IV
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In the middle of October, 1849,
the National Assembly met once more. On November 1 Bonaparte
surprised it with a message in which he announced the dismissal of
the Barrot-Falloux Ministry and the formation of a new ministry. No
one has ever sacked lackeys with less ceremony than Bonaparte his
ministers. The kicks that were intended for the National Assembly
were given in the meantime to Barrot & Co.
The Barrot Ministry, as we have seen, had been composed of
Legitimists and Orleanists; it was a ministry of the party of Order.
Bonaparte had needed it to dissolve the republican Constituent
Assembly, to bring about the expedition against Rome, and to break
the Democratic party. Behind this ministry he had seemingly effaced
himself, surrendered governmental power into the hands of the party
of Order, and donned the modest character mask that the responsible
editor of a newspaper wore under Louis Philippe, the mask of the
bonnne de paille [straw man]. He now threw off a mask which was no
longer the light veil behind which he could hide his physiognomy,
but an iron mask which prevented him from displaying a physiognomy
of his own. He had appointed the Barrot Ministry in order to blast
the republican National Assembly in the name of the party of Order;
he dismissed it in order to declare his own name independent of the
National Assembly of the party of Order.
Plausible pretexts for this dismissal were not lacking. The Barrot
Ministry neglected even the decencies that would have let the
President of the Republic appear as a power side by side with the
National Assembly. During the recess of the National Assembly
Bonaparte published a letter to Edgar Ney in which he seemed to
disapprove of the illiberal attitude of the Pope, just as in
opposition to the Constituent Assembly he had published a letter in
which he commended Oudinot for the attack on the Roman republic.
When the National Assembly now voted the budget for the Roman
expedition, Victor Hugo, out of alleged liberalism, brought up this
letter for discussion. The party of Order with scornfully
incredulous outcries stifled the idea that Bonaparte's ideas could
have any political importance. Not one of the ministers took up the
gauntlet for him. On another occasion Barrot, with his well-known
hollow rhetoric, let fall from the platform words of indignation
concerning the "abominable intrigues" that, according to his
assertion, went on in the immediate entourage of the President.
Finally, while the ministry obtained from the National Assembly a
widow's pension for the Duchess of Orleans it rejected any proposal
to increase the Civil List of the President. And in Bonaparte the
imperial pretender was so intimately bound up with the adventurer
down on his luck that the one great idea, that he was called to
restore the empire, was always supplemented by the other, that it
was the mission of the French people to pay his debts.
The Barrot-Falloux Ministry was the first and last parliamentary
ministry that Bonaparte brought into being. Its dismissal forms,
accordingly, a decisive turning point. With it the party of Order
lost, never to reconquer it, an indispensable position for the
maintenance of the parliamentary regime, the lever of executive
power. It is immediately obvious that in a country like France,
where the executive power commands an army of officials numbering
more than half a million individuals and therefore constantly
maintains an immense mass of interests and livelihoods in the most
absolute dependence; where the state enmeshes, controls, regulates,
superintends, and tutors civil society from its most comprehensive
manifestations of life down to its most insignificant stirrings,
from its most general modes of being to the private existence of
individuals; where through the most extraordinary centralization
this parasitic body acquires a ubiquity, an omniscience, a capacity
for accelerated mobility, and an elasticity which finds a
counterpart only in the helpless dependence, the loose shapelessness
of the actual body politic — it is obvious that in such a country
the National Assembly forfeits all real influence when it loses
command of the ministerial posts, if it does not at the same time
simplify the administration of the state, reduce the army of
officials as far as possible, and, finally, let civil society and
public opinion create organs of their own, independent of the
governmental power. But it is precisely with the maintenance of that
extensive state machine in its numerous ramifications that the
material interests of the French bourgeoisie are interwoven in the
closest fashion. Here it finds posts for its surplus population and
makes up in the form of state salaries for what it cannot pocket in
the form of profit, interest, rents, and honorariums. On the other
hand, its political interests compelled it to increase daily the
repressive measures and therefore the resources and the personnel of
the state power, while at the same time it had to wage an
uninterrupted war against public opinion and mistrustfully mutilate,
cripple, the independent organs of the social movement, where it did
not succeed in amputating them entirely. Thus the French bourgeoisie
was compelled by its class position to annihilate, on the one hand,
the vital conditions of all parliamentary power, and therefore,
likewise, of its own, and to render irresistible, on the other hand,
the executive power hostile to it.
