Introduction
Studies exploring health and medicine in military Brazil (1964–1985) frequently focus on the struggles of public health activists to advance substantial healthcare reforms during the country's gradual transition to democracy. In the 1960s, the Brazilian dictatorship installed a market-oriented system that outsourced healthcare to private providers, mostly servicing urban and employed benefactors. Without proper government oversight, the healthcare administration was overbilled and national public health indicators lagged. Scholars have highlighted the efforts of the Sanitary Reform Movement (Movimento da Reforma Sanitária) to dismantle the dictatorship's health system. Forming professional associations and assuming leadership positions in governmental agencies, sanitaristas promoted research and policies of collective health, laying the foundations for Brazil's universal healthcare system, established after the return to democracy.Footnote 1
This article, however, focuses on the labor struggles of the Brazilian doctors’ movement. Health workers’ protests for better salaries and working conditions in the late 1970s and early 1980s were extensive and reflected a dramatic change in the way medical practitioners perceived their professional and political identities. Historically, the Brazilian medical community was comprised of mostly upper-middle-class physicians who vigorously protected the liberal characterization and autonomy of their profession. Historians writing about the evolution of the Brazilian middle class, for example, have argued that medical professionals rejected union organizing specifically to distinguish themselves from the working class.Footnote 2 However, after a steady growth in numbers of state-employed physicians, and in the context of the economic downturn and social unrest of late 1970s Brazil, many physicians departed from the liberal tradition of their profession. As sociologist and public-health scholar Sarah Escorel has argued, doctors began considering themselves as workers subjected to unfair labor practices, adopting a “labor consciousness.”Footnote 3 Relying on archival material from doctors’ unions and medical associations, state and intelligence agencies records, as well as interviews with key doctor-activists, this article provides a historical analysis that strengthens and expands Escorel's claim. Doctors in the late 1970s and early 1980s employed tactics such as unionizing and striking, as well as partnered with other blue-collar sectors in a larger struggle for better working conditions and healthcare in Brazil. In this sense, the doctors’ movement played a significant role in challenging Brazil's dictatorship and advancing the nation's transition to democracy.
By exploring the blue-collar turn of doctors, the article fuses together histories of medicine and labor—often treated separately in the literature.Footnote 4 The scholarship examining the history of workers in military Brazil has mostly focused on the large-scale strikes organized by autoworkers in the São Paulo region in 1978–1979. Led by then-union leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, autoworkers demanded salary increases, better working conditions, and direct bargaining rights. Their campaign quickly spread to other labor sectors, resulting in a broad protest movement that challenged military rule.Footnote 5 As scholars have noted, however, other labor struggles remain underexplored in the historiography on Brazil's dictatorship.Footnote 6
This article follows the lead of recent works that have expanded the analytical and regional scope of the research on labor protests in military Brazil.Footnote 7 It reveals that physicians not only unionized by their tens of thousands but also collaborated with manual laborers. Doctors and autoworkers attended each other's assemblies, partnered in rallies, and urged structural and democratic reforms in Brazil. Government officials, the article shows, were significantly concerned by hospital strikes and particularly by this emerging alliance. Indeed, a new model of cross-sector labor and political activism served as a threat to a regime whose authoritarian rule was in many ways predicated on the nation's deep-rooted class divisions and social inequality.
