Rodolfo Sánchez Taboada
Rodolfo Sánchez Taboada (22 March 1895 – 2 May 1955) was a Mexican military officer and politician who served as secretary of the navy from 1952 until his death in 1955, during the presidency of Adolfo Ruiz Cortines. He previously served as the governor of the territory of Baja California from 1937 to 1944 and as president of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) from 1946 to 1952. Born in the state of Puebla, Sánchez Taboada joined the Constitutional Army during the Mexican Revolution. He rose through the ranks, supporting the government during several rebellions. He eventually became the governor of Baja California, at the time still a federal territory. He then became president of the PRI, becoming the first to serve a second term in the position. Sánchez Taboada implemented an anti-communist platform for the party and directed the successful presidential campaign of Ruiz Cortines in 1952. He also acted as a political mentor to Luis Echeverría, a future Mexican president. Family and educationRodolfo Sánchez Taboada was born on 22 March 1895 in San Sebastián Villanueva ,[1] in Acatzingo, Puebla.[2][3][4][5][a] His parents were Tirso "Charro" Sánchez Limón and Margarita Taboada.[1][3] He had two brothers, Ruperto and Tirso Sánchez Taboada. Ruperto was a federal deputy from Puebla from 1946 to 1949, and Tirso was a Supreme Court justice from 1941 to 1942.[2] The family were middle-class farmers.[9] Sánchez Taboada received his elementary education in San Sebastián Villanueva.[2] He completed his secondary education at the Colegio de San José and Hospicio de Puebla. He then attended the University of Puebla.[2][3][8] He completed two years of a pre-medical program at the university, but ended his studies in 1914 to fight in the Mexican Revolution.[2] He was married to Emma Cruz.[2] Their children were Rodolfo,[10][11] Margarita,[12] and Matilde "Maty" Sánchez Cruz.[13][14] Sánchez Taboada had three grandchildren through his son Rodolfo Sánchez Cruz; Laura Alicia, Manuel, and Rodolfo Sánchez Corro.[10] Though his daughter Matilde Sánchez Cruz, Sánchez Taboada had another grandson, Germán Sierra Sánchez.[13][14] Early careerMilitary career![]() In February 1913, during the Mexican Revolution, President Francisco I. Madero was overthrown by Victoriano Huerta. This inspired Sánchez Taboada to join the Constitutionalist forces, serving under Fortunato Maycotte.[3][8] He enrolled in the Heroic Military Academy on 10 November 1914 as a sub-lieutenant to join the medical corps.[3][15] He fought Villistas and Zapatistas in Morelos under the command of Col. Jesús Guajardo .[3][6][16] Sánchez Taboada participated in Guajardo's successful operation to assassinate Emiliano Zapata in Chinameca, Morelos[6][12][17] in 1919.[18] Sánchez Taboada is said by some to have been the one who gave Zapata the coup de grâce, according to the magazine Zeta.[6] Sánchez Taboada reported said that he "saw Zapata fall" and was part of the forces which "liquidated" Zapata.[19] He reportedly said this in conversation with Gonzalo N. Santos and Leobardo Reynoso, who stated that he was not at the Chinameca hacienda where Zapata was killed. Sánchez Taboada and Guajardo were reportedly promoted for taking part in the operation.[20] Sánchez Taboada supported General Álvaro Obregón's Plan of Agua Prieta[3][6][12] against President Venustiano Carranza in 1920.[21] He remained loyal to Obregón's government during the Delahuertista Rebellion[3][12] of 1923 to 1924[22] and to Emilio Portes Gil's government during the Escobar Rebellion[3][12] of 1929.[23] Sánchez Taboada achieved the rank of colonel on 4 October 1939.[2] After the end of his governorship in 1944, Sánchez Taboada returned to service in the army.[3] He was at the direct disposal of President Manuel Ávila Camacho from 1 August 1944 until 15 October 1945.[2] In 1950, a group of Zapatista veterans wrote in La Prensa that Sánchez Taboada should be removed from the army for his role in assassinating Zapata.[24] He was promoted to the rank of brigadier general on 1 November 1952.[2][3] Political beginningsThe Institutional Revolutionary Party (Spanish: Partido Revolucionario Institucional), or PRI,[b] was founded in 1929 by Plutarco Elías Calles. The party would rule Mexico uninterrupted from 1929 until 2000.[25] Sánchez Taboada was a founding member of the party.[10] Sánchez Taboada served as an assistant to President Lázaro Cárdenas in 1935. That same year, he also served as the budget director for the office of the presidency.[2] Governor of Baja CaliforniaAdministration![]() On 22 February of 1937, President Cárdenas discharged the governor of Baja California, Rafael Navarro Cortina, due to complaints of gambling resurfacing along the Mexico–United States border, and appointed Sánchez Taboada to serve as governor.[17][28][29] Sánchez Taboada assumed the office on 1 March 1937.