The new ministry was called the Hautpoul Ministry. Not in the sense
that General Hautpoul had received the rank of Prime Minister.
Rather, simultaneously with Barrot's dismissal, Bonaparte abolished
this dignity, which, true enough, condemned the President of the
Republic to the status of the legal nonentity of a constitutional
monarch, but of a constitutional monarch without throne or crown,
without scepter or sword, without freedom from responsibility,
without imprescriptible possession of the highest state dignity, and
worst of all, without a Civil List. The Hautpoul Ministry contained
only one man of parliamentary standing, the moneylender Fould, one
of the most notorious of the high financiers. To his lot fell the
Ministry of Finance. Look up the quotations on the Paris Bourse and
you will find that from November 1, 1849, onward the French fonds
[government securities] rise and fall with the rise and fall of
Bonapartist stocks. While Bonaparte had thus found his ally in the
Bourse, he at the same time took possession of the police by
appointing Carlier police prefect of Paris.
Only in the course of development, however, could the consequences
of the change of ministers come to light. To begin with, Bonaparte
had taken a step forward only to be driven backward all the more
conspicuously. His brusque message was followed by the most servile
declaration of allegiance to the National Assembly. As often as the
ministers dared to make a diffident attempt to introduce his
personal fads as legislative proposals, they themselves seemed to
carry out, against their will and compelled by their position,
comical commissions whose fruitlessness they were persuaded of in
advance. As often as Bonaparte blurted out his intentions behind the
ministers' backs and played with his "idees napoleoniennes," his own
ministers disavowed him from the tribune of the National Assembly.
His usurpatory longings seemed to make themselves heard only in
order that the malicious laughter of his opponents might not be
muted. He behaved like an unrecognized genius, whom all the world
takes for a simpleton. Never did he enjoy the contempt of all
classes in fuller measure than during this period. Never did the
bourgeoisie rule more absolutely, never did it display more
ostentatiously the insignia of domination.
I need not write here the history of its legislative activity, which
is summarized during this period in two laws: in the law
reestablishing the wine tax and the education law abolishing
unbelief. If wine drinking was made harder for the French, they were
presented all the more plentifully with the water of true life. If
in the law on the wine tax the bourgeoisie declared the old, hateful
French tax system to be inviolable, it sought through the education
law to insure among the masses the old state of mind that put up
with the tax system. One is astonished to see the Orleanists, the
liberal bourgeois, these old apostles of Voltaireanism and eclectic
philosophy, entrust to their hereditary enemies, the Jesuits, the
superintendence of the French mind. However Orleanists and
Legitimists could part company in regard to the pretenders to the
throne, they understood that securing their united rule necessitated
the uniting of the means of repression of two epochs, that the means
of subjugation of the July Monarchy had to be supplemented and
strengthened by the means of subjugation of the Restoration.
The peasants, disappointed in all their hopes, crushed more than
ever by the low level of grain prices on the one hand, and by the
growing burden of taxes and mortgage debts on the other, began to
bestir themselves in the departments. They were answered by a drive
against the schoolmasters, who were made subject to the clergy, by a
drive against the mayors, made subject to the prefects, and by a
system of espionage to which all were made subject. In Paris and the
large towns reaction itself has the physiognomy of its epoch and
challenges more than it strikes down. In the countryside it becomes
dull, coarse, petty, tiresome, and vexatious, in a word, the
gendarme. One comprehends how three years of the regime of the
gendarme, consecrated by the regime of the priest, were bound to
demoralize immature masses.
