União Operária Nacional | |
UON logo, with its motto "Bread and Liberty" | |
| Abbreviation | UON |
|---|---|
| Successor | General Confederation of Labour |
| Established | 17 March 1914; 111 years ago (1914-03-17) |
| Dissolved | 13 September 1919; 106 years ago (1919-09-13) |
| Type | National trade union centre |
| Headquarters | Calçada do Combro, 38,Lisboa |
| Location | |
| Membership | 60,000 (1914) |
General Secretary | Evaristo Esteves(1917–1919) |
Publication |
|
| Part ofa series on |
| Syndicalism |
|---|
|
TheNational Workers' Union (Portuguese:União Operária Nacional;[a] UON) was aPortuguesetrade union federation. Established by a coalition ofsyndicalists andsocialists, in the wake of a strike wave that followed the1910 revolution, the UON was the first trade union centre to unite workers across different industries from throughout the country. The UON launched a series of strike actions following thePortuguese entry into World War I, which radicalised the union towardsanarcho-syndicalism. By 1917, the UON was calling for revolution, backed by its powerfulconstruction workers' union. In November 1918, the UON carried out a nationalgeneral strike, but it was defeated by the state. The following year, the UON was reorganised into theGeneral Confederation of Labour (CGT), which took over its structures and activities.
During the late 19th century, trade unions in Portugal were largely dominated by thePortuguese Socialist Party (PSP), whilePortuguese anarchists held a comparatively minor amount of influence.[2] From the 1890s,anarcho-syndicalists steadily gained more influence over the trade unions from the socialists, following theanti-political example of therevolutionary syndicalists inFrance.[3] By the turn of the 20th century,strike actions anddirect actions were increasing in frequency, as more trade unions broke out ofreformist control.[3] In 1909, anarcho-syndicalists inLisbon held a congress of trade unions andcooperatives, during which they demanded theeight-hour day, established a General Confederation of Labour (CGT) and set themselves the goal of bringing the production of essential goods underworkers' control.[3] In 1911, syndicalists inPorto established the General Union of Labour (UGT).[4]
By the second syndicalist congress in May 1911, which was supported by the syndicalist unions in both Lisbon and Porto, syndicalism had become the dominant force in the Portuguese labour movement.[5] After the monarchy was overthrown in the5 October 1910 revolution, a massive strike wave broke out, lasting throughout the first year of thePortuguese Republic.[6] In 1912, after 20,000 agricultural workers inÉvora went on strike, industrial workers in Lisbon declared ageneral strike in solidarity with them. An armed workers' uprising in the capital resulted in the city falling under workers' control, but it was ultimately suppressed.[7] In thepolitical repression that followed, socialists and syndicalists sought to repair ties and agreed to hold the first national workers' congress.[8]
In 1914, the national workers' congress was held inTomar.[9] Attending delegates represented 103 trade unions,[10] four regional federations and the national federations of metal and agricultural workers, which altogether accounted for 60,000 workers. Although in the majority, the revolutionary syndicalist delegates offered concessions towards themoderates, in the interest of uniting the trade union movement.[11] Together, the anarcho-syndicalist and socialist delegates established the National Workers' Union (Portuguese:União Operária Nacional; UON).[12] United under the UON were socialist trade unions, including that of the tin welders in the canning industry, as well as radicals in the cork workers', railway workers', barbers' and shoe cleaners' unions.[11]
Due to its internal dissonance, the UON initially struggled to accomplish its tasks, with its newspaperUnião Operária only publishing two issues.[11] Following the outbreak ofWorld War I, as living conditions in Portugal deteriorated, workers began to resist the increasing cost of living and rising unemployment, often through spontaneous direct actions. In September 1914, workers were killed during unrest in Lisbon. In the spring of 1915, unemployed workers occupied theMinistry of Agriculture and destroyed the building.[13] Together with the Rural Workers' Association (ATR), the UON organised a series of protests against the rising cost of living throughout the first years of the war.[14] Riots and strikes increased in frequency following thePortuguese entry into the war in 1916.[15] UON memberManuel Joaquim de Sousa [pt] also attended ananti-militarist congress inGalicia, where syndicalists from around Europe discussed an international general strike to end the war.[16]
In January 1916, the central council of the UON began to consider proposals to stage a general strike against the rising cost of living. That same month, the union's construction workers organisedlooting in theCampo de Ourique neighbourhood of Lisbon, culminating in a riot that ended in a shoot-out with the police.[17] In March 1916, the UON was banned by the government ofBernardino Machado, although this only resulted in the further radicalisation of the labour movement.[18] As the price and scarcity of bread increase,food riots likewise increased in frequency and scale, many with the direct involvement of the UON.[19] By 1917, the revolutionary syndicalist faction had gained dominance within the UON, as was reflected at its national convention.[20] In the spring of 1917, several workers' conferences were held in Lisbon and Porto, which brought together 176 trade unions, 4 industrial federations and numerous left-wing newspapers and cooperatives. Among the issues discussed were the organisation of workers, proposals for peace and the cost of living crisis; on the latter, the conferences concluded that government intervention was incapable of solving the crisis.[17]
