was a new setback for the Republicans in emotional, political, and military terms. The news of the defeat fell like a ton of bricks on the morale of the rearguard. Colonel
Vicente Rojo Lluch admitted that it would still take a long time to provide the Republic with an army capable of facing the one on the
rebel side. But after the defeat of the Battle of Teruel, an even greater setback took place. The following month, the Aragon Front collapsed due to the thrust of the
Aragon Offensive launched by Franco, which culminated with the arrival of the rebel army in the Mediterranean through
Vinaròs on 15 April, thus dividing in two the territory that was loyal to the Republic. The perception that spread through Barcelona—the new seat of government since its transfer from Valencia in November 1937—was that of a real debacle. In a climate of general disarray,
Barcelona was heavily bombed. Added to this was the confirmation of the policy of
appeasement towards Germany by the United Kingdom and France. After
Anthony Eden, who was in favor of not making any more concessions to
Hitler, left the
Foreign Office on 20 February 1938, the British Conservative government reached an agreement with
Mussolini that allowed the presence of Italian forces in Spain in exchange for Italy's commitment that it would not seize any Spanish territory or island after the foreseeable victory of the
rebel side. The only positive news was the reopening of the French border after the formation of the second and short-lived government of
Léon Blum, from 13 March to 8 April. As soon as the Francoist offensive in Aragon began on 10 March, President Negrín made a secret trip to Paris where he met with prominent French pro-Republican figures such as Blum,
Édouard Daladier, and
Vincent Auriol to ask them for France's direct intervention in the war in Spain by sending five divisions. He argued that if the offensive was not stopped, France would have the Italians and the Germans on its border south of the Pyrenees, and nothing would prevent Mussolini and Hitler from practically penetrating French territory. Negrín returned to Spain on 15 March without having achieved anything concrete. Meanwhile, the Republican ambassador in London,
Pablo de Azcárate, who had gone to Paris on orders by Negrín, remained in charge of the conversations. The military defeats and the worsening of the international environment unleashed political tensions between the various forces that supported the Republic, leading to the crisis of March–April 1938, the second major internal crisis of the Republican faction, almost a year after the first one (
the events of May 1937). The precarious consensus on which the first Negrín cabinet of May 1937 had settled was thus broken, giving way to the confrontation between
negrinismo, or the party of resistance, and
anti-negrinismo, or the party of peace. The latter was headed by
Azaña himself, supported by the
Republican Left and the
Republican Union, plus the Catalan and Basque nationalists, and by
Indalecio Prieto at the head of a faction of the
PSOE. Both believed that the military disasters of the
Battle of Teruel and the
Aragon Offensive showed that the
Republican Army could never win the war and that a surrender had to be negotiated with support from France and the United Kingdom. Faced with them, Negrín and the PSOE faction that supported him, along with the
communists, were firm supporters of continuing to resist under the battle call
resistir es vencer. The
PCE and the
PSUC called for a large demonstration in favor of continuing the war on 16 March 1938—one day after Negrín's return from his secret trip to Paris to ask for help from the French—in front of the
Royal Palace of Pedralbes in Barcelona while Azaña was presiding over a government meeting. For Negrín, the alternative of negotiating with the enemy for the end of the war almost certainly meant the annihilation of the Republic. Therefore, the only possible way out was to resist prolonging this war while waiting for another to be unleashed in Europe on a continental scale, which would force France and the United Kingdom to come to the aid of the Republic. The crisis began when Negrín tried to get Prieto to change ministries—after having stated his conviction that the war was lost, Prieto was the worst possible minister of defense—but Azaña backed the latter, as did the rest of the left-wing Republicans and the nationalists from
Republican Left of Catalonia and the
Basque Nationalist Party. However, the latter did not manage to articulate any alternative to Negrín, and he ended up emerging from the crisis with renewed strength and with the consequent departure of Prieto from the government. From that moment on, Republican Spain was divided into two tendencies separated by deep chasms of distrust, suspicion, and mutual condemnation. On one side, the party of resistance or
negrinismo; on the other, the party of peace or
anti-negrinismo, at the head of which were the president of the Republic, Prieto,
Marcelino Domingo, and
Julián Besteiro. According to Bahamonde Magro and Cervera Gil (1999):
Second Negrín government of "National Union" (April 1938 – March 1939) in July 1938 On 6 April, Negrín rebuilt the government and took on the role of minister of defense, while replaced him as head of the Ministry of Finance. He integrated the two trade unions in the cabinet: the
UGT (with
Ramón González Peña in Justice) and the
CNT (with
Segundo Blanco in Public Education). This meant that the
PCE was left with only one minister (
Vicente Uribe in Agriculture) and that
Manuel de Irujo, from the
PNV, was left as minister without portfolio, as was
José Giral, replaced at the Ministry of State by Socialist
Julio Álvarez del Vayo.