Whatever amount of passion and declamation might be employed by the
party of Order against the minority from the tribune of the National
Assembly, its speech remained as monosyllabic as that of the
Christians, whose words were to be: Yea, yea; nay, nay! As
monosyllabic on the platform as in the press. Flat as a riddle whose
answer is known in advance. Whether it was a question of the right
of petition or the tax on wine, freedom of the press or free trade,
the clubs or the municipal charter, protection of personal liberty
or regulation of the state budget, the watchword constantly recurs,
the theme remains always the same, the verdict is ever ready and
invariably reads: "Socialism!" Even bourgeois liberalism is declared
socialistic, bourgeois enlightenment socialistic, bourgeois
financial reform socialistic. It was socialistic to build a railway
where a canal already existed, and it was socialistic to defend
oneself with a cane when one was attacked with a rapier.
This was not merely a figure of speech, fashion, or party tactics.
The bourgeoisie had a true insight into the fact that all the
weapons it had forged against feudalism turned their points against
itself, that all the means of education it had produced rebelled
against its own civilization, that all the gods it had created had
fallen away from it. It understood that all the so-called bourgeois
liberties and organs of progress attacked and menaced its class rule
at its social foundation and its political summit simultaneously,
and had therefore become "socialistic." In this menace and this
attack it rightly discerned the secret of socialism, whose import
and tendency it judges more correctly than so-called socialism knows
how to judge itself; the latter can, accordingly, not comprehend why
the bourgeoisie callously hardens its heart against it, whether it
sentimentally bewails the sufferings of mankind, or in Christian
spirit prophesies the millennium and universal brotherly love, or in
humanistic style twaddles about mind, education, and freedom, or in
doctrinaire fashion invents a system for the conciliation and
welfare of all classes. What the bourgeoisie did not grasp, however,
was the logical conclusion that its own parliamentary regime, its
political rule in general, was now also bound to meet with the
general verdict of condemnation as being socialistic. As long as the
rule of the bourgeois class had not been completely organized, as
long as it had not acquired its pure political expression, the
antagonism of the other classes likewise could not appear in its
pure form, and where it did appear could not take the dangerous turn
that transforms every struggle against the state power into a
struggle against capital. If in every stirring of life in society it
saw "tranquillity" imperiled, how could it want to maintain at the
head of society a regime of unrest, its own regime, the
parliamentary regime, this regime that, according to the expression
of one of its spokesmen, lives in struggle and by struggle? The
parliamentary regime lives by discussion, how shall it forbid
discussion? Every interest, every social institution, is here
transformed into general ideas, debated as ideas; how shall any
interest, any institution, sustain itself above thought and impose
itself as an article of faith? The struggle of the orators on the
platform evokes the struggle of the scribblers of the press; the
debating club in parliament is necessarily supplemented by debating
clubs in the salons and the bistros; the representatives, who
constantly appeal to public opinion, give public opinion the right
to speak its real mind in petitions. The parliamentary regime leaves
everything to the decision of majorities; how shall the great
majorities outside parliament not want to decide? When you play the
fiddle at the top of the state, what else is to be expected but that
those down below dance?
Thus by now stigmatizing as "socialistic" what it had previously
extolled as "liberal," the bourgeoisie confesses that its own
interests dictate that it should be delivered from the danger of its
own rule; that to restore tranquillity in the country its bourgeois
parliament must, first of all, be given its quietus; that to
preserve its social power intact its political power must be broken;
that the individual bourgeois can continue to exploit the other
classes and to enjoy undisturbed property, family, religion, and
order only on condition that their class be condemned along with the
other classes to like political nullity; that in order to save its
purse it must forfeit the crown, and the sword that is to safeguard
it must at the same time be hung over its own head as a sword of
Damocles.
In the domain of the interests of the general citizenry, the
National Assembly showed itself so unproductive that, for example,
the discussions on the Paris-Avignon railway, which began in the
winter of 1850, were still not ripe for conclusion on December 2,
1851. Where it did not repress or pursue a reactionary course it was
stricken with incurable barrenness.
