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A provisional government
was set up and a republic proclaimed. The government issued a
right-to-work declaration and set up national workshops to relieve
unemployment. The vote was extended to all adult males - an
unprecedented move for its time.
All
was not plain sailing, though. By the time elections were held in April,
a new tax designed to ameliorate the financial crisis had antagonized
the countryside. A massive conservative majority was re-elected, to the
dismay of the radicals.
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Three
days of bloody street fighting at the barricades followed, when General Cavaignac, who had distinguished
himself in the suppression of Algerian resistance, turned the artillery
on the workers. More than 1500 were killed and 12,000 arrested and
exiled.
A reasonably
democratic constitution was drawn up and elections called to choose a
president. To everyone's surprise, Louis-Napoléon, nephew of the
emperor, romped home. In spite of his liberal reputation, he restricted
the vote again, censored the press and pandered to the Catholic Church.
In 1852, following a coup and further street
fighting, he had himself proclaimed Emperor Napoléon III.
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