Brazil's Liberal Professionals
For most of Brazil's history, physicians played a central role in shaping the nation's social, political, and cultural landscapes. In the nineteenth century and particularly at the turn of the century, leading doctors linked public health and hygiene with the advents of progress and nationhood. The ascendancy of the sanitation movement marked the rise of prominent political doctors who advanced major public health reforms and considerably influenced Brazil's regional and national policies.Footnote 8 That these sanitaristas had the authoritative know-how to distinguish between “sick” and “healthy” citizens—distinctions that were crucial in shaping the desired social and racial makeup of society—granted them significant political and social capital.Footnote 9 Alongside public health experts, a relatively small number of physicians offered primary healthcare to the population, mainly in urban centers.Footnote 10 Brazil's doctors thus held deep notions of their political privileges and professional autonomy in the quest to modernize and civilize the nation.Footnote 11
Processes of urbanization, industrialization, and the growth of the state in the 1930s–1950s led to an expansion of Brazil's health sector as well as to changes in medical training and professional identity. Under Getúlio Vargas's corporatist regime, the state introduced the first-ever social and health protection plans, offered to employees in the formal labor sectors.Footnote 12 To accommodate the significant growth in services, Vargas's Ministry of Labor oversaw the establishment of various new hospitals and clinics, as well as the employment of many physicians to staff these facilities. The expansion was particularly evident in Rio de Janeiro, where doctor and mayor Pedro Ernesto spearheaded the construction of seven major hospitals in the 1930s.Footnote 13 The health sector continued to grow in the 1940s and especially in the 1950s. Campaigns to control tropical disease contributed to the expansion of scientific institutions and pharmaceutical industries.Footnote 14 The opening of fourteen new medical schools doubled their number in the country.Footnote 15 Within a decade, the number of physicians in Brazil rose from 22,000 (1950) to 34,000 (1960). The number of nurses nearly doubled (from 39,000 to 71,000).Footnote 16 Many of the new doctors were salaried medical professionals. But as scholars have noted, white-coat physicians mostly rejected a comparison to workers, shoring up their class identity by eschewing the “inappropriate” protest tactics of blue-collar laborers.Footnote 17 For example, the rare doctors’ strike of 1953–1954—led by the Rio de Janeiro doctors’ union in demand of wage increase—was constrained to only a few intermittent stoppages and sought to uphold the superior status of physicians in the federal wage index.Footnote 18
Reshaping the Medical Sector under Military Rule
The growth of Brazil's population and medical sector, coupled with the appearance of alternative views about healthcare and public health, ultimately prompted physicians to rethink the social, professional, and labor fabrics of their community. In the early 1960s, the approaches of preventive medicine, social medicine, and developmentalist public health gained increased attention in medical conferences and literature, especially by Brazil's socially-minded doctors.Footnote 19 After João Goulart assumed the presidency in August 1961, many of them expected major expansion in national health policies. A champion of extensive reforms, Goulart pledged to increase public spending, restructure the economy, and expand access to land, education, and healthcare. Within a year after taking office, his health minister Wilson Fadul articulated an overhaul of Brazil's health policies that included bolstering regulation of pharmaceutical firms, reforming healthcare services, and improving working conditions of health workers.Footnote 20 The government plans, however, had never come to fruition. Brazil was facing a political crisis over Goulart's promise to implement a series of structural reforms (reformas de base) that favored the expansion of voting rights, wage increases, nationalization of industries, and redistribution of land.Footnote 21 Within the medical sector, many conservative physicians found the leftist turn toward the socialization of health troubling, bemoaning their perceived loss of professional autonomy and neutrality.Footnote 22
The political and social tensions in Brazil reached a boiling point in early 1964. Fueled by Cold War anxieties, leading military generals who had long opposed Goulart's policies resolved to “restore” order and democracy in the country. Supported by the nation's business elite, political leadership, and the US government, the Brazilian armed forces overthrew President Goulart on March 31, 1964, installing an authoritarian regime that would rule Brazil for twenty-one years.Footnote 23 The civilian-military coup fractured Brazil's medical community. The military, which began purging physician-advocates of social medicine shortly after seizing power, received the backing of many of their professional critics. The conservative medical leadership both applauded the toppling of Goulart and welcomed—even encouraged—the expulsion of leftist doctors from medical schools and research institutions. In a professional sector imbued with Cold War and national security fears, medical practitioners and researchers holding progressive ideas about health and society were frequently labeled subversive communists.Footnote 24
Workers and labor organizations served as another prime target of state suppression. In the weeks following the coup, the military rounded up key labor leaders, seized union offices, and purged thousands of unionized workers. This was facilitated by an Institutional Act (pronounced by a provisional junta on April 9, 1964) that allowed the new regime to suspend key constitutional guarantees of civil liberties and conduct summary investigations against tens of thousands of alleged “subversives.”Footnote 25 The authorities proceeded to meddle in over five hundred labor organizations, appointing inspectors (interventores) to most major unions across the country.Footnote 26 In the following five years, the regime enacted antilabor laws that effectively outlawed strikes and bargaining, as well as manipulated inflation rates and controlled salary increases. As a result, regional labor courts frequently sided with employers in dispute cases. Real wages of workers dropped significantly, by over 35 percent.Footnote 27
