In this study I analyze the radical mobilization cycle sustained by the Salvadoran Labor movementbetween 1977 and 1981. In these years, Salvadoran organized workers were key contentious actors in
what developed into a “revolutionary situation”. To explain this process, this research employs a
framework that combines insights from labor studies and social movements about the Global South.
From labor studies, I draw from the literature of the contemporary transformation of the labor
movement toward Social Movement Unionism (SMU), with a more activist and political profile.
According to this perspective, labor movements following an SMU strategy have expanded their
demands beyond work-related issues, forged alliances with communities and other contentious forces,
widened the range of tactics employed, and combined institutional and non-institutional channels of
actions. And from social movement studies, I consider, on one side, the process of inducement of
mobilization from economic and political threats. From the other side of civil society agency, I examine
the role of preexisting mobilization structures in enabling radical labor actions. Following an
integrative model at the subnational level (combining organizational and structural dynamics), I argue
that unions and other forms of labor organizations in El Salvador sustained a radical form of SMU
protest when previous pro regime structures weakened under a hostile environment of transnational
production and repression. These findings are based on the results of a cross sectional and time series
study over 8 semesters and across 33 municipios (local units) where labor-based organizations were
most active. Using negative-binomial mixed effects models, I find an increase in the likelihood of
radical SMU labor actions with acts of state-sponsored repression, and heightened levels of
transnational production. Radical forms of SMU protest were less likely to occur in localities with
preexisting pro-regime labor unions.