Carnation Revolution Article Index for
Carnation
Website Links For
Carnation
 

Information About

Carnation Revolution





CONTEXT

In the beginning of the 1970s, the authoritarian regime of the '' Estado Novo '' continued to weigh heavily on the country, after a half-century of rule under António De Oliveira Salazar . After the Military Coup Of May 28, 1926 , Portugal implemented an authoritarian regime of fascist inspiration. In 1933, the regime was recast and renamed ''Estado Novo'' ("New State"), and Oliveira Salazar came to control the country until 1968, when he was incapacitated. Marcelo Caetano replaced him, and led the country until he was deposed on April 25, 1974.

Under the ''Estado Novo'', Portugal was not considered a democracy, whether by the opposition, by foreign observers, or even by the regime leaders themselves. There were formal elections and these were always contested by the opposition, who always accused the government of electoral fraud and of disrespecting its duty to remain impartial. During Caetano's reign, attempts at political reform were annihilated by the inertia of the regime. The ''Estado Novo'''s political police — the PIDE (''Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado''), later to become DGS (''Direcção Geral de Segurança''), and originally the PVDE (''Polícia de Vigilancia e Defesa do Estado'') — persecuted opponents of the regime.

The International context was not favourable to the Portuguese regime. The Cold War was near its peak, and Soviet interests were supporting the guerrillas in the Portuguese colonies, attempting to bring these under communist influence (which happened in 1975). The intransigence of the regime led to one of the worst decolonisation processes, with millions deported and the extension of the war for at least another 20 years in Angola and Mozambique .
The ''Estado Novo'' chose to occupy Portugal's colonies beyond the 1960s essentially because the maintenance of a colonial empire was part of the historical vision of the regime's ideologues. Despite objections in world forums such as the United Nations , Portugal maintained a policy of force and felt obliged to militarily defend its colonies against independence groups, particularly after India 's annexation of Portuguese enclaves Goa , Daman And Diu , in 1961.

Independence movements in the African colonies — Mozambique , Angola , Guinea-Bissau , São Tomé And Príncipe , and Cape Verde — were in revolt since the start of the 1960s, and forced the regime to invest more and more energy in a vain war of pacification as Portugal aimed to keep a strong hold on the rest of its colonial empire. Such a war contrasted with the actions of most European colonial powers, who were seeking to decolonise altogether. Young people driven by conscription and the officers engaged in this war were confronted by the regime's intransigence. The colonial war became a major cause for the revolution due to the dissent that it created in civil and military society.

The military sector that started the revolution was generally unhappy with the professional and personal situation, resulting from the apparent deadlock of the situation in the field and questions about a professional career.

Economically, the regime maintained a policy of Corporatism that resulted in the placement of a big part of the Portuguese economy in the hands of a few industrial groups. However, the economy was growing strongly, especially after the late 1950s, and Portugal co-founded EFTA , the OECD and NATO . The war in Africa cost the Portuguese state almost 40% of its annual budget throughout most of the conflict; this also contributed significantly to the impoverishment of the Portuguese economy, as money was diverted from infrastructural investments and education. Until the 1960s the country remained relatively poor, which stimulated emigration after WWII to fast growing, labour scarce west European countries. The regime was aging, seemingly lethargic in a world that was undergoing great cultural and intellectual change.


EVENTS

In February 1974, Caetano was obliged by the old guard to remove General António Spínola and his underlings as the General tried to change the direction of Portuguese colonial policy, which had become too expensive. The divisions of the powerful elite became visible, at which point the '' Movimento Das Forças Armadas '' (MFA, "Movement of Armed Forces"), a group of army officers, headed by Otelo Saraiva De Carvalho and joined by Salgueiro Maia , chose to lead a revolution. This movement was born in secrecy in 1973 through the conspiracy of some army officers of leftist tendencies who had been radicalized by the colonial war. Some say that Francisco Da Costa Gomes actually led the revolution.

There were two secret signals in the revolution: first the airing of the song '' E Depois Do Adeus '' ("After goodbye") by Paulo De Carvalho , Portugal's entry in the Eurovision Song Contest , which alerted the rebel captains and soldiers to start the revolution.

Next, on April 25, 1974 at 12:15 am, the national radio broadcast '' Grândola, Vila Morena '' (" Grândola , Grândola, the Moorish (or mixed race) town") a revolutionary song by Zeca Afonso . This was the signal that the MFA gave to take over strategic points of power in the country and "announced" that the revolution had started and nothing would stop it except "the possibility of a regime's repression".

Six hours later, the dictatorial regime caved in. Despite repeated appeals from the "captains of April" (of the MFA) on the radio inciting the population to stay at home, thousands of Portuguese descended on the streets, mixing themselves with the military insurgents. One of the central points of those gathering was the march of flowers in Lisbon, then richly stocked with carnations, which were in season. Some military insurgents would put these flowers in their gun-barrels; an image which was shown on television around the world. This would be the origin of the name of this "Carnation revolution".

Caetano found refuge in the main Lisbon military police station. This building was surrounded by the MFA, which pressured him to cede power to General Spínola . Both Caetano (the prime minister) and Americo Thomaz (the President) fled to Brazil . Caetano spent the rest of his life in Brazil, while Thomaz returned to Portugal a few years later.

The revolution was closely watched from neighbouring Spain , where Democrat s and Totalitarian s were planning for the Succession of Francisco Franco , who died a year later, in 1975.


CONSEQUENCES

The revolution in Portugal initiated the process which Political Scientist Samuel P. Huntington called the " Third Wave of democratisation;" a process of democratisation which then spread to Greece , Spain and Latin America . Soon after the 25th, all of the hundreds of political prisoners were liberated from prison. Exiled opposition political leaders, like Álvaro Cunhal and Mário Soares returned to the country in the following days and were received in apotheosis. One week later, May 1st was legally celebrated in the streets for the first time in many years. In Lisbon, about 1,000,000 people from all the country joined this occasion and listened to the speeches of Cunhal and Soares.

Portugal went through a turbulent period, commonly called the ''Ongoing Revolutionary Process'' (Portuguese: Processo Revolucionário em Curso, or PREC) that lasted until November 25 , 1975 , marked by a fight between the right and left. After a year, the First Free Election was carried out on April 25 , 1975 in order to write a new Constitution that would replace the Constitution of 1933 that ruled the country for the reign of the Estado Novo. In 1976, another Election was carried out and the first Constitutional government, led by Mário Soares, entered office. Meanwhile, the colonial war ended and the African colonies gained independence (The granting on independence to Mozambique was one of the major factors that led to the fall of Rhodesia four years later). The colony of East Timor also proclaimed its independence, but was invaded by Indonesia in 1975.

The decolonisation process, whose guidelines were approved with the Alvor Agreement , was generally marked by the handover of power, without free elections, to liberation movements supported by the Soviet Union and by the general disregard for the interests and property of the Portuguese-born or Portuguese-origin population.


FREEDOM DAY

Freedom Day on April 25 is a national Holiday in Portugal, with official and some popular commemorations, though some right-wing sectors of the population still regard the developments after the '' Coup D'état '' as pernicious for the country. On the other hand, some of the military leaders lament that the leftist inspiration of the uprising has since been abandoned. The carnation is the symbol of this revolution, since soldiers put these flowers in their guns, in what came to symbolise the Absence Of Violence in changing the regime in Portugal — a regime that had been one of the longest single right-wing party regimes of the 20th century.


EXTERNAL REFERENCES



SEE ALSO