Jaume Aiguader and
Bernardo Giner de los Ríos continued in Labor and Communications, respectively. The most noteworthy aspects of the new government were the dismissal of Prieto, who ended up heading the "anti-negrinista" faction of a fractured
PSOE; the departure of Giral from the Ministry of State—replaced by Álvarez del Vayo, a "negrinista" socialist—although he remained in the government in a minor role as minister without portfolio, as did Irujo; and the integration of two trade unionists, which was a debatable expansion, given the discussion that arose at the CNT and the UGT about the participation in the government of their two theoretical representatives. This government had to gradually adapt to the progressive military collapse of the Republic, abandonment by the international community, the weariness of the population, and the progressive rupture of political unity in the face of the uprising. There is, however, one of Negrin's policies that remained as a goal and as the only alternative: the continuation of the war until the end, on the assumption that it was not possible to obtain from the enemy—that is, from Franco—a true peace negotiation, with conditions other than surrender. On 21 April, only a week after the Republican zone had been split in two after the arrival of the Nationalists in the Mediterranean through
Vinaròs, Juan Negrín communicated his will to resist to the military attaché from the French Embassy, who in turn communicated it to his government: The positions of the new government with a view to potential peace negotiations, and as the pillars of a future new Republic, were set out in a made public on 1 May, a date of major significance. In it, the government announced that its war objectives consisted of guaranteeing Spain's independence and establishing a democratic Republic with a legal and social structure approved via a referendum; it expressed its respect for legitimately acquired property, the need for agrarian reform and advanced social legislation; and announced a broad amnesty for all Spaniards who wished to cooperate in the immense work of reconstruction of the country. In his attempt to make it seem to foreign powers that he had the internal situation under control, Negrín began negotiations with the
Holy See—that turned out to be unsuccessful—to reestablish diplomatic relations and open the churches to worship. '' from 18 July 1938 Negrín was aware that the survival of the Republic depended not only on strengthening the
Republican Army and maintaining the will of the civilian population to resist in the rearguard but also on France and the United Kingdom putting an end to the
policy of non-intervention or at least putting pressure on the fascist powers so that they, in turn, would convince Franco to agree to a negotiated end. Negrín believed that his policy was the only one viable. Thus, his idea was to resist to negotiate an armistice that would avoid the "reign of terror and bloody vengeance"—that is, retaliation and executions by the victors against the vanquished—that Negrín was convinced Franco was going to impose, as
indeed ended up happening. But Franco, who was kept informed by the agents of the (SIPM) about the Republicans' rift, of the difficult situation in the rearguard due to the shortage of food, and of the difficulties of the Republican Army to obtain supplies, only accepted an unconditional surrender by the Republicans—which left the
anti-negrinistas without arguments—and was not willing to admit mediation by the United Kingdom and France, to which, on the other hand, he had guaranteed that he would remain neutral in the event of a war in Europe. According to
Bahamonde Magro and Cervera Gil (1999): Besides, Negrín, General
Vicente Rojo Lluch, and the communists believed that the
Republican Army was still capable of one last offensive, which began on 24 July 1938, thus kickstarting the
Battle of the Ebro, the longest and most decisive of the
Civil War. The
Ebro Army was made up of the best units of the Republican Army commanded mostly by communist veterans of the
Siege of Madrid and provided with the best possible equipment, thanks to acquisitions made abroad during the three months in which the French border had been open (from April to June 1938). According to Bahamonde Magro and Cervera Gil (1999):
El Ejército del Ebro era el emblema del resistir es vencer negrinista. The ultimate goal of the Ebro offensive was to reunite the two republican zones, which Negrín considered necessary to underpin his policy of resistance and deal a blow of effect of international repercussions at a time when Europe was going through the
Sudeten crisis. This was the understanding of a French military observer based on the report he sent to Paris on 30 July, regarding the early days of the Ebro offensive he had been witness to: On his part, Franco accepted the challenge, as in other occasions, with the goal being that the enemy would exhaust its best resources in the fight, which indeed happened. Only two weeks after the Battle of the Ebro had started, the August crisis broke out in the Negrín administration. On 11 August 1938, the two Catalan and Basque nationalist ministers (
