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AD's wide margin of victory (in 1946 it drew 79 percent of the vote); in
1947, 73 percent) led its leaders to believe that they could push through a
highly progressive program without considering the conservative political
opposition. A new constitution was promulgated in 1947. The party's vigorous
pursuit of "social justice and better conditions for the workers" (as
stated in a decree by the 1945 junta that established a separate ministry of
labor) engendered widespread hostility within the business community, both
foreign and local. The overhaul of the 1943 petroleum law to assure the
government a 50 percent tax on the oil industry's profits intensified the
foreign oil companies' antagonism. The junta's aggressive campaign to expand
public education and its regulation of both public and private education
incensed the Roman Catholic Church. The church, whose dominant role in education
had heretofore gone unchallenged, now enlisted COPEI in a strident
antigovernment campaign.
The political polarization intensified following the inauguration of Rómulo
Gallegos as president on February 15, 1948. At that time, Venezuela's most
renowned author, Gallegos proved less than adroit as a politician. His signing
of AD's wide-ranging land reform bill in October pitted the nation's powerful
landowners against him, and his reduction of the military personnel in his
cabinet and advocacy of a reduced military budget alienated the armed forces. In
mid-November, the UPM issued an ultimatum to the president demanding that COPEI
share political authority with AD and that Betancourt, still AD leader, be sent
into exile. Gallegos refused, and on November 24, after barely ten months in
office, the military overthrew him in a nearly bloodless coup and exiled him
along with Betancourt and the rest of the AD leadership.
The three-man provisional military junta that assumed control of the
government was headed by Colonel Delgado. Delgado had joined the anti-AD
conspiracy only after Gallegos had rejected the UPM ultimatum and it was clear
that his fall was inevitable. Delgado had been a UPM coconspirator in 1945, and
had served as a member of the AD junta and as minister of defense under
Gallegos. The military junta's other two members, UPM conspirator Pérez Jiménez
and Luis Felipe Llovera Páez, were tachirenses who also held the rank
of colonel. The junta quickly set about undoing the reforms of the AD trienio.
It voided the 1947 constitution and restored the traditionalist 1936
constitution. The new military government outlawed AD and persecuted its
militants... ...labor failed to avert the November 1948 coup that brought Pérez Jiménez to
power.
Pérez Jiménez further alienated labor by allowing the immigration of
thousands of workers from Southern Europe. With the return to democracy in 1958,
however, organized labor returned to political prominence. All political parties
vied to obtain links to labor.
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