Activist doctors and workers suffered extensive political repression particularly after the regime issued the Fifth Institutional Act (Ato Institucional Número Cinco, AI-5) in December 1968, ushering in the most violent period in the dictatorship's history. In the name of national security, AI-5 allowed the president to close congress, suspend habeas corpus, intervene in state governments, and implement strict censorship over the press and cultural productions, as well as restrict the civil liberties of any citizen.Footnote 28 The act also enabled the purges of various state workers, union leaders, and academics, among them medical educators and researchers.Footnote 29 Particularly after General Emílio Médici assumed the presidency in October 1969, the regime expanded its security apparatus and significantly intensified state-sponsored repression, leading to the detention and torture of tens of thousands of political activists as well as to the forced disappearance of hundreds of “subversives.”Footnote 30 Among the victims of repression were various medical students, physicians, and labor activists who were detained, tortured, and killed by the security forces.Footnote 31
Becoming Health Workers
Alongside soaring state-sponsored repression, Brazil witnessed substantial economic growth in the early 1970s, dubbed the “economic miracle” (milagre econômico). Under the direction of finance minister Antônio Delfim Netto, the government significantly increased credit programs, which stimulated the growth of local industries, attracted foreign investments, and prompted domestic consumerism. The regime's pro-business approach, conjoined with its control of labor wages, significantly amplified socio-economic inequalities and intensified workers’ frustrations. By the mid-1970s, the “miracle” became unsustainable. Behind the apparent triumphant fiscal strategy, the government ran an unbalanced growth model.Footnote 32 Concomitantly, the global oil crisis of 1973 had a substantial impact on Brazil, which relied on imported petroleum for most of its energy needs. Before long, an increasing deficit in trade balance brought economic instability, and the country's external debt had doubled.Footnote 33
The economic contraction played a role in prompting President Ernesto Geisel—who took office in early 1974—to announce a controlled political liberalization process that would roll back some of the authoritarian measures placed by his predecessors and begin Brazil's long transition out of military rule.Footnote 34 It also served as a backdrop for a wave of social protests that took over the country in the late 1970s and early 1980s, most associated with São Paulo's autoworkers. In early 1978, the International Monetary Fund revealed that the Brazilian government concealed the real inflation rates in the early 1970s, during the so-called “economic miracle.” After their appeals for wage readjustments were disregarded by both state authorities and what they viewed as inept union leaderships, autoworkers mobilized in May 1978.Footnote 35 Within a month, sixty-nine companies in São Paulo's industrial belt reported some form of stoppages, counting over forty-five thousand people on strike. Led by the charismatic union leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, strikers formed networks within and between factories and reached decisions in collective assemblies. Given the protest's favorable press coverage, public support, and the government's wish to ensure economic stability in the context of political opening, managements ultimately conceded to several of the workers’ demands.Footnote 36 The autoworkers’ protest inspired various other workers and professionals disgruntled by their declining salaries. By the end of 1978, there were over half a million Brazilians on strike, demanding higher wages, better working rights, and democratic reforms.Footnote 37
The protest within the health sector began as early as 1977, led by junior residents at the hospital of São Paulo State University (UNESP) in Botucatu, who were frustrated by their low stipends, long shifts, and lack of social benefits.Footnote 38 They were also disappointed by the passing of decree-law 80.281 (1977), which regulated medical residency programs for the first time in Brazil but did not codify residents’ working conditions and wages.Footnote 39 Within a year, the protest expanded to other parts of the country. In June-July 1978, residents in over twenty hospitals in São Paulo were carrying out stoppages and full strikes.Footnote 40 Slowdowns and strike actions were also organized by residents in Porto Alegre and Rio de Janeiro, defying local governors’ threats of dismissal.Footnote 41 In São Paulo, the threats of hospital managements to expel protestors were answered by a massive four thousand-resident strike organized in over thirty health facilities across the state.Footnote 42 As strikers emphasized in various public statements, their working conditions were grossly inadequate: “we work up to 100 hours a week . . . frequently we are forced to work 36 hours nonstop . . . this with no working rights, sick days, social protection, etc.”Footnote 43 Residents soon partnered with permanent hospital physicians to expand the protest campaign. By the end of June, hundreds of doctors at São Paulo's Hospital Servidor and Hospital das Clínicas joined their junior residents on strike, demanding to readjust their salaries to ten times the minimum federal wage.Footnote 44 By July, strike organizers formed alliances with hospital staff, who shut down essential maintenance, food, and laboratory services, forcing management to call back workers on vacation to avoid hospital collapse.Footnote 45
