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The variety and volume of constitutional violations [committed by the leftists] in Spain between February and July 1936 were without precedent in the history of parliamentary regimes. They included:
- The great strike wave, featuring many strikes without practical goals but seeking instead to dominate property, often accompanied by violence and destruction.
- Illegal seizures of property, especially in the southern provinces, sometimes legalized ex post facto…
- A wave of arson and property destruction, especially in the south.
- Seizure of churches and church properties in the south and east.
- Major economic decline… with a severe stock market decline, flight of capital, and in some southern provinces the abandonment of cultivation, when the costs became greater than market value…
- Broad censorship, with severe limitations on freedom of expression and assembly.
- Several thousand arbitrary arrests…
- Virtual immunity for members of the (leftist) Popular Front parties, who were rarely arrested…
- Politicization of justice through the creation of a special tribunal to censor and purge the judiciary, as well as through regulations and policies to facilitate political arrests and to place rightist parties outside the law.
- Dissolution of rightist groups, beginning with the Falangists in March and the Catholic trade unions in May, and moving to the monarchist Renovacion Espanola in July.
- Increasing electoral coercion, culminating in the suppression or opposition activity in the special elections of May in Cuenca and Granada.
- Arbitrary municipal and provincial government, with most local administration placed in the hands of appointees of the central government. Municipal elections originally scheduled for March 31, 1936 were postponed sine die.
- Politicization and subversion of the security forces.
- Growth of political violence, albeit very unequal in its extent in different parts of the country…
Gil Robles sharply protested such unprecedented abuses, observing that every day he read in leftist newspapers declarations that “the enemy must be smashed” or one must “practice a policy of extermination.” He continued:
“I know that you are carrying out a policy of persecution, violence, and extermination against everything that is rightist. But you are profoundly mistaken: however great may be the violence, the reaction will be greater still. For everyone killed another combatant will rise up… You who today are fostering violence will become the victims of it. The phrase that revolutions, like Saturn, devour their own children is commonplace, but no less true for so being. Today you are complacent, because you see an adversary fall. But the day will come when the same violence that you have unleashed will be turned again to you.”
Stanley G. Payne, The Spanish Civil War (pp. 59-61)
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