Lázaro Cárdenas

Lázaro Cárdenas
Official presidential portrait, 1930s
51st President of Mexico
In office
1 December 1934 (1934-12-01)  30 November 1940 (1940-11-30)
Preceded byAbelardo L. Rodríguez
Succeeded byManuel Ávila Camacho
Secretary of National Defence
In office
1 September 1942  31 August 1945
PresidentManuel Ávila Camacho
Preceded byJesús Agustín Castro
Succeeded byFrancisco Luis Urquizo
Secretary of War and Navy
In office
1 January 1933  15 May 1933
PresidentAbelardo L. Rodríguez
Preceded byPablo Quiroga Escamilla
Succeeded byPablo Quiroga Escamilla
Governor of Michoacán
In office
1928–1932
Preceded byLuis Méndez
Succeeded byDámaso Cárdenas
President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
In office
16 October 1930  27 August 1931
Preceded byEmilio Portes Gil
Succeeded byManuel Pérez Treviño
Personal details
Born
José Lázaro Cárdenas del Río

(1895-05-21)21 May 1895
Jiquilpan, Michoacán, Mexico
Died19 October 1970(1970-10-19) (aged 75)
Mexico City, Mexico
Resting placeMonument to the Revolution
Mexico City, Mexico
Political partyInstitutional Revolutionary Party
Spouse
(m. 1932)
ChildrenCuauhtémoc Cárdenas
Alicia Cárdenas
OccupationStatesman, General
Signature
Military service
AllegianceMexico
Branch/serviceMexican Army
Years of service1913–1933
1941–1945
RankGeneral
CommandsMexican Revolution, World War II

Lázaro Cárdenas del Río (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈlasaɾo ˈkaɾðenas] ; 21 May 1895 – 19 October 1970) was a Mexican army officer and politician who served as president of Mexico from 1934 to 1940. Previously, he served as a general in the Constitutional Army during the Mexican Revolution and as Governor of Michoacán and President of the Institutional Revolutionary Party. He later served as the Secretary of National Defence. During his presidency, which is considered the end of the Maximato, he implemented massive land reform programs, led the expropriation of the country's oil industry, and implemented many key social reforms.

Born in Jiquilpan, Michoacán, to a working-class family, Cárdenas joined the Mexican Revolution and became a general in the Constitutionalist Army. Although he was not from the state of Sonora, whose revolutionary generals dominated Mexican politics in the 1920s, Cárdenas was hand-picked by Plutarco Elías Calles, Sonoran general and former president of Mexico, as a presidential candidate and won in the 1934 general election.

After founding the National Revolutionary Party (PNR) in the wake of the assassination of president-elect Álvaro Obregón, Plutarco Elías Calles had unofficially remained in power during the Maximato (1928–1934) and expected to maintain that role when Cárdenas took office. Cárdenas, however, out-maneuvered him politically and forced Calles into exile. He established the structure of the National Revolutionary Party, eventually renamed the Party of the Mexican Revolution (PRM), on the sectoral representation of peasant leagues, labor union confederations, and the Mexican Army. Cárdenas's incorporation of the army into the party structure was a deliberate move to diminish the power of the military and prevent their intervention in politics through coups d'état.

A left-wing economic nationalist, Cárdenas led the expropriation of the Mexican oil industry and the creation of the state-owned oil company Pemex in 1938. He implemented large-scale land reform programs in Mexico, redistributing large estates to smallholders in lands termed ejidos. He created the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN) and El Colegio de México (Colmex). His foreign policy supported and gave asylum to Republicans during the Spanish Civil War. An achievement of Cárdenas was his complete surrender of power in December 1940 to his successor, Manuel Ávila Camacho, who was a political moderate without a distinguished military record.

Cárdenas has been praised as "the greatest constructive radical of the Mexican Revolution", for implementing its ideals, but has also been criticized as an "authoritarian populist". He was the first Mexican president to serve for a sexenio, a practice that continues today. According to numerous opinion polls and analysts, Cárdenas is the most popular Mexican president of the 20th century.