These strikes responded to Brazil's economic downturn of the mid-1970s, but also to the growing crisis in the country's healthcare system. Soon after consolidating power in the mid-1960s, the dictatorship established a new social security agency that provided health protection to mostly urban, employed contributors. Coverage was later expanded to include some rural and self-employed populations. But the system was based on, and encouraged the growth of, the private health sector. While the state decreased its investment in public health programs, the number of private health businesses grew exponentially, with little regulation.Footnote 46 The result was a medical-industrial complex that not only led to budget misuse and a decline in salaries of employed physicians but also to lagging national health indicators.Footnote 47 Doctors on strike thus linked their poor working conditions with Brazil's precarious state of health.Footnote 48 Indeed, a 1975 study by the Ministry of Social Security found that Brazil's doctor per capita ratio was significantly low, counting one physician for every two thousand people. The disparity was even more pronounced in the poor Northeast, where one doctor served approximately thirty-four hundred people.Footnote 49
The inequities of the healthcare system and the struggle for better working conditions in the health sector gave rise to a new generation of doctor-activists and union leaders. In similar ways to the autoworker sector, many hospital residents and employed physicians were dissatisfied with their unions’ leaderships. The “old-guard,” they believed, had submitted to the interests of major healthcare businesses and the regime's labor policies.Footnote 50 Thus, concomitant with carrying out protests in hospitals, junior doctors launched a campaign to win control over the medical sector's unions. The first attempt occurred in December 1977, when a local group of physicians under the slate “Medical Renewal” (Renovação Médica) won the elections for the Rio de Janeiro doctors’ union. The group's platform included fighting for better working conditions for residents and employed physicians, as well as campaigning against abusive medical businesses.Footnote 51 Following the group's success in the Rio de Janeiro doctors’ union, in 1978 a similar slate by the name of the Movement for Medical Renewal (Movimento Renovação Médica, or REME) struck a major victory at the São Paulo doctors’ union.Footnote 52 At the inauguration ceremony of the new union board—attended by not only hundreds of health workers but also leaders of other labor unions—the entering union president Agrimeron Cavalcanti condemned doctors’ loss of basic working conditions. Lamenting the decline in the Brazilian population's health, he forcefully attacked the private healthcare industry for undervaluing physicians and for making “profit an end, and health a means.”Footnote 53 Renovação Médica's victories in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo led to a series of successful bids in doctors’ unions around the country. Between 1978 and 1980, groups affiliated with REME won elections in the doctors’ unions of Minas Gerais, Bahia, Espírito Santo, and Brasília, as well as in various medical associations and regulatory boards.Footnote 54
Under the leadership of REME, doctors’ unions became major actors in the struggle for improved working conditions in the health sector.Footnote 55 Between 1978 and 1982, for example, São Paulo's doctors’ union filed 858 complaints with the state's regional labor court concerning violations of workers’ rights.Footnote 56 Alongside legal assistance, unions provided extensive support for doctors’ protests, which picked up again in early 1979—particularly after Geisel's government repealed AI-5 and lifted censorship.Footnote 57 By midyear, all resident doctors in São Paulo state were on strike.Footnote 58 On May Day, they joined other striking sectors—from state teachers, through autoworkers, to journalists, and to public servants—in large-scale rallies across the state's capital calling for better pay, freedom to strike, and protected labor rights.Footnote 59
That doctors participated in direct strike actions and May Day rallies in record numbers reflected the transformative shift in the professional and labor identity of many health practitioners. As noted earlier, in the decades preceding the dictatorship, Brazilian physicians avoided participating in direct protest actions and rarely went on strike.Footnote 60 But the tens of thousands of doctor-activists leading stoppages, strikes, and collective action in the late 1970s challenged that tradition, redefining themselves as health workers. For them, going on strike—a tactic associated with blue-collar labor sectors—was a legitimate tool in the campaign to improve their working conditions.Footnote 61 The surge in doctors’ union membership demonstrates the wide support for this professional and political shift. The São Paulo doctors’ union, for example, registered approximately two thousand members in 1977. Two years later, the number had increased to eight thousand. By the end of 1980, the union had a record high of twelve thousand members.Footnote 62 Rio de Janeiro's union witnessed a sharp rise in membership as well, reaching a whopping sixteen thousand unionized doctors in 1979.Footnote 63
The expansion and appeal of the doctors’ protest movement could be explained in part by its ability to encompass a diverse group of healthcare professionals. Some were recent medical graduates who were steeped in critical medical education about collective and social medicine. Others were physicians with distinguished careers who saw the quality of medical care in Brazil dropping consistently since the early 1970s.Footnote 64 It is true that many were located somewhere on the left side of the political map. Some were sympathizers of the Brazilian Communist Party—the moderate strand in the opposition movement—while others held more radical views based on their early student activism in the late 1960s.Footnote 65 Importantly, however, a sizeable group of doctors was not ideologically motivated but rather driven by frustration over declining wages and an inept healthcare system. Indeed, the common denominator was the understanding that low salaries and unfit working conditions have damaged the job security of healthcare professionals and the quality of medical services in Brazil.
