They had also been actively organising people into unions in the mining belt of Goa and in the port town of Vasco da Gama.
It attacked the prohibition policy promoted by the Congress and criticized the administration of Goa for nepotism and corruption.
[citation needed] They also highlighted issues that affected the Goan working class, along with a clear agenda of "Land to the Tiller".
[4] Frente Popular was responsible for organizing mass rallies which were addressed by prominent national communist leaders such as S. A. Dange.
[2] There were persistent demands to merge the Union Territory of Goa into the newly created linguistic state of Maharashtra.