Jaume Aiguader of
Republican Left of Catalonia and
Manuel de Irujo of the
PNV) resigned because of their opposition to the creation of the Directorate General of Industries, linked to the Minister of Defense (that is, to Negrín himself), which meant that the
Generalitat de Catalunya lost its powers over them, since they were militarized. The crisis was ultimately resolved by Negrín replacing them with a Catalan and a Basque, respectively: Aiguader by communist of the
PSUC, and Irujo by
Tomás Bilbao of
Basque Nationalist Action. Both were fervent supporters of the
negrinista slogan "To resist is to win," with which the president strengthened even more his position within the government. After three months of heavy fighting, the
Republican offensive of the Ebro ended in a new failure. On 16 November 1938, the Republican army had to return to its initial positions, with tens of thousands of casualties and a considerable loss of war material that could no longer be used to defend Catalonia against the
Francoist offensive. of 30 September 1938:
Benito Mussolini,
Adolf Hitler,
Édouard Daladier, and
Neville Chamberlain. Shortly before the
Battle of the Ebro ended, another event took place that was also decisive for the defeat of the Republic, this time coming from abroad. On 29 September 1938, the
Munich Agreement was signed between the United Kingdom and France, on one hand, and Germany and Italy, on the other, which put an end to the possibility of war breaking out in Europe and the democratic powers intervening in favor of the Republic. Likewise, in the same manner that the agreement meant the surrender of
Czechoslovakia to Hitler, it also meant abandoning the Spanish Republic to the allies of the Nazis and Fascists. It was of no use that, in a last desperate attempt to obtain foreign mediation, Negrín announced before the
League of Nations on 21 September—a week before the signing of the
Munich Agreement—the unilateral withdrawal of foreign combatants fighting in Republican Spain, thus agreeing without waiting for the nationalists to do the same with the resolution by the
Non-Intervention Committee of 5 July 1938, which had been approved after six months of discussion and proposed a plan for the withdrawal of foreign volunteers from the war in Spain. On 15 November 1938, the day before the end of the
Battle of the Ebro, the
International Brigades held a farewell parade along the
Avinguda Diagonal avenue in Barcelona. Meanwhile, in October 1938, the rebel faction, already sure of its military superiority and that victory was near, decided to reduce the Italian forces by a quarter. According to Bahamonde Magro and Cervera Gil (1999): With the signing of the
Munich Agreement, Negrín's European hope to save the Republic vanished: there would be no war in Europe and once again the democratic powers had yielded to the fascist powers. This led Negrín to a dead end: either to continue resisting while waiting for the definitive outbreak of war in Europe—in the now more distant future—or to surrender, which would almost certainly result in reprisals from Franco. Besides, the Munich Agreement together with the failure of the Ebro offensive spread discouragement and defeatism in the Republican rearguard, breaking the will of resistance of the Popular Front. Very few, if not no one, had any faith in a Republican victory. On the other hand, the material losses of the
Battle of the Ebro had been so great that it would be almost impossible to defend Catalonia against the foreseeable offensive of the Francoist army. Being aware of this, President Negrín sent
Ignacio Hidalgo de Cisneros, commander of the
Republican Air Force, to Moscow on 11 November 1938 with a handwritten and personal letter from Negrín himself to be delivered to
Stalin, in which he requested immediate military aid for the Republic. The Soviet dictator agreed to send seven ships with a large amount of armament, but only two arrived in
Bordeaux with enough time to be used in the campaign of Catalonia. In the end, this armament could not be used due to impediments by the French authorities for it to cross their territory and the rapid collapse of the front to the Francoist offensive. The
Catalonia Offensive ended in a new disaster for the Republic. The nationalist army launched its offensive on 23 December 1938 from the west and south on a
Republican Army that was far inferior in terms of men and means—the
Ebro Army was very weakened and the Republic had virtually no air forces—and was retreating. In January, fleeing from the bombings and fearful of reprisals, large numbers of the civilian population began to cross over to France. On 26 January 1939, the Francoist troops entered Barcelona practically without a fight. On 5 February, they occupied Girona. One year later, from exile, General
Vicente Rojo Lluch compared what had happened in Madrid in November 1936 with what happened in Barcelona in January 1939: On 3 February, a representative of the French government had arrived in
