Lara was personally linked to Alejandro Lerroux, who became head of government on 14 April 1931. On 28 June 1931 he was elected deputy for Santa Cruz de Tenerife, holding office until 9 October 1933. Soon after he became a member of the national executive committee of the Radical Republican Party. He was very active in debates. He was a member of the committees of Agriculture, Navy and Budget. In 1932 he was appointed second vice president of the Cortes. He was vice-president of the commission that drafted the opinion of the proposed Statute of Catalonia. He was a member of the committee that investigated the Casas Viejas incident in January 1933. Lara was Minister of Finance in the cabinets of Alejandro Lerroux and Diego Martínez Barrio. He was reelected deputy for Santa Cruz de Tenerife on 19 November 1933. He continued as finance minister in the second Lerroux government from 16 December 1933 until 3 March 1934, when he was replaced by Manuel Marraco in a cabinet shuffle. Lara was aligned with Martínez Barrio in opposing collaboration in parliament with the Catholic right confederation of Gil Robles. In the spring of 1934 he broke with Lerroux and became president of the organizing committee of the Republican Radical Democrat Party, and soon after of the new Republican Union led by Martinez Barrio. Lara was elected deputy for Seville on 16 February 1936. He was Minister of Justice in the cabinets of Manuel Azaña and Augusto Barcía Trelles. He was named Minister of Public Works by Martínez Barrio in the ephemeral government of 19 July 1936. During the Spanish Civil War Lara attended some of the sessions of the Cortes, but lived in Barcelona and Paris, where he was an attaché in the Spanish Embassy. Azaña's memoirs record a long meeting with Lara, who had just arrived from Paris, in August 1937. He said the internal struggles among the Republicans had been fatal to their image abroad, and said, "It is useless for the President of the Republic to speak of democracy and liberalism if at the same time the films our propaganda shows in theaters always come with the portraits of Lenin and Stalin."
Exile (1939–56)
In 1939 Lara moved to Great Britain, and in September 1940 managed to travel on the steamer Orduña from Liverpool to Veracruz, Mexico. It was only years later that he was reunited with his first son Cristóbal, and much later with his son Juan. His two daughters and his wife remained in Santa Cruz de Tenerife. In Mexico he worked as a lawyer in the law firm of Felipe Sánchez-Román, and was an adviser to Mexican President Manuel Ávila Camacho. Vicente Llorens in his book La emigración republicana says that Lara also had his own office in Mexico city. He remained a member of the Republican Union and of the government in exile, and was involved in intense political activity with Martinez Barrio. He died on 24 February 1956 in Mexico.
Publications
From 1941 to 1948 Lara composed a considerable number of poems about his feelings and meditations as an exile from his country.