Both the dictatorship's officials and the medical sector's conservative leadership sought to curtail the doctors’ movement. The regime's National Intelligence Service (SNI) frequently labeled journal articles discussing doctors’ protests as “subversive” material.Footnote 66 By the end of 1979, the agency had accumulated sizable files on “the rise of REME” and its ramifications for the medical sector and Brazilian society, including detailed profiles of union and strike leaders.Footnote 67 During major strikes, security agents made surprise visits to doctors’ union meetings and summoned key organizers—some of whom were previously arrested as student activists in the early 1970s—for “friendly” conversations at the regime's political police offices, the DOPS.Footnote 68 Concomitantly, state officials retaliated against activist doctors and even terminated complete residency programs in an effort to quell protest.Footnote 69
The medical sector's conservative old guard likewise sought to restrain the protest movement. The Brazilian Medical Association denounced striking physicians, claiming they were unprofessional and unpatriotic doctors who abandoned their shift and violated medical ethics.Footnote 70 Certainly, for many conservative physicians, the protesters’ tactics went against the core tenets of the Hippocratic oath obliging to always treat the sick. Hospital workers and doctors’ unions refuted that accusation, emphasizing that patients with emergency cases were never turned down during strikes. What was violated, strike leaders contended, was doctors’ rights to dignified work. For them, poor wages and substandard working conditions clearly amounted to exploitation of labor, which in itself was proscribed by the Brazilian code of medical ethics.Footnote 71 But there was something larger at stake than medical ethics. This was a struggle between two contrasting views about the nature of the medical profession in Brazil. The position of the doctors’ movement, which considered physicians as health workers and promoted the expansion of a state healthcare system, threatened the traditional understanding of medical practitioners as liberal professionals who independently seek their patients and income. The conservative medical authorities thus sought to curb strike organizing. But their attempts—along with the dictatorship's suppression—backlashed, coalescing a diverse body of professionals into a mobilized movement.
Intensifying Doctors’ Protest in Rio de Janeiro
Following the 1978–1979 strikes, the government pledged to increase doctors’ wage levels and regulate hospital residencies. Furthermore, Renovação Médica won control over morelabor and professional bodies around the country.Footnote 72 But doctors’ salaries remained largely below the rising inflation rate. Moreover, the economic and political reforms promised by President João Figueiredo—who expanded his predecessor's plan of political opening after taking office in early 1979—were measured and controlled by the government.Footnote 73 With many of their discontents still unresolved, doctors relaunched a powerful protest in the early 1980s. The campaign now called not only for better wages and working conditions but also for national health reform and transition to democracy. As the National Federation of Doctors (Federação Nacional dos Médicos, FENAM) asserted in one of the first campaign statements, “only under democracy could doctors reestablish their usurped rights and their degraded dignity.”Footnote 74
Beginning with periodic short stoppages and escalating into full-fledged hospital strikes, 1981 saw one of the biggest strike campaigns the medical sector had ever seen. Tens of thousands of doctors in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro went on strike in March and April of that year.Footnote 75 Physicians in six more states declared strikes, marches, and demonstrations.Footnote 76 A national twenty-four-hour strike was organized by FENAM in late April 1981, with hundreds of hospitals participating.Footnote 77 Major disruptions in hospitals and clinics across the country were a cause of concern for the dictatorship's officials. Multiple covert operatives who infiltrated strike assemblies to record speeches, conversations, petitions, and flyers asserted in confidential reports that the protest would continue to expand.Footnote 78 After FENAM declared that another national strike would take place in early June, the government conceded to some of the campaign's demands. It agreed to increase wages of early-career doctors by 22 percent and amend the law regulating residency programs. At the same time, state officials threatened that prolonging the strike would be met with “exceptional measures.”Footnote 79
