Uruguay THE NEW COUNTRY, 1903-33
Contrasting buildings in Montevideo's Old City
Courtesy Edmundo Fores
Batlle y Ordóñez and the Modern State
The election of José Batlle y Ordóñez as the first
Uruguayan
president in the twentieth century (1903-07, 1911-15)
marked the
beginning of a period of extraordinary change in the
country. The
son of former President Lorenzo Batlle y Grau, Batlle y
Ordóñez
was a member of the Colorado Party, founder of the
newspaper
El Día (in 1886), and an active opponent of
militarism.
The dominant political event during the first
administration
of Batlle y Ordóñez was another National Party
insurrection in
1904, led by Saravia. After nine months of fierce fighting
and
Saravia's death, it ended with the Treaty of Aceguá
(1904). The
civil war triumph of Batlle y Ordóñez and the Colorados
meant the
end of the coparticipation politics that began in 1872,
the
political and administrative unification of the country,
the
consolidation of the state, and, most profoundly, the end
of the
cycle of civil wars that had persisted throughout the
nineteenth
century.
The period's most significant economic change occurred
in
meat processing. In 1905 the first shipment of frozen
beef,
produced by a refrigeration plant (frigorífico)
established by local investors two years before, was
exported to
London in a refrigerated ship. Uruguay now entered the age
of
refrigeration, making possible the diversification of one
of its
main export items and giving the country access to new
markets.
With the inauguration of the modernized port of Montevideo
in
1909, Uruguay could compete with Buenos Aires as a
regional trade
center.
Claudio Williman (1907-11), the president's handpicked
candidate, succeeded Batlle y Ordóñez, who sailed for
Europe,
where he spent the next four years studying governmental
systems.
In some respects, Williman's administration was considered
more
conservative than that of Batlle y Ordóñez, although
Batllists
maintained their political influence. Williman tried to
ensure
political peace by enacting electoral laws in 1907 and
1910 that
increased political representation of minority opposition
parties. Williman also ensured peace with Uruguay's
northern
neighbor by signing a border treaty with Brazil, thereby
putting
an end to pending litigation and disputes dating back half
a
century.
The National Party, disappointed with Williman's
electoral
laws and with the announcement that Batlle y Ordóñez would
once
again run for president, did not participate in the
elections
held in 1910. This helped foster the emergence of two new
political parties: the Catholic-oriented Civic Union of
Uruguay
(Unión Cívica del Uruguay--UCU) and the Marxist-inspired
Socialist Party of Uruguay (Partido Socialista del
Uruguay--PSU).
Church and state relations also underwent changes. The
government
passed a divorce law in 1907, and in 1909 it eliminated
religious
education in public schools.
In 1911 Batlle y Ordóñez was reelected to the
presidency. A
non-Marxist social democrat, he set about modernizing the
country, taking into account the aspirations of emerging
social
groups, including industrialists, workers, and the middle
class.
Writing and promoting progressive social legislation,
Batlle y
Ordóñez fought for the eight-hour workday (enacted in 1915
under
the administration of his successor), unemployment
compensation
(1914), and numerous pieces of social legislation. Some of
these
would be approved years later, such as retirement pensions
(1919)
and occupational safety (1920)
(see Batllism
, ch. 3).
Batlle y Ordóñez firmly believed that the principal
public
services had to be in the hands of the state to avoid
foreign
remittances that weakened the balance of payments and to
facilitate domestic capital accumulation. In a relatively
short
period of time, his administration established a
significant
number of autonomous entities. In 1911 it nationalized
BROU, a
savings and loan institution that monopolized the printing
of
money. In 1912 the government created the State Electric
Power
Company, monopolizing electric power generation and
distribution
in the country; it nationalized the Mortgage Bank of
Uruguay; and
it founded three industrial institutes for geology and
drilling
(coal and hydrocarbon explorations), industrial chemistry,
and
fisheries. In 1914 it purchased the North Tramway and
Railway
Company, later to become the State Railways
Administration.
