As the twentieth century wore on, so
the pressure for political change
increased. Power still remained in
the hands of a tiny minority of the
landed and urban elite, leaving the
professional and working classes of
the rapidly expanding cities
unrepresented. From 1890, a new
party, the
Radical Civic Union
(Unión Cívica Radical or UCR),
agitated for reform but was excluded
from power. A sea change came with
the introduction of
universal
manhood suffrage and secret
balloting by the reformist
conservative president, Roque Sáenz
Peña, in 1912. This saw the victory
of the first radical president,
Hipólito Yrigoyen , in 1916, and
ushered in thirteen unbroken years
of radicalism, under him and his
associate, Marcelo T. de Alvear.
Soon after World War I, growth
picked up again, with the expansion
of manufacturing industry, but the
benefits of economic growth were far
from equally distributed. Serious
confrontations between police and
urban strikers in Buenos Aires led
to numerous deaths in the
Semana
Trágica - or Tragic Week - of
1919. This was followed by the
1920-21
rural workers' strikes
in southern Patagonia. Most strikers
were immigrant peon farmhands from
the impoverished Chilean island of
Chiloe but there was also a handful
of labour activists, Bolsheviks and
anarchists. A first strike had taken
place in 1920, sparked by the fact
that peons had been unable to cash
in or exchange the tokens with which
they were paid by wealthy sheep
barons - many of them British. The
protest expanded to include a raft
of other grievances concerning
working rights and conditions, and
radical factions latched onto what
was, at root, a fairly conservative
phenomenon. Shaken and surprised,
the estancia owners promised to
arrange payment, but when this was
not forthcoming, a second strike was
unleashed, this time releasing far
more in the way of pent-up anger and
frustration. Incidents of Luddite
vandalism, rape and acts of
violent lawlessness were used by
opponents of the strike to panic the
authorities, now better prepared,
into
brutal repression . The
final tragedy came with the massacre
in cold blood of 121 men by an army
batallion, at Estancia La Anita.
Later, the radicals introduced
social security and pro-labour
reforms.
By the end of the 1920s,
Argentina was the seventh richest
nation in the world, and
confidence was sky high. Britain
remained the country's major
investor and market - as revealed in
a confidential report by Sir Malcolm
Robertson, Ambassador to Argentina,
in 1929: "Argentina must be regarded
as an essential part of the British
Empire. We cannot get on without
her, nor she without us." This was a
nation that people predicted would
challenge the United States in
economic power. Within fifty years,
however, Argentina had fallen to the
status of a Third World power, and
the loss of this golden dream of
prosperity has haunted and perplexed
the Argentine conscience ever since.
This decline in status was not
constant, but the world
depression that followed the
Wall Street Crash of 1929 marked one
of the first serious blows. The
effects of the crash and the
collapse of export markets left the
radical regime reeling and
precipitated a military takeover
in 1930 - an inauspicious omen of
what was to come later in the
century. The military restored power
to the old, oligarchic elite, who
ruled through a succession of
coalition governments that gained a
reputation for fraud and electoral
corruption. Economic changes
continued to shift away from the
agrarian sector during this period,
and by the late 1930s, the value of
the manufacturing industry overtook
that of agriculture for the first
time. Immigration continued apace,
with one important group being Jews,
fleeing persecution in Germany.