Guatemalan Revolution

Guatemalan Revolution
DateOctober 1944 – June 1954
LocationGuatemala
Also known asThe Ten Years of Spring
Cause
MotiveLiberal democracy
Land reform
Outcome
  • Ruling junta resigns
  • First largely free presidential and parliamentary elections held in 1944. Juan José Arévalo elected president
  • Progressive social and agrarian/land reforms initiated, including Decree 900
  • Labor laws passed to increase worker rights, including a set of health and safety standards in workplaces, a standardized an eight-hour working day and 45-hour working week for non-plantation laborers, and bans on discrimination in salaries, and required plantation owners to construct primary schools for the children of their workers
  • Foreign policy shift to support anti-authoritarian movements such as the Caribbean Legion in other countries
  • Military coup attempt against the government in 1949 fails
  • Jacobo Árbenz elected president in 1950
  • CIA supports 1954 coup d'état via Operation PBFortune, which is successful
  • Guatemalan Civil War begins in 1960
    • Free and fair elections not held for roughly three decades

The period in the history of Guatemala between the coups against Jorge Ubico in 1944 and Jacobo Árbenz in 1954 is known locally as the Revolution (Spanish: La Revolución). It has also been called the Ten Years of Spring, highlighting the peak years of representative democracy in Guatemala from 1944 until the end of the civil war in 1996. It saw the implementation of social, political, and especially agrarian reforms that were influential across Latin America.[1]

From the late 19th century until 1944, Guatemala was governed by a series of authoritarian rulers who sought to strengthen the economy by supporting the export of coffee. Between 1898 and 1920, Manuel Estrada Cabrera granted significant concessions to the United Fruit Company, an American corporation that traded in tropical fruit, and dispossessed many indigenous people of their communal lands. Under Jorge Ubico, who ruled as a dictator between 1931 and 1944, this process was intensified, with the institution of harsh labor regulations and a police state.[2]

In June 1944, a popular pro-democracy movement led by university students and labor organizations forced Ubico to resign. He appointed a three-person military junta to take his place, led by Federico Ponce Vaides. This junta continued Ubico's oppressive policies, until it was toppled in a military coup led by Jacobo Árbenz in October 1944, an event also known as the "October Revolution". The coup leaders formed a junta which swiftly called for open elections. These elections were won in a landslide by Juan José Arévalo, a progressive professor of philosophy who had become the face of the popular movement. He implemented a moderate program of social reform, including a widely successful literacy campaign and a largely free election process, although illiterate women were not given the vote and communist parties were banned.

Following the end of Arévalo's presidency in 1951, Jacobo Árbenz was elected to the presidency in a landslide. The progressive military leader of 1944 continued Arévalo's reforms, and began an ambitious land-reform program, known as Decree 900. Under it, the uncultivated portions of large land-holdings were expropriated in return for compensation, and redistributed to poverty-stricken agricultural laborers. Approximately 500,000 people benefited from the decree. The majority of them were indigenous people, whose forebears had been dispossessed after the Spanish invasion. Árbenz's policies ran afoul of the United Fruit Company, which lost some of its uncultivated land. The company lobbied the US government for the overthrow of Árbenz, and the US State Department responded by engineering a coup under the pretext that Árbenz was a communist. Carlos Castillo Armas took power at the head of a military junta, provoking the Guatemalan Civil War. The war lasted from 1960 to 1996, and saw the military commit genocide against the indigenous Maya peoples and widespread human rights violations against civilians.

  1. ^ Gleijeses 1991, p. 3.
  2. ^ Forster 2001, pp. 29–32.

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