Juan Negrín López (born February 3, 1894, Las Palmas, Canary Islands, Spain—died November 14, 1956, Paris, France) was the Republican prime minister (1937–39) of Spain who held office during the last two years of the Spanish Civil War. He was a determined wartime leader but was forced to rely heavily on communist support during his time in power. His policies as prime minister have been the subject of much historical controversy.
Negrín, of a prosperous merchant family, became a physiologist of repute and held a chair at Madrid University (1923–31). In 1929 he turned to politics and as a democratic socialist was elected to the Cortes (Spanish parliament) in 1931, 1933, and 1936. As wartime minister of finance (September 1936–May 1937) he played an important role in shipping much of Spain’s gold reserves to the Soviet Union.
In May 1937 Negrín succeeded Francisco Largo Caballero as prime minister. From the outset he was committed to a policy of resolute resistance to the Nationalists, a stance that led him to substantial reliance on the Soviet Union, the Republic’s only source of arms. Negrín’s dependence on the communists contributed to the alienation of the noncommunist left and aroused suspicion among western countries.
Negrín urged resistance even after the collapse of Catalonia (February 1939), but an anticommunist military rising in Madrid favouring a negotiated peace forced his resignation in March. He was in exile in Paris until the German occupation, when he fled to Great Britain and then to the United States. He was prime minister of the Republican government in exile but resigned in 1945.