Make France Great Again

Chapter 100 Disbanding the Rangers

After Passy's report, Jérôme Bonaparte listened to the report on Paris security issues from the Minister of the Interior, Leon Foch. Kang’s “problems” were mentioned, but nothing was said about the newly established Anti-Revolutionary Investigation Department within the police department.

Jérôme Bonaparte nodded in satisfaction. It is rare to see such a decent guy like Leon Fuchs. He immediately said to Leon Fuchs: "Since you think there is a problem with our police chief, then let Get him replaced!"

Leon Fudu, who was approved by Jérôme Bonaparte, immediately responded: "Mr. President, how should the Special Forces under the Superintendent of Police deal with it?"

The Einsatzgruppen that Leon Fauchi called was an armed force formed by the extreme republicans in response to the June Revolution, and it was also one of the only armed forces of the republicans.

Although the Einsatzgruppen gave Parisian proprietors a more satisfactory answer than the army in the June Revolution, the extreme republican brand it carried made the Party of Order very disgusted.

"Mr. Barrow, what do you think?" Jerome Bonaparte turned his attention to Barrow. The dissolution of the Einsatzgruppen would require Barrow's cooperation to succeed.

"France no longer needs this weapon! Their existence is the greatest crime to the workers!" Barro said eloquently, and now he seems to have become a left-wing fighter with infinite sympathy for the workers, the word political chameleon It is vividly reflected in Barrow.

"Then disband them in the name of helping the civil unrest!" Jerome Bonaparte, who also disliked the republican armed forces, immediately decided, and then he added: "If some people in the Einsatzgruppen are willing to pay for what they did in June If you repent of what happened in June, then put them into the National Guard, someone must be responsible for the incident in June!"

"Yes!" Leon Fushi, who received double guarantees from the president and the prime minister, readily accepted the order, and Leon, who had endured the police chief and his semi-militarized Rangers for nearly half a month, was going to do something drastic.

Jerome Bonaparte, who had settled the issue of the Minister of the Interior, looked around again, waiting for the next minister to report on his work.

The ministers who reported to Jerome Bonaparte were obviously not as vigorous as those reported by the Minister of Finance and the Minister of the Interior. Most of them were issues that required fiscal expenditures or investment projects.

Jerome Bonaparte patiently listened to their respective questions, which will be handled by Barrot.

The meeting lasted from 11:00 to 1:00 pm. After the meeting, Jerome Bonaparte invited the Prime Minister and the ministers to have a simple lunch at the Elysee Palace.

At 2:30 p.m., Barrow and the minister left after lunch.

Minister of Justice Eugène Rouet and Minister of Public Works Morny were retained by Jérôme Bonaparte.

The three entered the study one by one, and Jerome Bonaparte walked to his desk and sat down.

Eugene Rouet and Morny sat opposite Jerome Bonaparte.

"Mr. Morny, this is the first time we have met! I don't know what you want to say!" Jerome Bonaparte asked Morny in a slightly joking tone.

Morni was sitting upright, leaning tightly against the back of the chair.

"Thank you to the President for giving me this opportunity to serve as the Minister of Public Works. I will do my best to serve the President!" Morney lowered his voice, making it even more deep and convincing.

"Mr. Morny, I already know your life experience! So there is no need for us to be so unfamiliar!" Jerome Bonaparte decided to speak frankly to Morny, his aunt's illegitimate son: "I hope you Can you join us? Because we are the only one!"

"You guys?" Morny looked at Jerome Bonaparte suspiciously, and then said bluntly: "Mr. President, please forgive me, you and your team are too weak? It is not good for me to join you all." Any benefit!"

"Could they (the Party of Order) be able to benefit you?" Jerome Bonaparte asked rhetorically,

He shook his head: "Morni, my friend! Wake up, they won't give you any benefits at all. There are only so many places in France, and they don't have enough time to give you an outsider!"

"But Mr. President, your term is only 4 years! It is difficult to do a great project in 4 years!" Morney then responded.

"Morny, rules are dead, but people are alive! People who can be bound by rules are only mediocre!" Jerome Bonaparte stretched out a finger and waved it back and forth.

"Don't you think..." Morni thought of a possibility, but he didn't dare to say it.

"No, no, no!" Jerome Bonaparte obviously understood what Morny wanted to say, and he shook his head in response: "The best way is to reach a satisfactory result under the current system. If it doesn't work, it's okay." Use other methods! Weapons can only be our last resort!"

"What do you want?" Morny responded to Jerome Bonaparte.

Jerome Bonaparte lightly tapped the table with his index finger and said, "We just want to get back what belongs to us!"

"How do you get it back! As far as I know, Mr. President, you don't seem to be able to directly control the army!" Morni had already acquiesced in the possibility of Jérôme Bonaparte's coup.

"I believe that General Changarnier will definitely be here with us!" Jerome Bonaparte responded confidently to Mornier. He did not dare to reveal the idea of ​​deposing Changarnier in front of Mornier. Some things are better reserved for Morney.

Looking at Jerome Bonaparte's confident expression, Morni actually had a feeling of "maybe he can win" in his heart: "Then Mr. President... No, Your Royal Highness! I am willing to fight with you!"

With the addition of Morny, Jerome Bonaparte's small team has one more person who can share Jerome Bonaparte's worries.

Jerome Bonaparte, who had finished solving the Morny problem, turned his attention to Eugène Rouet: "Mr. Rouet, do you have any questions you want to ask me!"

Eugene Rouay was taken aback for a moment, and then replied: "I already understand!"

"Tell me about it?" Jerome Bonaparte showed an attitude of listening attentively. A worry-free subordinate can indeed save a lot of talking.

"The restoration of the salt tax is a trap!" Eugène Roue responded in a firm tone: "Once this proposal is handed over to the National Assembly, the contradictions in the National Assembly will quickly heat up! The Montagne and the Republicans in the parliament will never Seeing that the plan is passed, they will do everything possible to obstruct the passage of the plan, but Prime Minister Barrow must implement the proposal, because only in this way can they ease the fiscal deficit!"

"You are right!" Jerome Bonaparte clapped his hands and applauded, "The National Assembly must be mobilized. A united National Assembly is not in our interest!"

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