[The Development of the European Nations, 1870-1914 (5th ed.) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link book
The Development of the European Nations, 1870-1914 (5th ed.)

CHAPTER V
15/34

The question having thus been thrust to the front, the Assembly brought forward (April 1871) a measure authorising the election of Communal Councils elected by every adult man who had resided for a year in the Commune.

A majority of the Assembly wished that the right of choosing mayors should rest with the Communal Councils, but Thiers, browbeating the deputies by his favourite device of threatening to resign, carried an amendment limiting this right to towns of less than 20,000 inhabitants.

In the larger towns, and in all capitals of Departments, the mayors were to be appointed by the central power.

Thus the Napoleonic tradition in favour of keeping local government under the oversight of officials nominated from Paris was to some extent perpetuated even in an avowedly democratic measure.
Paris was to have a Municipal Council composed of eighty members elected by manhood suffrage from each ward; but the mayors of the twenty _arrondissements_, into which Paris is divided, were, and still are, appointed by the State; and here again the control of the police and other extensive powers are vested in the _Prefet_ of the Department of the Seine, not in the mayors of the _arrondissements_ or the Municipal Council.

The Municipal or Communal Act of 1871, then, is a compromise--on the whole a good working compromise--between the extreme demands for local self-government and the Napoleonic tradition, now become an instinct with most Frenchmen in favour of central control over matters affecting public order[69].
[Footnote 69: On the strength of this instinct see Mr.Bodley's excellent work, _France_, vol.i.pp.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books