Attempts to change the agrarian productive structure
were not
as successful. Influenced by United States economist Henry
George, Batlle y Ordóñez thought that he could combat
extensive
landholdings by applying a progressive tax on land use and
a
surcharge on inheritance taxes. The agrarian reform plan
also
contemplated promoting colonization and farming. Very
little was
accomplished in this regard, however, partly because of
the
opposition of large landowners who created a pressure
group, the
Rural Federation (Federación Rural), to fight Batlle y
Ordóñez's
policies. The government did make one important
accomplishment
with regard to agriculture, namely, the creation of a
series of
government institutes dedicated to technological research
and
development in the fields of livestock raising, dairying,
horticulture, forestation, seeds, and fodder.
The government adopted a protectionist policy for
industry,
imposing tariffs on foreign products, favoring machinery
and raw
materials imports, and granting exclusive licensing
privileges to
those who started a new industry. Indigenous companies
sprang up,
but foreign capital--especially from the United States and
Britain--also took advantage of the legislation and came
to
control the meat industry. The growth of the
frigorífico
meat-processing industry also stimulated the interbreeding
of
livestock, Uruguay's main source of wealth.
Education policy was designed to take into account the
continuous inflow of European migrants. Although it
fluctuated,
immigration was significant until 1930. Furthermore,
education
was a key to mobility for the middle classes. The state
actively
sought to expand education to the greatest number of
people by
approving free high school education in 1916 and creating
departmental high schools throughout the country in 1912.
A
"feminine section" was created to foster mass attendance
of women
at the University of the Republic, where the number of
departments continued to expand.
The secularization process, initiated during the second
half
of the nineteenth century, was accelerated by Batlle y
Ordóñez's
anticlericalism. Uruguay banned crucifixes in state
hospitals by
1906 and eliminated references to God and the Gospel in
public
oaths in 1907. Divorce laws caused a confrontation between
church
and state. In addition to the 1907 and 1910 laws (divorce
with
cause and by mutual agreement), a law was passed in 1912
allowing
women to file for divorce without a specific cause, simply
because they wanted to.
Batlle y Ordóñez also proposed the institutional
reorganization of government in 1913. Essentially, he
wanted to
replace the presidency with a nine-member collegial
executive
(colegiado) inspired by the Swiss model
(see Constitutional Background
, ch. 4). This proposal caused an
immediate split in the Colorado Party. One sector opposed
the
political reform and also feared some of Batlle y
Ordóñez's
economic and social changes. Subsequently, these
dissidents, led
by Carlos Manini Ríos, founded a faction known as the
Colorado
Party-General Rivera (Riverism). The National Party, under
Luis
Alberto de Herrera, the leading opposition figure from
1920 to
his death in 1959, did not back Batlle y Ordóñez's
proposal
either.
Feliciano Viera (1915-19), a Colorado who was more
conservative than Batlle y Ordóñez, became president at
the time
of the debate between "collegialists" and
"anticollegialists."
During his mandate, elections were held for a constituent
assembly (July 30, 1916). The rules for this election
enabled the
National Party to ensure incorporation of many of the
principles
it advocated, such as the secret ballot, partial
proportional
representation, and universal male suffrage.
Batlle y Ordóñez and his political faction of the
Colorados
lost these first popular elections, but the Colorados
continued
to be the majority party, and the 1917 constitution, the
country's second, reflected many of the changes that had
taken
place under Batlle y Ordóñez. It separated church and
state,
expanded citizens' rights, established the secret ballot
and
proportional representation, and banned the death penalty.
It
also created autonomous state enterprises in the areas of
industry, education, and health. But in a bitter
compromise for
Batlle y Ordóñez, the executive was divided between the
president, who appointed the ministers of foreign affairs,
war,
and interior, and the nine-member colegiado, the
National
Council of Administration (Consejo Nacional de
Administración).
The latter, which included representatives from the party
that
received the second highest number of votes, the Blancos,
was
placed in charge of the ministries dealing with economic,
educational, and social policy.
President Viera, like many of Batlle y Ordóñez's
followers,
interpreted the 1916 electoral defeat as a direct
consequence of
previous policy. He thus announced a halt to economic and
social
reforms. Some of the old projects as well as some new
proposals
were approved, however, such as restrictions on night work
in
1918 and the creation in 1916 of a new autonomous entity,
the
Montevideo Port Authority, as known as the National
Administration of Ports (Administración Nacional de
Puertos--
ANP). Workers' strikes, however, were repressed severely.
Finally, in 1919 Viera, in disagreement with Batlle y
Ordóñez,
founded a dissident Colorado Party faction known as
Vierism.
Data as of December 1990
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