Make France Great Again

Chapter 104: army admission

"What's the matter? Mr. Barrow, you haven't answered my question?"

Jerome Bonaparte still questioned Odilon Barrow without knowing it.

"We will all support your decision, President!" Odilon Barrow tried to deal with Jérôme Bonaparte in a vague manner.

"Mr. Barrow, you are fighting against the National Assembly!" Jerome Bonaparte directly pierced Odilon Barrow, he spread his hands and said helplessly: "I cannot fight with the National Assembly. To fight, the Constitution does not give me such power!"

"Mr. President, I didn't ask you to fight the National Assembly! I just implore you to order the banning of the club and the dissolution of the Rangers! This is your constitutional right!" Odilon Barrow once again described his next actions as conforming to the constitution thing.

"Excuse my refusal! Mr. Prime Minister, doing this will not do me any good, and it will also tear France into a tear." Jerome Bonaparte, who did not see the rabbit but not the eagle, was unwilling to do so without absolute interests. Barrow endorsed it, and he picked up the Gallic War Chronicles on the desk and read it.

The National Assembly's "no-confidence motion" made Odilon Barrow feel on pins and needles. Now he has obviously lost the stability he had before becoming prime minister. Beneath Tom Bonaparte.

"Mr. President, what are your conditions?" Odilon Barrow asked dryly with a bitter smile.

"Huh?" Jerome Bonaparte turned his attention from "The Gallic War" to Odilon Barrow, and when he put the book back on the table, he replied to Odion Barrow: "Mr. Barrow, in my When I was very young, my father told me that everything in the world is priced from the beginning! I have a suggestion, I don’t know if you want to listen to it!”

Did you finally start negotiating conditions?

Odilon Barrow responded immediately, "I'd love to listen!"

"Well... you can think of it as a business or a policy! The executors of the policy are of course you and me!" The misnomered Jerome Bonaparte added: "And of course you Regardless of the party we belong to, we can all make a lot of money in this area, and we don’t have to worry about people gossiping afterwards.”

Immediately afterwards, Jerome Bonaparte told Odilon Barrow about the "Railroad Commission" and the issuance of public creditor's rights.

Barrow also raised the same questions as Morney raised at the beginning, and Jerome Bonaparte also answered them one by one.

"Reasonable design!" Odilon Barrow couldn't help but said: "This can avoid disorderly and savage growth, and also avoid the issue of approval by the National Assembly."

"So Mr. Prime Minister, we are heroes and see the same thing!" From Odilon Barrow's expression, it can be concluded that Odion Barrow already agrees with this plan.

"I want to ask, who made this plan!" Odilon Barrow is eager to know who proposed the plan. No one knows how to operate better than the proposer of the plan.

Jerome Bonaparte, who was unwilling to act as an early bird, resolutely gave Morne all the credit: "This is the plan given to me by the Minister of Public Works, Mr. Morne!"

"Mr. President, is there any more detailed and specific content for this plan!" Odilon Barrow gestured with his hands: "It would be great if the plan could be sorted out!"

"Of course!" Jerome Bonaparte tapped the desk twice.

Pesini outside the door quickly entered the office after hearing the movement.

"Pesini, I have to trouble you!" Jerome Bonaparte said to Pesini.

Afterwards, Jerome Bonaparte ordered Persini to bring over the plan submitted by Morny in the drawer of the study at the Elysee Palace.

After receiving the order, Pessini acted quickly, and Jerome Bonaparte and Odilon Barrot discussed the issue of the National Assembly again.

"Mr. Prime Minister, I have a question for you!" said Jérôme Bonaparte, putting his hands on the desk: "I remember that Minister Leon Fouche told me as early as January 6th. Regarding the necessity of disbanding the Rangers, I have also unified his opinion, why the Rangers have not been disbanded yet!"

Barrow explained to Jerome Bonaparte about the Rangers.

Since the cabinet meeting on January 6, Leon Fouche ordered the disbanding of the Rangers, but the Rangers refused to disband on the grounds that Leon Fouche was not their direct commander.

The Rangers, led by the Ministry of the Interior but with military salaries, were not at all threatened by Leon Fushi, and with the secret support of the Republican faction, the Rangers even dared to have a small-scale conflict with the Capital Corps.

"Damn, how did Paris become like this! Neither the republicans nor the mountains are clean!" Jerome Bonaparte cursed.

"That's right! The Republicans and the Mountain Party are not the stuff to govern the country at all, they will only bring down the whole country!" Odilon Barrow, who was equally displeased with the Republicans and the Mountain Party, echoed.

"In this case~www.readwn.com~ Mr. Prime Minister! I think they should be given a little color! I think Paris should hold a military parade in the near future to prevent the revolution from coming back," Jerome Bonaparte urged Odilon. Barrow conducts a preventive coup.

For Jerome Bonaparte's instigation, Odilon Barrow was obviously a little moved.

At this time, he didn't even think about using the army to force the parliament to submit, whether he and his party would one day become victims of the army.

"I still have to discuss this with General Changarnier!" Odion Barro responded.

"I want to discuss it with General Changarnier! Otherwise, it will be difficult to properly resolve the issue of the Rangers!" Jerome Bonaparte nodded in response.

As soon as Jerome Bonaparte finished speaking, Pesini appeared in the office with a document in hand.

Persini respectfully handed the information to Jerome Bonaparte, who in turn handed it over to Odilon Barrow.

Barrow, who received the information, flipped through the content page by page until the end of the last page.

Faced with a well-prepared plan, Odilon Barrow couldn't help but disagree: "I agree with Mr. Morney's plan!"

After the cooperation between the two parties is reached, what remains is how Odilon Barro does the work of Tongchangarnier.

Jérôme Bonaparte, returning to the Elysee Palace, rarely saw Odilon Barrot for the next few days.

However, with the support of Odilon Barrow, the "Railroad Commission" began to be established in an orderly manner.

It was not until the end of the cabinet meeting on January 25 that Odilon Barrot approached Jérôme Bonaparte: "Mr. President, General Changarnier and Minister Liulier have agreed that the army will be held on January 29. A military parade!"

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