While Bonaparte's ministry partly took the initiative in framing
laws in the spirit of the party of Order, and partly even outdid
that party's harshness in their execution and administration, he, on
the other hand, sought by childishly silly proposals to win
popularity, to bring out his opposition to the National Assembly,
and to hint at a secret reserve that was only temporarily prevented
by conditions from making its hidden treasures available to the
French people. Such was the proposal to decree an increase in pay of
four sous a day to the noncommissioned officers. Such was the
proposal of an honor-system loan bank for the workers. Money as a
gift and money as a loan, it was with prospects such as these that
he hoped to lure the masses. Donations and loans — the financial
science of the lumpen proletariat, whether of high degree or low, is
restricted to this. Such were the only springs Bonaparte knew how to
set in action. Never has a pretender speculated more stupidly on the
stupidity of the masses.
The National Assembly flared up repeatedly over these unmistakable
attempts to gain popularity at its expense, over the growing danger
that this adventurer, whom his debts spurred on and no established
reputation held back, would venture a desperate coup. The discord
between the party of Order and the President had taken on a
threatening character when an unexpected event threw him back
repentant into its arms. We mean the by-elections of March 10, 1850.
These elections were held for the purpose of filling the
representatives' seats that after June 13 had been rendered vacant
by imprisonment or exile. Paris elected only social-democratic
candidates. It even concentrated most of the votes on an insurgent
of June, 1848, on De Flotte. Thus did the Parisian petty
bourgeoisie, in alliance with the proletariat, revenge itself for
its defeat on June 13, 1849. It seemed to have disappeared from the
battlefield at the moment of danger only to reappear there on a more
propitious occasion with more numerous fighting forces and with a
bolder battle cry. One circumstance seemed to heighten the peril of
this election victory. The army voted in Paris for the June
insurgent against La Hitte, a minister of Bonaparte's, and in the
departments largely for the Montagnards, who here too, though indeed
not so decisively as in Paris, maintained the ascendancy over their
adversaries.
Bonaparte saw himself suddenly confronted with revolution once more.
As on January 29, 1849, as on June 13, 1849, so on March 10, 1850,
he disappeared behind the party of Order. He made obeisance, he
pusillanimously begged pardon, he offered to appoint any ministry it
pleased at the behest of the parliamentary majority, he even
implored the Orleanist and Legitimist party leaders, the Thiers, the
Berryers, the Broglies, the Moles, in brief, the so-called burgraves,
to take the helm of state themselves. The party of Order proved
unable to take advantage of this opportunity that would never
return. Instead of boldly possessing itself of the power offered, it
did not even compel Bonaparte to reinstate the ministry dismissed on
November 1; it contented itself with humiliating him by its
forgiveness and adjoining M. Baroche to the Hautpoul Ministry. As
public prosecutor this Baroche had stormed and raged before the High
Court at Bourges, the first time against the revolutionists of May
15, the second time against the democrats of June 13, both times
because of an attempt on the life of the National Assembly. None of
Bonaparte's ministers subsequently contributed more to the
degradation of the National Assembly, and after December 2, 1851, we
meet him once more as the comfortably installed and highly paid vice
president of the Senate. He had spat in the revolutionists' soup in
order that Bonaparte might eat it up.
The social-democratic party, for its part, seemed only to look for
pretexts to put its own victory once again in doubt and to blunt its
point. Vidal, one of the newly elected representatives of Paris, had
been elected simultaneously in Strasbourg. He was induced to decline
the election for Paris and accept it for Strasbourg. And so, instead
of making its victory at the polls conclusive and thereby compelling
the party of Order to contest it in parliament at once, instead of
thus forcing the adversary to fight at the moment of popular
enthusiasm and favorable mood in the army, the democratic party
wearied Paris during the months of March and April with a new
election campaign, let the aroused popular passions wear themselves
out in this repeated provisional election game, let the
revolutionary energy satiate itself with constitutional successes,
dissipate itself in petty intrigues, hollow declamations, and sham
movements, let the bourgeoisie rally and make its preparations, and,
lastly, weakened the significance of the March elections by a
sentimental commentary in the April by-election, the election of
Eugene Sue. In a word, it made an April Fool of March 10.
The parliamentary majority understood the weakness of its
antagonist. Its seventeen burgraves — for Bonaparte had left to it
the direction of and responsibility for the attack — drew up a new
electoral law, the introduction of which was entrusted to M. Faucher,
who solicited this honor for himself. On May 8 he introduced the law
by which universal suffrage was to be abolished, a residence of
three years in the locality of the election to be imposed as a
condition on the electors, and finally, the proof of this residence
made dependent in the case of workers on a certificate from their
employers.
