Frente Obrero

FO poster. Slogan reads 'Negotiate with the workers - not the contra!'

Frente Obrero (Spanish for 'Workers Front'), a national trade union centre in Nicaragua. FO was founded circa 1972-74, as the trade union wing of the pro-Albanian MAP-ML.

When the National Reconstruction Government was formed on July 19, 1979, FO had one of 33 representatives in the Council of State.[1] As of 1983, it was mainly active in the construction and sugar cane sectors.[2]

Adopting a hardline, anti-revisionist policy on the Sandinistas, starting in 1980 strikes led by the Front occurred in the private sugar mills of San Antonio and Monterrosa, while the Front called for 100% salary increases, started a series of occupations of privately owned lands and industries, sabotaged government-led economic efforts, and advocated the development of "another civil war, this time against the Sandinista Front."[3] Its base of support, however, gradually declined from thereon.

It was dissolved in 1986.

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-06-06. Retrieved 2007-06-14.
  2. Revista Envío - El sindicalismo nicaragüense frente a la agresión y la defensa
  3. George Black, Triumph of the People: The Sandinista Revolution in Nicaragua, New York: ZED Press, 1981, p. 337.
  • "Labor Relations during the Sandinista Government" by Carlos Alá Santiago Rivera in Caribbean Studies, Vol. 24, No. 3/4 (1991), pp. 242-243.
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