The government's wage proposal and explicit threats of retaliation prompted many doctors’ unions to suspend campaign.Footnote 80 However, conflict was far from over in Rio de Janeiro, which had a significantly high number of state-employed physicians. Rio's Sindicato dos Médicos (originally Sindicato Médico Brasileiro, established 1927) was the first doctors’ union in Brazil and had a long history of leading labor, professional, and public health struggles in the country.Footnote 81 Soon after the 1964 coup, the union and its leaders—some of whom were affiliated with the outlawed Communist Party—became a target of dictatorship harassment and intervention.Footnote 82 With the rise of REME in the late 1970s, the union witnessed a resurgence that brought both junior and experienced, politically savvy physicians to lead the organization. The union's president, Roberto Chabo, was an influential doctor who belonged to an older generation of physicians affiliated with the moderate Communist Party. His vice president, Carlos Gentile de Mello, was a prominent hospital director and an advocate of social medicine. Both doctors had been on the regime's watch list.Footnote 83
Pressure from the more activist faction of the union—affiliated with the Communist Party of Brazil (PCdoB) and the newly-established Workers’ Party—drove Rio’s Sindicato dos Médicos to reject the government's proposal and maintain its strike plans, in contrast to other unions.Footnote 84 In an open letter, the campaign organizers emphasized that hospitals are close to collapse, as “there is a shortage of medicine, the rooms are tight and hot, bathrooms are filthy, and equipment is broken.” The situation was “unsustainable,” they affirmed.Footnote 85 Indeed, a study by Brazil's National Research Council published in 1981 noted the shortage of hospital beds and highlighted the deficiency of protein–energy nutrition across the country, particularly in the Northeast.Footnote 86 In this context, on June 3, 1981, twenty thousand doctors in hospitals and clinics across Rio de Janeiro state opened strike again, unlimited in time.Footnote 87
Seeking to quell the escalating protest, Rio's state authorities ordered the temporary suspension of all public-employed doctors involved in organizing the strike, including president of the doctors’ union Roberto Chabo and various hospitals’ department heads.Footnote 88 Despite the threat of layoffs, union leaders balked at the idea of compromise and pressed forward with the campaign. To mark the third week of strike, on June 19 the union organized a large rally at Rio de Janeiro's Cinelândia square that drew thousands of doctors, multiple political and labor activists, as well as various federal, state, and municipal representatives.Footnote 89 Among them was the autoworkers’ union leader Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, by then the founding president of the Workers’ Party who sought to solidify a national alliance of labor sectors across Brazil. Addressing the marchers from a van's rooftop, Lula expressed his union's solidarity with the doctors’ movement, but also exclaimed that he was “sick and tired of making solidarity visits” and that “something more concrete [was] necessary [to be done].”Footnote 90
This was not the first meeting between Lula and health workers. Unionized doctors and autoworkers began interacting during the large-scale protests of the late 1970s, when hospital residents and physicians launched their first strikes in São Paulo. In April 1978, Lula attended the inauguration ceremony of the new REME board at the São Paulo doctor's union, and a few weeks later unionized doctors reciprocated with solidarity visits to assemblies of striking autoworkers.Footnote 91 The 1981 rally in Rio de Janeiro thus reflected an evolving alliance between auto- and health workers. Concerned by that developing relationship, the dictatorship authorities assigned undercover agents to monitor and document the rally.