[3][6] While Sánchez Taboada was serving as governor of Baja California, Manuel J. Contreras served as the military commander of the Northern District of Baja California, which left Sánchez Taboada in charge of civilian authorities and Contreras in charge of military authorities.[28][30] Like many northern governors, Sánchez Taboada supported Manuel Ávila Camacho for the PRI candidacy during the 1940 presidential election.[31] Ávila Camacho ultimately won the election.[32] It was reported by the Los Angeles Times in August 1941 that Ávila Camacho was going to replace Sánchez Taboada with Edmundo Sánchez Cano.[33] However, this did not happen. Sánchez Taboada's term ended on 31 July 1944.[2][3][6][34] He resigned, being given permission by Baja California's legislature to leave office,[34] reportedly due to dissatisfaction with the perceived incompetence of his appointments.[2] He was succeeded by Juan Felipe Rico Islas, who had been chosen for the role the previous year.[34][35][36] Domestic affairsAt the time of his governorship, Baja California was a federal territory.[11][37] During his administration, the second Pro-State Committee (Spanish: Comité Pro-Estado) was formed in 1940, following the first in 1929.[37] The territory would ultimately become a state in 1952.[37][38] Parts of Mexicali, the state's capital, were damaged in the 1940 El Centro earthquake, including by fire and flooding. Sánchez Taboada placed affected areas under governmental care and promised immediate aid in rebuilding.[39] During World War II, a national directive was issued that ordered governors to remove their Japanese populations to designated zones of Mexico City and Guadalajara. Sánchez Taboada quickly rounded up his state's Japanese population and forced them on trains and trucks bound for the zones. He gave them only twenty-four hours to evacuate, but ex-president Cárdenas, who was in charge of military operations in the Pacific zone, expanded the timeframe to one week.[40] Mexico–United States relationsIn March of 1937, Sánchez Taboada traveled to the city of Calexico, California, and met with the city's officials in an effort to promote the Good Neighbor policy in place between Mexico and the United States at the time.[41] In May of 1938, Sánchez Taboada met the governor of California, Frank Merriam, in San Ysidro, San Diego.[42] In February of 1941, Sánchez Taboada and California governor Culbert Olson met at the border of the two countries, then Sánchez Taboada once again visited Calexico, followed by Olsen's visit to Mexicali.[43] In December of 1942, the governor-elect of California, Earl Warren, visited Sánchez Taboada in Mexicali, and Sánchez Taboada again traveled to Calexico.[44] President of the PRIFirst termSánchez Taboada became the president of the PRI on 4 December 1946, succeeding Rafael Pascasio Gamboa Cano.[4][5] The latter was appointed by the then-presidential candidate Miguel Alemán Valdés in an attempt to "civilianize" the party. However, Gamboa was largely unknown and unpopular, and within less than a year Alemán replaced him with Sánchez Taboada.[45] He became the first of four PRI presidents in a row from 1946 to 1964 who were all generals and some of Mexico's most prominent military figures.[45][c] Following the declaration of the Truman Doctrine in the United States in 1947, the PRI followed its lead in adopting increasingly anti-communist stances. The party declared itself to be "neither extreme left nor extreme right" (Spanish: ni extrema izquierda ni extrema derecha). Sánchez Taboada declared that from that point on the PRI would not accept people from other parties, which was intended to allow for the expulsion of communists from the party.[47] That same year, U.S. President Harry S. Truman visited Mexico City. During the visit, Sánchez Taboada denounced communism as a "pernicious influence" and derided the left-wing politician Vicente Lombardo Toledano as an agent of Moscow.[48] Sánchez Taboada also led a push to drive communists out of the Secretariat of Public Education.[49] ![]() Sánchez Taboada was a mentor to one of the most influential political groups in Mexican politics,[2] a generation which attained power in the 1970s.[50] In 1946, while he was serving as president of the PRI, he hired Luis Echeverría Álvarez to serve as his personal secretary. Echeverría would later serve as president of Mexico from 1970 to 1976.[51] Echeverría's father, Rodolfo Echeverría, had served as paymaster to an army unit that Sánchez Taboada commanded.[52] Sánchez Taboada also made him director general of press and propaganda of the PRI in 1949.[50] Also in 1946, Sánchez Taboada appointed Teófilo Borunda, who would later serve as the governor of Chihuahua, as General Secretary of the PRI.[53] Under Sánchez Taboada's guidance, Echeverría, future Michoacán governor Agustín Arriaga Rivera, and future Baja California Sur governor Hugo Cervantes del Río served as youth members of the PRI's National Committee.