At the forefront of the UON during this period was its construction workers' federation,[21] which had taken a staunchly anarcho-syndicalist orientation.[22] After a series of riots led by construction workers,[23] the police raided the federation's offices and arrested its members.[24] In May 1917, Machado declaredmartial law and suspended the constitution in Lisbon, which provoked further protests and riots, leading to shoot-outs with the police and mass arrests.[25] The UON called a general strike in Lisbon, in solidarity with the construction workers.[26] The general strike was successful,[26] managing to secure the return of the offices to the federation, the release of arrested construction workers[27] and a 50% wage increase.[28]
In September 1917, when the government imprisoned striking postal workers and began mobilising the military, the UON called another general strike, forcing the government to back down and release the workers.[29] Following negotiations withAfonso Costa, the UON brought an end to its campaign against the government, although protests and riots continued.[23] As food and fuel supplies waned further, Machado warned the French diplomatÉmile Daeschner that Lisbon was on the brink of collapse.[29]
By 1918, the UON had been reorganised and reached the peak of its organisational capacity, as the outbreak of theRussian Revolution and theestablishment of a dictatorship bySidónio Pais raised revolutionary sentiments among Portuguese workers.[30] Pais initially sought the support of the trade unions, promising to release syndicalists from prison or exile and implement acorporatist reform package in collaboration with the unions.[31] When the price of food rose, Pais requisitioned foodstuffs from private warehouses and establishedstate ownership over food distribution.Júlio Botelho Moniz attempted to secure the UON's support for this measure by proposing that the unions take over the sale of food, but the workers refused to form such a pact with the dictatorship.[32] When Pais later refused to implement his promised reform programme, in May 1918, the UON held a series ofpolitical demonstrations demanding that the reforms be put in place.[33] The UON was subsequently banned from holding meetings by Pais,[34] who ordered the exile of its president to the African colonies.[32] In response, the UON declared that:[11]
The situation of the workers is unbearable and demands immediate measures [...] The workers therefore demand the right to take part in consumption. [...] It is not reforms which are important, but revolutions. [...] However, as long as the necessary revolution does not take place, the workers have only one way of ensuring their existence: the permanent struggle for higher wages.
In May 1918, the UON began planning for a nationwide general strike with the goal of opposing the rising cost of living.[35] The construction workers' federation went further and called for a revolution.[26] When the revolutionary general strike began on 18 November 1918,[36] the end of the war one week earlier had already calmed many people's revolutionary sentiments and the government had pre-emptively arrested the UON's executive committee.[31] Large amounts of southern Portugal were brought to a standstill, while in Lisbon, the strike was supported by printers, furniture makers and construction workers.[27] The strike was also joined by agricultural workers inAlentejo, who attacked farmhouses and clashes with police.[37] But workers in northern Portugal failed to join the strike, and by 22 November, it was over.[27] One month after the failure of the strike, Sidónio Pais wasassassinated, bringing an end to the dictatorship.[31]
Despite the defeat, trade unions continued to take action into 1919, as unemployment and the cost of living continued to rise even after the end of the war. That year, trade unions managed to secure the eight-hour day in several sectors of the Portuguese economy.[26] On 23 February 1919, the UON published the first issue of its periodicalA Batalha, which grew in readership to achieve the third largest circulation of a Portuguese newspaper.[38] The paper included articles about the trade union movement and workplace issues, as well as subjects likenaturism andanti-colonialism.[39] ThroughA Batalha, the UON publicised the situation of its members that had been deported to the African colonies after the general strike and successfully campaigned for their return.[40]
At the second national workers' congress, held inCoimbra in September 1919,[41] the UON was reorganised into theGeneral Confederation of Labour (CGT), a newnational trade union confederation.[42] The CGT was dominated by anarcho-syndicalists,[43] who saw the organisation as the nucleus for the administration of a future socialist society.[44] The confederal structure of the CGT was more or less the same as that of the UON, although the CGT differed ideologically from the UON, as it sought to completely marginalise the PSP from the labour movement.[45] The CGT also took over publication ofA Batalha, which itmodernised and expanded its scope of article inclusion.[46]
{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of July 2025 (link)