Louis XVI and Charles Louis François de …

Years: 1789 - 1789
May
Louis XVI and Charles Louis François de Paule de Barentin, the Keeper of the Seals of France, address the deputies on May 6, at which point the Third Estate discovers that the royal decree granting double representation also upholds the traditional voting "by orders", i.e. that the collective vote of each estate will be weighed equally.

The apparent intent of the King and of Barentin is for everyone to get directly to the matter of taxes.

The larger representation of the Third Estate will remain merely a symbol while giving them no extra power.

Director-General of Finance Jacques Necker has more sympathy for the Third Estate, but on this occasion he speaks only about the fiscal situation, leaving it to Barentin to speak on how the Estates-General was to operate.

The King and his ministers, in trying to avoid the issue of representation and to focus solely on taxes, have gravely misjudged the situation.

The Third Estate wants the estates to meet as one body and for each delegate to have one vote.

The other two estates, while having their own grievances against royal absolutism, believe—correctly, as history is to prove—that they stand to lose more power to the Third Estate than they stand to gain from the King.

Necker sympathizes with the Third Estate in this matter, but the astute financier lacks equal astuteness as a politician.

He decides to let the impasse play out to the point of stalemate before he will enter the fray.

As a result, by the time the King yields to the demand of the Third Estate, it seems to all to be a concession wrung from the monarchy, rather than a magnanimous gift that would have convinced the populace of the King's goodwill.

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