[54] Other protégées of Sánchez Taboada's include future Baja California governor Milton Castellanos Everardo,[55] future Guanajuato governor Rafael Corrales Ayala,[56] future Durango governor Armando del Castillo Franco,[57] future Nuevo León deputy Margarita García Flores,[58] future Jalisco governor Flavio Romero de Velasco,[59] future Tabasco governor Leandro Rovirosa Wade,[60] future Sinaloa governor Leopoldo Sánchez Celis,[61] and future Hidalgo governor José Luis Suárez Molina.[62] Second term![]() From 2 February to 4 February 1950, the PRI held its National Assembly, and Sánchez Taboada became the first president of the PRI to be reelected to the position. To satisfy the older wing of PRI politicians, the party removed the provisions from the party's statutes that called for internal elections of candidates, and all candidates from that point on would be elected by assemblies.[63] Elements at the assembly also supported futurism, which was opposed by the higher authorities of the PRI. Sánchez Taboada did, however, attempt to control this sentiment by stating in April that he did not oppose futurism if it was a constructive attitude that emphasized the wellbeing of Mexicans.[64] Sánchez Taboada also sought to make the party amiable with the Catholic Church. In a 1951 tour of Mexico's southeast, he arranged several church visits and assured the press of the PRI's respect for "the religious beliefs of the pueblo".[65] In 1951, Sánchez Taboada called for a national convention to select the PRI's presidential candidate for the 1952 election, to be held from 11 October to 14 October.[66] On 13 October, he proposed Adolfo Ruiz Cortines as the candidate.[67] He subsequently became the candidate the following day.[68] Sánchez Taboada served as the director of his presidential campaign.[16][69] Ruiz Cortines used the slogan "austerity and work" (Spanish: austeridad y trabajo)[68] and endorsed women's suffrage.[38] Ruiz Cortines won the election with 2,713,419 votes,[70] or 74.3% of the vote.[71] He defeated three opponents: Miguel Henríquez Guzmán of the FPP, Efraín González Luna of PAN, and Vicente Lombardo Toledano of the PP.[72] Sánchez Taboada's presidency of the PRI ended on 4 December 1952. He was succeeded by Gabriel Leyva Velázquez.[4][5] Navy secretary and deathUpon assuming the presidency, Ruiz Cortines nominated Sánchez Taboada to serve as secretary of the navy.[69] Succeeding Raúl López Sánchez,[73] he assumed office on 1 December 1952.[69] Sánchez Taboada named Echeverría as General Director of Accounts and Administration of the Secretary of the Navy,[74][75] and Cervantes del Río as his personal secretary.[76] During his term, Sánchez Taboada carried out the project Programa de Progreso Marítimo ("Maritime Progress Program"), popularly known as the Marcha al Mar ("March to the Sea").[69] The project was planned by the Ruiz Cortines administration to bring surplus populations from Mexico's highlands into costal areas and to make better use of maritime resources.[77] It also called for the improvement of ports, and the modernization of rail and highway communications between ports and inland cities. The six-year project was given a budget of 750,000,000 pesos, with 150,000,000 pesos being spent in its first year under Sánchez Taboada.[78] Sánchez Taboada also commissioned the ship Orizaba as a training ship at the Heroica Escuela Naval Militar under the name Zaragoza II.[69] He also deployed more ships to stop Cuban and American shrimp poachers in the Gulf of Mexico.[79][80] In October of 1954, Sánchez Taboada and several other high-ranking naval officials visited Washington, D.C. to tour American naval institutions and promote the Marcha al Mar.[78][81][82] Sánchez Taboada died in office of a myocardial infarction[69] on 2 May 1955[2][4][11] in Mexico City.[4][16][d] He was buried in the Panteón Francés de Puebla in the city of Puebla on 3 May.[69] On 9 May, Ruiz Cortines nominated Alfonso Poire y Ruelas to succeed Sánchez Taboada.[83] Legacy![]() Following Sánchez Taboada's death, Echeverría was made a senior officer of the Secretariat of Public Education.[50] He progressed through several further positions in the following years, becoming secretary of the interior in 1964 and ultimately becoming president of Mexico in 1970.[75] Echeverría attributed his political career to Sánchez Taboada, stating:
Sánchez Taboada's son Rodolfo Sánchez Cruz was also a PRI politician representing Puebla,[2][10] as was his grandson Germán Sierra Sánchez.[13][85] Mexicali International Airport is named after Sánchez Taboada. A borough in the area of the Tijuana River also bears his name.[12] Boulevard General Rodolfo Sánchez Taboada is a street in Tijuana, Baja California. [86][87] A bust of Sánchez Taboada existed on a street named after him in Guaymas, Sonora, but it was stolen in 2012. In 2020, a replacement bust was unveiled.[88] Notes
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