This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(January 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
José María Gil-Robles | |
|---|---|
| Leader of theConfederación Española de Derechas Autónomas | |
| In office November 1933 – 19 April 1937 | |
| Member of theCortes Generales | |
| In office 28 June 1931 – 17 July 1936 | |
| Constituency | Salamanca |
| Minister of War | |
| In office 6 May 1935 – 14 December 1935 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones de León (1898-11-27)November 27, 1898 |
| Died | September 13, 1980(1980-09-13) (aged 81) |
| Political party | CEDA(1933–1937) Christian Democratic Party(1977) |
José María Gil-Robles y Quiñones de León (Salamanca, 27 November 1898 –Madrid, 13 September 1980) was a Spanish politician, leader of theCEDA, and a prominent figure in the period leading up to theSpanish Civil War. He served as Minister of War from May to December 1935. In the 1936 elections, the CEDA was defeated, and support for Gil-Robles and his party evaporated. Gil-Robles was unwilling to struggle withFrancisco Franco for power and in April 1937, he announced the dissolution of CEDA, and went into exile. Abroad, he negotiated with Spanish monarchists to try to arrive at a common strategy for taking power in Spain. In 1968, he was named a professor of theUniversity of Oviedo and published his bookNo fue posible la paz ('Peace Was Not Possible'). After the death of Franco and the end of his regime, Gil-Robles became one of the leaders of the "Spanish Christian Democracy" party, which however failed to win support inthe Spanish general elections in 1977.
José Maria Gil-Robles was born inSalamanca on 27 November 1898. He was the son ofEnrique Gil Robles, a conservative Spanish law scholar and aCarlist theorist, whose ancestors werehidalgos fromLeón. Carlism was a traditionalist political movement in Spain whose goal was to establishing an alternative branch of the Bourbon dynasty.
José María Gil-Robles received his master's degree in 1919, and in 1922, he gained by examination the chair of political law in theUniversity of La Laguna (Tenerife).
During the dictatorship ofMiguel Primo de Rivera, he was secretary of the Catholic-Agrarian National Confederation and member of the Writing Council ofEl Debate. After the declaration of theSecond Spanish Republic, he participated in and led theAcción Nacional (National Action) party, later renamedAcción Popular (Popular Action).
In the elections of 1931, he was chosen as a deputy in theCortes forSalamanca. During the period of the Republic, he maintained the posture of "accidentalism": whether Spain was a monarchy or republic was less important than the law's compatibility with religious principles.

Gil-Robles formed theSpanish Confederation of the Autonomous Right (CEDA), a conservative Catholic party, the political heir to Ángel Herrera Oria's Acción Popular and fought for the "affirmation and defence of the principles of Christian civilization". The CEDA won the largest number of seats inelections of November 1933, and Gil-Robles was thus the head of the largest party in the Cortes. However, to avoid conflicts with leftist parties, PresidentNiceto Alcalá-Zamora investedAlejandro Lerroux, leader of theRadical Republican Party, as prime minister instead of Gil-Robles.
The appointment of three CEDA ministers to the cabinet in 1934, triggered the leftistAsturian miners' strike that rose, ultimately unsuccessfully, against the government of the Republic. Gil-Robles served as Minister of War under Lerroux from May to December 1935.
During the February1936 Spanish general election, the CEDA formed the largest part of the National Front coalition, which also included Alfonsine monarchists andCarlists. Gil-Robles campaigned under the sloganTodo el poder para el Jefe ("All the power to the Chief"), and while he himself was reelected to the Cortes, the conservative National Front narrowly lost the election, with power swinging to the left. The CEDA itself lost ground, winning 88 seats, fewer than the 115 it had won in 1933.
Following the narrow victory of the leftistPopular Front and the defeat of the CEDA, support for Gil-Robles and his party declined, losing both votes and membership to theFalange party, founded in 1934, whose share of the vote had been very small in the 1936 elections. Bitterly disillusioned with the failure of theirjefe to win the election, the CEDA's youth groupJuventudes de Acción Popular went overen masse to the Falange.[citation needed]
In the following months and in the volatile situation that arose, Gil-Robles was well aware that acoup was being prepared against the government. Despite his later insistence that he had no part in the coup, the CEDA leader was kept informed of each stage of the plot, and members of his party played important liaison roles, facilitating contact between military and civilian plotters. Gil-Robles himself authorized the transfer of 500,000 pesetas of CEDA electoral funds to GeneralEmilio Mola's military insurgents.[1]

With the beginning of the Spanish Civil War, following the uprising on 17 July 1936, Gil-Robles found himself unwilling or unable to struggle withFrancisco Franco for power. Franco himself was determined not to have competing right-wing parties in Spain, and in April 1937 Gil-Robles announced the dissolution of CEDA. After the Civil War, Gil-Robles went into exile. Abroad, he negotiated with Spanish monarchists to try to arrive at a common strategy for taking power in Spain.
In 1968, he was named a professor of theUniversity of Oviedo and published his bookNo fue posible la paz ('Peace Was Not Possible').
After the death of Franco and the end of his regime, Gil-Robles became one of the leaders of theSpanish Christian Democracy party, which won little support inthe Spanish general elections in 1977.
Gil-Robles' son,José María Gil-Robles, was born on 17 June 1935, in Madrid. Like his father, he entered politics, serving as a member of the European Parliament in theEuropean People's Party group, and as President of theEuropean Parliament from 1997 to 1999.
| Part ofa series on |
| Conservatism in Spain |
|---|
Literature |
Parties
|
Gil-Robles is a unique and controversial figure in the history of Spanish politics. The nature of his political beliefs during the Second Republic either greatly fluctuated or were tailored to his audience, as he is recorded as making many statements that appear contradictory. This is certainly reflected in the nature of his party, the CEDA, which attracted support from both moderate Catholic republicans[citation needed] and avowed right-wing monarchists.[citation needed]
The controversy surrounding him has been best articulated by the historiansPaul Preston and Richard Robinson: