La Reforma, liberal political and social revolution in Mexico between 1854 and 1876 under the principal leadership of Benito Juárez.
La Reforma period began with the issuance in 1854 of the Plan de Ayutla, a liberal pronouncement calling for the removal of the dictator Antonio López de Santa Anna. After Santa Anna’s fall in 1855, Juárez and the liberals enacted the Ley Juárez, abolishing the fueros (special privileges of the clergy and the military); the Ley Lerdo (1856) ordered the sale of all church lands not used for specifically religious purposes. In 1857 the congress, in which the moderate liberals held sway, drafted a liberal, federalist constitution; it ended special jurisdiction for the clergy, limited the power of the church, placed the army under ultimate civilian control, abolished hereditary titles and imprisonment for debt, and gave Mexican citizens their first genuine bill of rights.
In 1858 the conservative clergy, military, and landowners precipitated a civil war (known as the War of the Reform or Reform War), which was won by the liberal government by 1860. By the Laws of La Reforma (1859), church property, except for places of worship, was to be confiscated without compensation, monasteries were suppressed, cemeteries nationalized, and civil marriage instituted. Confiscated church property was to be allotted in small parcels to the landless; the land policy of La Reforma was its outstanding failure, however, because by the end of the period the number and wealth of large landholders increased while the condition of impoverished, landless peasants worsened.
In 1862 Juárez’s government was attacked from without: Napoleon III sought to establish French power in Mexico by siding with Mexican conservatives to restore the old order. The brief reign of Napoleon’s protegé, the Habsburg emperor Maximilian, ended when the French withdrew under pressure from Mexican patriots and the United States. Juárez was reelected president in 1867 and, until he died in 1872, tried to implement his program in the face of insufficient revenues and the discontent of many liberals who opposed his increasingly authoritarian methods, including his unconstitutional reelection to the presidency in 1871. His successor, Sebastián Lerdo de Tejada, faced mounting conservative opposition, which culminated in the military coup of Porfirio Díaz in 1876.