Vicente Lombardo
Toledano (1894-1968) was a Mexican university professor, Marxist intellectual,
and politician. He was a leader in national and international labor movements,
the founder and head of the Popular party, and the author of numerous books and
articles.
Vicente Lombardo
Toledano was born in Tezlutlán ,
Puebla , on July 16, 1894, the son
of middle-class parents. He enrolled simultaneously in the programs offered in
the Law School and in the School of Higher Studies (philosophy and letters) of
the National University of Mexico and received his licentiate in law (1919),
master's degree (1920), and doctorate (1933). During these years he also became
an attorney at Law.
In 1917 Toledano
obtained a professorship at the Mexican
Popular University
and from 1918 until 1933 was professor of law and philosophy at the National
University of Mexico. In 1933, when he was expelled from the university for his
radical views, he founded his own university, devoted to the education of workers
and peasants. In 1936 this institution emerged as the Universidad Obrera, with
Toledano as rector, a position he held until the 1960s.
During the early
years of the Mexican Revolution, Toledano, a liberal and socially conscious
intellectual, supported the revolution. In 1923 he became governor of the state
of Puebla . In
1926 and 1928 he was elected federal deputy.
Labor Leader
By this time
Toledano had developed a vivid interest in labor problems and had become active
in labor organizations. In 1923 he became a member of the central committee of
the most important labor confederation, the Confederación Regional Obrera
Mexicana (CROM). He remained active in CROM until the early 1930s, when the
organization disintegrated as a result of government undermining, internal
dissensions, and lack of labor support. In 1932 Toledano organized the General
Confederation of Workers and Peasants (CGOC), which united most of the former
CROM unions, and in 1936 he founded and became first secretary general of the Confederation
of Mexican Workers (CTM).
With the support
of President Lázaro Cárdenas the CTM grew into the largest and most important
labor organization in the country. It abandoned craft unionism for industrial
organization, and its principal centers of strength were located in the
railroad, mining, electrical, and petroleum industries. As membership
increased, so did the political and economic power of CTM. The organization
benefited from the widespread nationalism prevalent in Mexico and from its close cooperation with the
Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI), Mexico 's ruling party. In 1938
Toledano tried to extend his power over labor throughout the continent by
organizing the Confederation of Latin American Workers (CTAL).
His Ideology
Toledano's
participation in the labor movement was instrumental in developing his
ideology. He became initially an evolutionary socialist in the tradition of the
Second International and later a Marxist. In his resignation speech from CROM
on Sept. 19, 1932, Toledano explained that he would continue to be "a
radical Marxist, although not a Communist" and that he would remain an
internationalist and an opponent of chauvinistic nationalism. He claimed that
the most important goals of the Mexican Revolution— economic independence, a
higher standard of living, and equitable distribution of wealth—could be
reached only if Mexico socialized the ownership of the means of production and
planned its economic development. Prior to his conversion to Marxism, he had
called for moral improvement through education as a means of realizing human
ideals. But as he came to accept Marxism, he emphasized profound changes in
society and in the material conditions of Mexicans.
Journalist and
Party Leader
After he
completed his term as secretary general of the CTM in 1940, he turned to
journalism. In June 1938 he founded and became director of the daily El
Popular. In 1946 he founded the Marxist review Documentos, which was devoted to
questions of philosophy, economics, and politics. He felt that Mexico needed a
new revolutionary vehicle to carry on its struggle; thus in 1948 he founded the
Partido Popular (PP). The party accepted as its goal the establishment of a
people's democracy which would aid in the construction of socialism in Mexico . He ran
unsuccessfully for the presidency in the 1952 elections. In 1960 the party
formally adopted the principles of Marxism-Leninism and changed its name to
Partido Popular Socialista (PPS).
Toledano died in
Further
Toledano's own
works are helpful, although all are in Spanish. Robert P. Millon, Vicente
Lombardo Toledano: Mexican Marxist (1966), is a complete study of Toledano's
ideas. Information on him is also in William C. Townsend, Lázaro Cárdenas:
Mexican Democrat (1952).