Just as the democrats had, in revolutionary fashion, raged and
agitated during the constitutional election contest, so now, when it
was requisite to prove the serious nature of that victory arms in
hand, did they in constitutional fashion preach order, calme
majestueux, lawful action, that is to say, blind subjection to the
will of the counterrevolution, which imposed itself as the law.
During the debate the "Mountain" put the part of Order to shame by
asserting, against the latter's revolutionary passion, the
dispassionate attitude of the philistine who keeps within the law,
and by felling that party to earth with the fearful reproach that it
was proceeding in a revolutionary manner. Even the newly elected
deputies were at pains to prove by their decorous and discreet
action what a misconception it was to decry them as anarchists and
construe their election as a victory for revolution. On May 31 the
new electoral law went through. The Montagne contented itself with
smuggling a protest into the President's pocket. The electoral law
was followed by a new press law, by which the revolutionary
newspaper press was entirely suppressed. It had deserved its fate.
The National and La Presse, two bourgeois organs, were left after
this deluge as the most advanced outposts of the revolution.
We have seen how during March and April the democratic leaders had
done everything to embroil the people of Paris in a sham fight, how
after May 8 they did everything to restrain them from a real fight.
In addition to this, we must not forget that the year 1850 was one
of the most splendid years of industrial and commercial prosperity,
and the Paris proletariat was therefore fully employed. But the
election law of May 31, 1850, excluded it from any participation in
political power. It cut the proletariat off from the very arena of
the struggle. It threw the workers back into the position of pariahs
which they had occupied before the February Revolution. By letting
themselves be led by the democrats in the face of such an event and
forgetting the revolutionary interests of their class for momentary
case and comfort, they renounced the honor of being a conquering
power, surrendered to their fate, proved that the defeat of June,
1848, had put them out of the fight for years and that the
historical process would for the present again have to go on over
their heads. As for the petty-bourgeois democracy, which on June 13
had cried, "But if once universal suffrage is attacked, then we'll
show them," it now consoled itself with the contention that the
counterrevolutionary blow which had struck it was no blow and the
law of May 31 no law. On the second Sunday in May, 1852, every
Frenchman would appear at the polling place with ballot in one hand
and sword in the other. With this prophecy it rested content.
Lastly, the army was disciplined by its superior officers for the
elections of March and April, 1850, just as it had been disciplined
for those of May 28, 1849. This time, however, it said decidedly:
"The revolution shall not dupe us a third time."
The law of May 31, 1850, was the coup d'etat of the bourgeoisie. All
its conquests over the revolution hitherto had only a provisional
character and were endangered as soon as the existing National
Assembly retired from the stage. They depended on the hazards of a
new general election, and the history of elections since 1848
irrefutably proved that the bourgeoisie's moral sway over the mass
of the people was lost in the same measure as its actual domination
developed. On March 10 universal suffrage declared itself directly
against the domination of the bourgeoisie; the bourgeoisie answered
by outlawing universal suffrage. The law of May 31 was therefore one
of the necessities of the class struggle. On the other hand, the
constitution required a minimum of two million votes to make an
election of the President of the Republic valid. If none of the
candidates for the presidency received this minimum, the National
Assembly was to choose the President from among the three candidates
to whom the largest number of votes would fall. At the time when the
Constituent Assembly made this law, ten million electors were
registered on the rolls of voters. In its view, therefore, a fifth
of the people entitled to vote was sufficient to make the
presidential election valid. The law of May 31 struck at least three
million votes off the electoral rolls, reduced the number of people
entitled to vote to seven million, and nevertheless retained the
legal minimum of two million for the presidential election. It
therefore raised the legal minimum from a fifth to nearly a third of
the effective votes; that is, it did everything to smuggle the
election of the President out of the hands of the people and into
the hands of the National Assembly. Thus through the electoral law
of May 31 the party of Order seemed to have made its rule doubly
secure, by surrendering the election of the National Assembly and
that of the President of the Republic to the stationary section of
society.
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