General Pierre Augereau (he of the Fructidor-coup),…
October 1801 CE
Despite this military putsch the campaign for the plebiscite had taken place in an atmosphere of political freedom unthinkable in France.
Nevertheless, this had not resulted in great enthusiasm for the new constitution.
'When the votes were counted on 1 October, out of 416,619 voters only 16,771 voted in favor and 52,219 against.
The Directors then used a sleight of hand that unfortunately would also become familiar in the Dutch constitutional politics of the successor states: they counted the 350,000 abstentions as "tacit affirmations".
Unlike the coup of June 1798, the Augereau coup does present a sharp break with the recent past.
The new constitution reduces the role of the legislative branch (which now does not have the right of initiative), and expands the powers of the Executive, which now becomes known as the Staatsbewind (Regency of State).
The elective principle is reduced to a formality: the Staatsbewind, originally consisting of the three directors taking part in the coup, expands its membership by co-optation to twelve.
This executive then appoints the first thirty-five members of the legislature.
As vacancies arose, these will be filled, as far as possible, on a provincial rota and according to national quotas of representatives of each province (much like the old States-General).
Except for Holland, the old provinces are reconstituted.
The local and provincial administrative organs will continue to be —no longer by universal manhood suffrage, but by a system of census suffrage.
Most important is the change in personnel of these organs, mostly as a consequence of this electoral change.
The "democrats" are mostly replaced by Patriot regents, who have no patience with democracy, and by the old Orangist regents, who do not even have to disguise their allegiance as in early 1801 a convenient amnesty had been proclaimed.
One surprising example is Egbert Sjuck Gerrold Juckema van Burmania Rengers, the Orangist burgomaster of Leeuwarden before 1795, a notorious reactionary.
To sum up: the coup representsa counter-revolution.
This becomes clear in the way the iconography of the 1795 revolution disappeas: the epigraph Vrijheid, Gelijkheid, Broederschap (Liberty, Equality, Fraternity) which had adorned all official publications, will be henceforth removed, and the last Liberty Trees will be removed from the town squares.
Soon the "good old days" of nepotism and venality will be restored.
Equally, though the abolition of the guilds formally remains, in practice regulation of crafts and trades will be reimposed by local ordinances.
Officially, the Batavian Republic became the Batavian Commonwealth (Bataafs Gemenebest).