Indeed, the Cinelândia demonstration riled both state and military officials. For three weeks, public hospitals in Rio de Janeiro were operating at minimal capacity, causing major disruptions in healthcare services. More significantly, security authorities were concerned by the involvement of other union leaders and specifically Lula, which indicated that the doctors’ campaign enjoyed wide support in the labor movement. In classified reports, intelligence agencies warned that collaboration between white-coat professionals and blue-collar laborers could lead to greater protests, jeopardizing the stability of the political opening.Footnote 92 The regime thus sought to crush the protest swiftly. In press releases, authorities made efforts to delegitimize the strike by calling it illegal and unethical.Footnote 93 In a confidential intelligence memo, dictatorship officials discussed more direct steps to suppress the campaign. The union's strike, the memo emphasized, violated both the 1964 “anti-strike law” and the 1978 National Security Law, which prohibited public servants from participating in “strikes,” “civil disobedience,” and “subversive propaganda.” Various other laws were cited to provide additional legal grounds for a possible state intervention in the union.Footnote 94 Six days after the memo's circulation—and twenty days into the doctors’ strike—Labor Minister Murillo Macedo signed a decree that ordered the dismissal of the doctors’ union board. Later that day, two intervening inspectors (interventores) accompanied by armed agents appeared at the union's offices and announced the organization was under ministry hands.Footnote 95 Citing national security concerns, supplementary ministerial decrees proscribed the continuation of the strike and allowed summary purges of physicians involved in the protest.Footnote 96
By seizing control of the union and removing its leaders, officials hoped to curtail the strike movement. Yet they underestimated how wide the support was for the doctors’ union campaign within and outside the medical sector. A day prior to the intervention, the union's leaders gathered over five thousand doctors and other workers at the Tabaco Workers Union offices to publicly commit to the continuation of the strike.Footnote 97 Promptly following the hostile takeover, a public statement signed by 111 labor unions, professional associations, and congressional representatives repudiated the government's action, demanding to reinstate the union's board and negotiate a solution for the physicians’ grievances.Footnote 98 A similar letter of support was signed by prominent academics, intellectuals, filmmakers, and theater directors.Footnote 99 In São Paulo, the doctors’ union convened an urgent assembly attended by representatives from more than sixty organizations (including Lula da Silva) that announced a regional strike in solidarity with the Rio-based union.Footnote 100
Inspired by the wide support, doctor-strikers in Rio de Janeiro ignored the regime's intervention decrees and refused to end the protest.Footnote 101 Meanwhile, removed union president Roberto Chabo convened an “exiled” board meeting at the offices of Rio's Society of Medicine and Surgery (Sociedade de Medicina e Cirurgia do Rio de Janeiro). Baffled by doctors’ defiance, the dictatorship authorities opted to significantly escalate the conflict. As the exiled board began its meeting, dozens of military police officers and unidentified security agents stormed the building in search of the dismissed union president. Chabo finally appeared, agreeing to leave freely with the security authorities to be booked at Rio's political police headquarters, the DOPS.Footnote 102
Before long, doctors, union leaders, and local politicians were showing up outside the DOPS facility, expressing concern for Chabo's safety. While the days in which the dictatorship employed extreme repression against its political foes were over, national security laws were still used to target those deemed as threats. Moreover, 1981 saw violent attempts by hardline factions within the military to sabotage the government's political reforms and intensify social unrest.Footnote 103 Union activists were thus relieved when authorities officially acknowledged Chabo's detention and charged him with violating national security laws for organizing an “illegal strike.”Footnote 104 Indeed, Chabo was a known public figure who frequently appeared in the press in the preceding weeks; security officials could not risk another scandal.Footnote 105
The detention of a senior prominent physician at a time of a purportedly national liberalization process was met with strong public criticism and prompted further mobilization. The arrest headlined Brazil's major newspapers, appearing on the front page of the Rio de Janeiro-based Jornal do Brasil.Footnote 106 The National Federation of Doctors immediately declared June 30 as a national protest day.Footnote 107 Over twenty heads of hospital departments in Rio de Janeiro submitted their resignation.Footnote 108 Outside of the medical sector, various trade unions and political groups publicly denounced the intervention and arrest. In a public note, the newly-established Workers’ Party called workers from all sectors to lend their support to the “companheiros health workers.”Footnote 109 Most important, Rio de Janeiro's physicians announced their strike will continue.
