- Ploughmen's Front
The Ploughmen's Front ( _ro. Frontul Plugarilor) was a
Romania n left-wing agrarian-inspired political organisation ofplough men, founded at Deva in 1933 and led byPetru Groza . At its peak in 1946, the Front had over 1 million members. [Ştefan, p.10]History
Begun in
Hunedoara County , it quickly spread into theBanat , and then into the other regions of Romania. Groza, who had been a minister inAlexandru Averescu 's People's Party cabinet (1926), [Cioroianu, p.150, 151] aimed to improve the situation of the peasantry (which he believed had been betrayed by the main agrarian group, theNational Peasants' Party ), [Cioroianu, p.150, 151; Hitchins, p.390] calling for asocial security program in the countryside andtax reform favourable to small holdings. [Hitchins, p.390-391] The group was also republican in ambitions, probably from the moment it was created (before 1940, Groza was recorded to have said "my last king wasDecebalus , after whose death I became a republican"). [Groza, in Cioroianu, p.165]In 1935, the organisation aligned itself with the outlawed
Romanian Communist Party (PCR), an agreement inspired by the Stalinist "Popular Front " doctrine and signed inŢebea (after negotiations overseen by Scarlat Callimachi). [Frunză, p.115]During this period, the Ploughmen's Front never obtained more than 0.30% of the vote. [Hitchins, p.391] Outlawed together with all parties in 1938, through a law passed by the authoritarian regime of King Carol II, it remained active in clandestinity during the dictatorial rule of
Ion Antonescu (when Groza was detained in 1943-1944), [Betea, "În umbra..."] and surfaced after its fall in 1944 and the start of Soviet ascendancy and influence ("seeRomania during World War II "). [Betea, "În umbra..."]In October of that year, it joined other the PCR-led "National Democratic Front" (FND), alongside the Union of Patriots, the Union of Hungarian Workers, the
Socialist Peasants' Party , and the Romanian Social Democratic Party (the Ploughmen's Front absorbed the Socialist Peasants' Party one month later). [Cioroianu, p.154]In February 1945, although represented inside the
Nicolae Rădescu cabinet (as it had been in theConstantin Sănătescu one) it took part in violent incidents that led to its fall. [Cioroianu, p.159-162; Hitchins, p.507-508] Groza, who was first considered for high political office in late 1944, [Cioroianu, p.152-153] led the third cabinet after the fall of Antonescu (formed onMarch 6 ,1945 ); while the government was maneuvered by the PCR, the Ploughmen's Front did hold the Ministry of Agriculture and Royal Domains, which was assigned toRomulus Zăroni , [Cioroianu, p.161; Frunză, p.116, 187] and that of Culture and Arts, which was assigned toMihai Ralea . [Cioroianu, p.154, 161] In late 1947,Stanciu Stoian became another one of the party's leading members to be presiding over a ministry — that of Religious Affairs; [Cioroianu, p.159] additionally,Octav Liveazeanu became head on the Information Ministry.The party ran on a single platform with the PCR during the 1946 general election, which the Groza cabinet won through large-scale
electoral fraud , [Frunză, p.287-292; Hitchins, p.517; Ştefan, p.9-10; Tismăneanu, p.288] and had PCR activists such asConstantin Agiu [Cioroianu, p.159; Frunză, p.117] andMihail Roller [Frunză, p.377] among its nominal members. It thus played an active part in the proceedings leading to the creation ofCommunist Romania .At the time, PCR leaders began using Antonescu's 1943 crackdown on the Front as an instrument in inner-party fights: after
General Secretary Gheorghiu-Dej had ordered his predecessorŞtefan Foriş to be abducted and held in secrecy, it was alleged that Foriş' collaboratorRemus Koffler had functioned as an agent for the former secret service (Siguranţa Statului ), and that he had engineered Groza's arrest. [Betea, "În umbra..."]Nevertheless, relations between the Front and Communists were tested at times: after its first congress (July 1945), Groza's party called for the preservation of small, privately-owned, agricultural plots and voluntary
cooperative farming instead of thecollectivization advocated by the PCR; [Cioroianu, p.162; Hitchins, p.511] in the period known as the "Royal strike" (beginning in the autumn of 1945 and marked by King Mihai I's refusal to sign his name to legislation advocated by the government), Groza, urged on by Zăroni andMihail Ghelmegeanu , objected to Soviet pressures on the monarch and even threatenedVasile Luca that he would withdraw support for the PCR. [Cioroianu, p.161-162] Eventually, the Front gave in to Communist demands [Cioroianu, p.162] (as a politician whose career survived the group's demise, Groza continued to sporadically clash with the PCR). [Cioroianu, p.165-166]In July 1947, the Front was joined by
Nicolae D. Cornăţeanu and other members of the defunct "National Union for Work and Reconstruction" (a small political grouping formed byConstantin Argetoianu ), [Otu] and, in 1948, it absorbedAnton Alexandrescu 's faction (a splinter group of the National Peasants' Party). [Videnie, p.46]The Ploughmen's Front ceased to exist when it dissolved itself in 1953. According to the 1991 testimony of former PCR leader
Gheorghe Apostol , the latter action was instigated by the main party; he also indicated that, in retrospect, Gheorghiu-Dej had found such measures taken against pluralism to be regrettable ("Dej himself said: «What a stupid thing we have done! We could at least have allowed the Ploughmen's Front to exist!»). [Apostol, in Betea, "Engima..."]Notes
References
*Lavinia Betea,
**ro icon [http://www.jurnalul.ro/articol_71167/enigma_partidului_unic.html "Engima partidului unic" ("The Riddle of the Single Party")] , in "Jurnalul Naţional ", January 30, 2007
**ro icon [http://www.jurnalul.ro/articol_45047/_in_umbra_celulei_.html "«În umbra celulei»" ("«In the Cell's Shadow»")] , in "Jurnalul Naţional", January 31, 2006
*Adrian Cioroianu , "Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc" ("On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism"),Editura Curtea Veche , Bucharest, 2005
*Victor Frunză, "Istoria stalinismului în România" ("The History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990
*Keith Hitchins , "România, 1866-1947", Humanitas, Bucharest, 1998 (translation of the English-language edition "Rumania, 1866-1947", Oxford University Press, USA, 1994)
*ro icon [http://www.itcnet.ro/history/archive/mi2000/current5/mi37.htm Petre Otu, "1946-1947. Se pregăteşte guvernul Argetoianu!" ("1946-1948. An Argetoianu Government Is Under Preparation!")] , in "Magazin Istoric", May 2000
*M. Ştefan, "În umbra Cortinei de Fier" ("In the Shadow of theIron Curtain "), in "Magazin Istoric", November 1995
*Vladimir Tismăneanu , "Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism",University of California Press , 2003, ISBN 0-520-23747-1
*Nicolae Videnie, "«Alegerile» din martie 1948: epilogul listelor electorale alternative. Obsesia unanimităţii — primii paşi" ("The «Elections» of March 1948: an Epilogue to Alternative Electoral Lists. Unanimity Obsession — The First Steps Taken"), in "Dosarele Istoriei", 11/V, 2000
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