The constitutional régime of Madero, decisive stage in the Mexican Revolution, full of contradictions that didn't get to be defmed but time later, had among their main political components the confrontation among the textile workers, the best organized and mobilized sector of the Mexican workers, against the owners of the textile industry. Before this confrontation, the maderista régime tried unfruitfully to act as referee. Through the Department of Work and the activity of some maderista leaders, linked to the movement of the workers, the maderista régime started a strategy of state interventionism and negotiation that it could not contain the constitution of a front of textile workers' of national dimensions, neither the explosion of several national strikes; although they didn't reach to be crystallized its petitions, they mined the bases of support of the maderismo strongly and contributed to the crumbling of the ruling maderista coalition and the reorganization and challenge of die elites and the institutions of the old régime. In spite of everything, it was an algid stage for the movement of the workers in which they put into practice a multitude of tactical experiences and they faced diverse ideological positions that later had a considerable influence inside the Mexican labor organizations.
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