In a confidential report, the dictatorship's intelligence agency admitted that the punitive measures had led to “radicalization in the movement's actions.”Footnote 110 Looking for a way out, government officials agreed to form a “high commission” of Brazil's most prominent physicians to mediate a solution to the deepening crisis in the health sector.Footnote 111 A few hours after the commission's first meeting in Brasília on June 28, Chabo was released.Footnote 112 As a final show of force, two days later, thousands of physicians participated in rallies across Brazil to pressure the commission—and to celebrate Chabo's release.Footnote 113 After further discussions by the Brasília commission, government officials conceded to significant demands of the doctors’ movement. They offered to bump physicians three levels up in the federal wage index and increase salaries for early-career doctors. They also agreed to recognize temporary-employed public doctors as permanent workers, recruit additional physicians to the public healthcare system, and ultimately approve a much-anticipated new medical residency law.Footnote 114 On July 10, 1981, the general assembly of the Rio doctor's union finally announced the end of strike.Footnote 115 Two weeks later, the Ministry of Labor reinstated the union's board, concluding a month-long intervention.Footnote 116
Conclusion
The doctors’ strike in Rio de Janeiro ended in July 1981, but the campaign for better working conditions, access to healthcare, and re-democratization continued in the following year, building on an extensive labor protest movement.Footnote 117 As this article has shown, between 1978 and 1981, doctor-activists from various Brazilian states forged significant organizational ties under the umbrella of Movimento Renovação Médica. Winning control of doctors’ unions allowed a new generation of physicians to spearhead a dramatic shift in political and labor identities within the Brazilian medical sector. Assuming the identity of wage workers and labor organizers, they negotiated demands through unionizing, striking, and rallying.Footnote 118 By 1981, REME-affiliated groups were presiding over most of the sector's labor and professional bodies. Moreover, various strike leaders were later elected to head Brazil's powerful medical boards, illustrating the success of this shift.Footnote 119
The doctors’ movement normalized not only blue-collar tactics but also collaboration with other labor sectors to advance political, economic, and professional reform. From a sector of practitioners who emphasized their class and professional distinctiveness, the medical community had moved to view manual workers as political and ideological allies. Doctors and autoworkers in particular exchanged solidarity visits in times of strikes and expressed their commitment to mutual political objectives. This alliance might have played a role in the decision of security officials to employ harsher measures to curb the doctors’ movement. The regime's authoritarian grip on society was in many ways dependent on maintaining Brazil's historical divisions of social class. Indeed, a potential coalition of doctors, autoworkers, and other labor sectors posed enough of a threat to military rule that security agents were sent to capture one of Rio's senior physicians.
Of course, as a prominent physician, Roberto Chabo enjoyed social privileges and relative political protection.Footnote 120 The effective mobilization for his release—leading to his discharge after four days in detention—reveals the very real differences between doctors and manual laborers in military Brazil. The latter faced the policing of the factory floor by rigid managements, lost a significant value of their wages, and witnessed the security forces detain, torture, and even kill their politically active coworkers.Footnote 121 These differences notwithstanding, Chabo's arrest did have a significant mobilizing effect within the medical community. The authorities’ punitive response to doctors’ protests, coupled with the government's disregard of the continuous crises in the healthcare system, swayed many otherwise politically indifferent physicians to join the doctors’ movement, unionize in large numbers, and seek out new allies. This article thus suggested that the doctors’ struggles for labor rights and healthcare reform played a significant role in advancing Brazil's transition to democracy. In 1984, organized workers and doctors joined millions of Brazilians in massive rallies calling for direct presidential elections. The Diretas Já movement ultimately led to the end of military rule in 1985 and to the ratification of a new Brazilian Constitution in 1988.Footnote 122 Various demands of the doctors’ movement were incorporated into the constitution, which defined health as a basic right guaranteed by the state and upheld doctors’ right to strike over poor working conditions.Footnote 123
Many of the foundational problems of the health sector were left unresolved in the following decades, as medical professionals continued to face declining wages and job insecurity.Footnote 124 These shortcomings, however, should not detract from the significance of doctors’ mobilizations during the nation's transition to democracy. The doctors’ movement rallied together public health practitioners seeking substantial healthcare reform, leftist medical activists fighting to end military rule, and most importantly, thousands of doctors who did not belong to a political camp but grew discontented with their low wages and declining working conditions. In this sense, this article has illustrated not only how professional and labor identities have shifted under Brazilian authoritarianism but also how diverse political and ideological aspirations coalesced in the struggle for the nation's democracy.
Acknowledgments
This article began as a workshop paper presented during a postdoctoral fellowship at The Institute for Historical Studies at The University of Texas at Austin. I thank Marcelo Paixão as well as the other fellows and participants who offered thoughtful feedback during that workshop. Revised sections of this manuscript were later presented at the annual meetings of the American Historical Association/Conference on Latin American History. I thank Gabriela Soto Laveaga for her insightful comments on that presentation. Lastly, I am grateful for the two anonymous reviewers as well as the editorial board at ILWCH, whose close reading of the manuscript and helpful comments greatly improved this article.