Jump to content

Spanish Syndical Organization

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Sindicato vertical)
Spanish Syndical Organization
Organización Sindical Española
Founded26 January 1940 (1940-01-26)
Dissolved6 December 1977 (1977-12-06)
HeadquartersCasa Sindical, Madrid
Location
MembersAll employed citizens
Key people
See Leadership section
Publication
Pueblo [es]

The Spanish Syndical Organization[1][2][3] (Spanish: Organización Sindical Española; OSE), popularly known in Spain as the Sindicato Vertical (the "Vertical Trade Union"), was the sole legal trade union for most of the Francoist dictatorship. A public-law entity created in 1940, the vertically-structured OSE was a core part of the project for frameworking the Economy and the State in Francoist Spain, following the trend of the new type of "harmonicist" and corporatist understanding of labour relations vouching for worker–employer collaboration developed in totalitarian regimes such as those of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy in the first half of the 20th century.[4] Up until the early 1950s, it internally worked—at least on a rhetorical basis—according to the discourse of national syndicalism.[5] Previous unions, like the anarchist CNT and the socialist UGT, were outlawed and driven underground, and joining the OSE was mandatory for all employed citizens.[6] It was disbanded in 1977.

History

[edit]

The OSE was founded in 1940, established in a January 1940 Law of "Syndical Unity", while its structure was developed through a December 1940 law, in which the OSE was defined as subordinated to the (single) party.[7] Its ideological fundamentals date back to the 1938 Fuero del Trabajo [es] law.[8]

OSE held its first congress February 27, 1961 – March 4, 1961. The organisation itself claimed to have roots in the trade union activity of the National-Syndicalist Workers Central (CONS), founded in 1935. CONS had been, as a result of the Unification Decree between the Falangists and the Carlists in 1937, fused with the National-Syndicalist Employers Central (CENS) into the National-Syndical Centrals (Centrales Nacional-Sindicalistas). The idea of organising workers, technicians and employers within one "vertical" structure was also integrated in OSE, and the CNS were incorporated into OSE.[9]

At the very beginning of the Francoist State, wages were directly fixed by the state and only later could workers and employers agree upon their wages through this vertical union. This organisation was the practical consequence of the fascist ideal for industrial relations in a corporate state. In it, all the workers, called "producers," and their employers had the right to choose their representatives through elections.

In this organisation, workers and employers supposedly bargained equally. Strikes were forbidden and firing a worker was very expensive and difficult, as the fascism had "bettered capitalism" and had "succeeded in harmonically balancing workers' and employers' interests". In reality, candidates for these elections had to be approved by Francoist Spain and all the process was heavily controlled, as fascism had a very interventionist policy towards the labour market: full employment for men, even at the expense of low wages or inflation, almost no right to work for married women and no unemployment benefits at all.

At the very end of the Francoist State, the sindicato vertical lost its always limited power and illegal trade unions gained force. This led some pragmatic employers to deal with these illegal unions and forsake the "vertical" one. It disappeared in 1977, during the Spanish transition to democracy.

Clandestine PCE presence

[edit]

The banned Communist Party of Spain (PCE) considered that the "union" was heavily lopsided in favour of capital but was there to stay, and decided to infiltrate it with their candidates in order to achieve practical gains for the workers' conditions. This was the basis for the communist Workers' Commissions.

Leadership

[edit]
No. Portrait Name
(Birth–Death)
Term Political party
Took office Left office Time in office
National Delegates
1
Gerardo Salvador Merino [es]
Gerardo Salvador Merino [es]
(1910–1971)
9 September 193913 September 19412 years, 4 daysNational Movement
Manuel Valdés Larrañaga [es]
Manuel Valdés Larrañaga [es]
(1909–2001)
Acting
13 September 194118 December 194196 daysNational Movement
2
Fermín Sanz-Orrio
Fermín Sanz-Orrio
(1901–1998)
18 December 19417 September 19519 years, 263 daysNational Movement
3
José Solís Ruiz
José Solís Ruiz
(1913–1990)
7 September 195129 October 196918 years, 52 daysNational Movement
4
Enrique García-Ramal
Enrique García-Ramal
(1914–1987)
Cabinet-level official in the Franco VIII Government
29 October 196911 June 19733 years, 225 daysNational Movement
Ministers of Trade Union Relations
1
Enrique García-Ramal
Enrique García-Ramal
(1914–1987)
11 June 19733 January 1974206 daysNational Movement
2
Alejandro Fernández Sordo
Alejandro Fernández Sordo
(1921–2009)
3 January 197411 December 19751 year, 342 daysNational Movement
3
Rodolfo Martín Villa
Rodolfo Martín Villa
(born 1934)
11 December 19757 July 1976209 daysNational Movement
4
Enrique de la Mata
Enrique de la Mata
(1933–1987)
7 July 19764 July 1977362 daysNational Movement

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Witney, Fred (1966). "Labor and the Spanish Syndical System". Monthly Labor Review. 89 (8): 867–870. ISSN 0098-1818. JSTOR 41836594.
  2. ^ Foweraker, Joe (1987). "Corporatist Strategies and the Transition to Democracy in Spain". Comparative Politics. 20 (1): 57–72. doi:10.2307/421920. ISSN 0010-4159. JSTOR 421920.
  3. ^ Campbell, Joan; Windmuller, John P. (1992). European Labor Unions. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313263712.
  4. ^ Giménez Martínez 2015, pp. 223, 232.
  5. ^ Soto Carmona, Álvaro (1995). "Auge y caída de la Organización Sindical Española" (PDF). Espacio Tiempo y Forma. Serie V, Historia Contemporánea. 8. Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia.
  6. ^ Barred, Mikel (2006). La Democracia española: realidades y desafíos. Análisis del sistema político español. Open University of Catalonia.
  7. ^ Lieberman, Sima (2013-11-05). The Contemporary Spanish Economy: A Historical Perspective. Routledge. ISBN 9781136590351.
  8. ^ Giménez Martínez, Miguel Ángel (2015). "El sindicalismo vertical en la España franquista: principios doctrinales, estructura y desarrollo". Revista Mexicana de Historia del Derecho. XXXI. Mexico: UNAM: 228. doi:10.22201/iij.24487880e.2015.31.10213.
  9. ^ Organización Sindical Española, Escuela Sindical 1961. Madrid: 1961