Burgos to prepare the official recognition of Franco's government by France and the United Kingdom, thus completing their abandonment of the Republic because, as
Lord Halifax said during the 8 February meeting of the British cabinet, "it was clear that Franco was going to win the war" and so it was necessary to deal with him directly. Around the same time, the only intervention by the United Kingdom in the Spanish war happened in the
occupation of the island of Menorca by the nationalists. To prevent the strategic island of
Menorca—which had remained under Republican control throughout the war—from falling to the Italians or Germans, the British government agreed to the proposal by , Count of San Luis, who was the Francoist head of the
Balearic Islands Aerial Region, to have a
Royal Navy ship to take him to
Mahón and, from there, negotiate the surrender of the island in exchange for the Republican civilian and military authorities being able to leave it under British protection. The British government set the operation in motion without informing the Republican ambassador in London,
Pablo de Azcárate. The latter, when he found out later, lodged a formal complaint for having lent a British ship to an "emissary of the Spanish rebel authorities." Thus, on the morning of 7 February, the heavy cruiser
HMS Devonshire arrived at the port of
Mahón with the Count of San Luis on board, where he met with Republican Governor
Luis González de Ubieta. The following day, after having tried unsuccessfully to contact Negrín, the latter agreed to the conditions of surrender. At 5 in the morning on 9 February, the HMS
Devonshire left Mahón headed for
Marseille with 452 refugees on board. Menorca was immediately occupied by the nationalists without the participation of any Italian or German contingent. The British intervention gave rise to a heated debate in the
House of Commons on 13 February, during which the Labour opposition accused
Chamberlain's conservative government of having compromised the United Kingdom in Franco's favor. The following day, General Franco's unofficial representative in London, the
Duke of Alba, conveyed to
Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax "the gratitude of the Generalíssimo and the national government" for his collaboration in "reconquering Menorca." Four days before the fall of Girona, on 1 February 1939 and during sessions held in
Sant Ferran Castle, in
Figueres, by what was left of the members of Congress (64 deputies), Negrín reduced his to three guarantees that his government submitted to the democratic powers as conditions for peace: independence of Spain, for the Spanish people to point out what would be their regime and their fate, and for all persecution and retaliations to cease in the name of
una labor patriótica de reconciliación. A few days later, he let the French and British ambassadors know that he was ready to order an immediate cessation of hostilities if his government obtained guarantees that there would be no reprisals. But he did not receive these guarantees. Franco's intransigence was directly related to the military culture with which he conducted the war at all times, tending towards the destruction of the adversary. At the same time,
Azaña also met with the ambassadors of France and the United Kingdom to express his opinion against Negrín and asked their governments to intercede with Franco so that he would provide guarantees to allow compromised persons to leave Spain, a single condition for the end of hostilities that ignored the three that had been approved by the
Republican Cortes at the meeting in Figueres. When Negrín learned of this initiative by Azaña, which went beyond his constitutional powers, he completely disallowed it. Negrín had previously held a meeting with the main Army commanders in
Agullana, near the French border, in which they expressed their opinion that the war was lost. On 6 February, the main Republican authorities, headed by President Azaña, crossed the border followed by a large exodus of Republican civilians and members of the military who were going into exile. Then, on 9 February, Negrín did the same, but he took a plane in
Toulouse to return to
Alicante the next day, accompanied by some ministers to reactivate the war in the central-south region. The last Republican troops crossed the border on 11 February. The march to the central-south region was decided during a hasty meeting of the
Council of Ministers in the Spanish consulate in Toulouse. Most of them were not willing to return, as morale was extremely low. However, none of them dared to say no. According to
Viñas and Hernández Sánchez (2010): On the other hand, Negrín had tried to convince Azaña to also return to the central-south region, but the latter flatly refused, claiming that the war was lost. Nonetheless, Negrín at least managed to get Azaña to stay at the Spanish embassy in Paris, which in terms of international law was Spanish territory, and thus, technically, the president was neither in exile nor living outside Spain. == Casado's coup and the collapse of the Republic (March 1939) ==