1786-June 1789: Real Political Influence
The continuing dissipation of the financial situation in France, though cutbacks in the royal retinue had been made, ultimately forced the king, in collaboration with his current Minister of Finance, Charles Alexandre Calonne, to call the
Assembly of Notables, after an absence of 160 years, to try and pass some of the reforms needed to alleviate the situation when the Parlements refused to cooperate. The first meeting of the Assembly took place on
February 22, 1787, at which Marie Antoinette was not present and was afterwards accused of trying to undermine the process.
However, the Assembly was a failure with or without the queen, as they did not pass any reforms and instead fell into a pattern of defying the king, demanding other reforms and for the acquicence of the Parlements. As a result, the king to dismiss Calonne on
April 8, 1787; Vergennes died on
February 13 and the king, once more ignoring the queen's pro-Austrian candidate (which she had half-heartedly endorsed) appointing a childhood friend, the Comte de Montmorin, to replace him as Foreign Minister.
During this time, even as her candidate was rejected, the queen began to abandon her more carefree activities to become more involved in politics than ever before, and mostly against the interests of Austria. This was for a variety of reasons; her children were the Children of France, and thus their futures needed to be assured, the after effects of the "Diamond Necklace Affair" which in a way this was the queen's way of fighting the image presented, and the king's own condition, which was largely affected by a major
depression, the symptoms of which were passed off as drunkeness by the
libelles. As a result, she finally became a politically viable entity, though she herself was not gifted as such. Nevertheless, she did her best to help the situation brewing between the Assembly and the king.
The change in interests also signalled the beginning of the end of the influence of the Polignacs, as Marie Antoinette began to dislike the Duchesse's expenditures which were all at the queen's expense and to her discredit. The Duchesse left for England in May, leaving her children behind in Versailles. Also, on
May 1, Etienne de Lomenie de Brienne, Archbishop of Toulouse and one of the queen's political allies, was appointed by the king as Financial Minister, and began instituting more cutbacks at court.
The clear preference shown to the minister by the queen, who would, like Calonne, fail to rectify the finances, hurt the queen even more. The Assembly of Notables was then dissolved on
May 25 because of their inability to get things done. The lack of solutions, as a result, would cause the blame of the entire situation - which was really a result of successive wars, a too-large royal family who were given astronomical allowances (as every individual royal had their own household, and some, for example the Comte de Provence and Mesdames Tantes, spent far more frivolously than the queen ever had), and the unwillingness of ministers and other non-royal nobles to help defray the costs - to fall on the queen. She would earn her famous nickname of "Madame Deficit" in the summer of 1787 as a result of her perceived destroying of the French government.
The queen attempted to fight back with her own propaganda that portrayed her as the mother of the Children of France, most notably with the portrait of her and her children done by Vigée-Lebrun, which was to premiere at the
Royal Académie Salon de Paris in August
1787. It was eventually dropped, however, due to the death of Sophie, the youngest child, due to convulsions from her baby teeth coming in, and also due to the unpopularity of the queen. Also around this time, Jeanne de Lamotte escaped from the
prison she had been sentenced to and landed in London, where she published more about her "affair" with the queen.
The political situation in 1787 began to worsen when Parlement was exiled and culminated on
November 11, when the king used a
lit de justice to try and force legislation through. He was unexpectedly challenged by the Louis Philippe Joseph, Duc de Chartres, now the
Duc d'Orléans, who publicly protested the move, and was subsequently exiled. The May Edicts issued on
May 8, 1788, also a
lit de justice, were also opposed by the public. Finally, on
July 8 and
August 8, the king announced a preliminary hearing, and then his official intentions, respectively, to bring back the
Estates General, an elected government body that had not been convened since
1614.
The queen was not directly involved with the exile of Parlement, the May Edicts or with the announcement regarding the Estates General. Her primary concern of late 1787 and 1788 was the betterment of Louis Joseph, who suffered from tuberculosis, which in his case twisted and curved his spinal column severely. He was sent to the castle at
Meudon in hopes that he would be able to recover; unfortunately, the move did little to alleviate the Dauphin's condition, which gradually continued to deteriorate. She was, however, present with Madame Royalle, when
Tippu Sahib of Mysore visited Versailles for help against the British; more importantly she was the reason for the recall of Jacques Necker as Finance Minister on
August 26, a popular move, even though she herself was worried that the recall would again go against her if Necker was unsuccessful.
Her prediction began to come true when the bread prices began to rise due to the severe 1788-1789 winter. The Dauphin's condition worsened even more, riots broke out in Paris in April, and on
March 26, Louis XVI himself almost died from a fall off the roof.
"Come, Léonard, dress my hair, I must go like an actress, exhibit myself to a public that may hiss me" was her line to her hairdresser when she was preparing for the Mass celebrating the return of the Estates General on
May 4, 1789 in which the Duc d'Orleans, flaunting that he had given money and bread to the people during the winter, was popularly acclaimed by the crowd. The Estates General convened the next day.
During the month of May, as the Estates General began to fissure between the more radical Third Estate comprised of the bourgeois and radical nobility) and the nobility of the Second Estate, while the king's brothers began to become more hardline and the queen's influence once more gave way to nothing. Instead, she turned to the care of the dying Dauphin, who finally passed at Meudon, with the queen at his side, on
June 4, aged seven. His death, which would have normally been nationally mourned, was virtually ignored the French people, who were instead preparing for the next meeting of the Estates General and the solution to the bread prices. As the Third Estate declared itself a
National Assembly and took the
Tennis Court Oath, and others listened to rumors that their queen wished to bathe in their blood, as she went into mourning.