Manuel Adame

Manuel Adame Misa (1901–1945) was an Andalusian trade unionist and politician. Initially an anarcho-syndicalist of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT), in 1927, he became a leading member of the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) in Andalusia. In 1932, he was ejected from the PCE, due to his conflicts with the leadership of the Communist International, and subsequently joined the Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT) and Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). He was active in the Republican side of the Spanish Civil War and, after its defeat, fled to Mexico, where he died.

Biography
Manuel Adame Misa was born in 1901 in the Andalusian city of Seville. He worked as a day labourer and was a member of the Seville branch of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT).

The leader of a local communist group, which included José Díaz, Antonio Mije and Manuel Delicado among its members, in 1927, he joined the Communist Party of Spain (PCE) and was appointed as the head of its trade union section. From August of that year, he pursued a strategy of communist entryism in the CNT, in collaboration with the CNT's secretary general Joan Peiró. In December 1927, he was appointed as the PCE's regional secretary of Andalusia. By the proclamation of the Second Spanish Republic, he was already the undisputed leader of the PCE in Seville. From 1931 to 1932, he was a member of the PCE's central committee, and after that, he was a member of its political bureau. In the 1931 Spanish general election, Adame was presented as one of the PCE's candidates for the Constituent Cortes, but they failed to win any seats.

In the by-election that took place in the Balearic Islands in October 1931, Adame was presented as the PCE's candidate. With 628 votes (1.88%), Adame came third, losing the election to Francesc Carreras Reura of Republican Action, who received 22,406 votes. He mostly received votes from dissident republicans and socialists, who were dissatisfied with Carreras' candidacy. More than three-quarters of his votes came from Palma, where he received 5.97% of the vote; he also received 6.99% of the vote in Capdepera and 6.45% of the vote in Pollença. He only received 8 votes in Menorca and 1 vote in Eivissa.

In the wake of the PCE's fourth congress in March 1932, the political bureau - which included José Bullejos, Gabriel León Trilla and Adame himself - was deposed due to their persistent clashes with the leadership of the Communist International. On 21 October 1932, Adame, Trilla and Bullejos were expelled from the PCE. The following year, Adame joined the Unión General de Trabajadores (UGT) and became its secretary general in Seville, as well as the leader of the local group of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE). His defection from the PCE to the PSOE-UGT intensified a communist smear campaign against him. He nevertheless continued his work as a trade union leader throughout the subsequent years, taking a leading role in the Revolution of 1934 in Seville, for which he was arrested.

During the 1936 Spanish general election, he was elected as a deputy of the PSOE for the province of Seville. When Adame received news of the Spanish coup of July 1936, he was in Benamahoma, where he organised Andalusian resistance to the coup. After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, he was delegated by the socialists to serve in the military command in Málaga, then aided Andalusian refugees in Barcelona, and headed the Under-Secretariat of Armaments.

After the defeat of the Republicans, he fled to France, where he was held in the Gurs internment camp. He moved to Mexico in October 1942, settling in Acapulco, where he ran a flower plantation. Manuel Adame Misa died on 3 April 1945. In the years after his death, he was frequently denounced as a "traitor" in the Spanish communist press. In 1949, Adame was sentenced in absentia by the Francoist dictatorship, but upon discovery that he had died in Mexico, the proceedings were dismissed.

Selected works

 * El comité Nacional de Reconstrucción y la política sindical del Partido (1931);
 * Qué es el Bloque Obrero y Campesino (1932);
 * ¿Alianza Obrera? ¡No! Frente Único, ésta es la salida (1934).