In
1848, Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte was elected
President of France through universal male suffrage, taking 74% of the vote. He did this with the support of the
Party of Order after running against
Louis Eugène Cavaignac. Subsequently, he was in constant conflict with the members (
députés) of the National Assembly. Contrary to the Party's expectations that Louis-Napoleon would be easy to manipulate (
Adolphe Thiers had called him a "cretin whom we will lead [by the nose]"), he proved himself an agile and cunning politician. He succeeded in imposing his choices and decisions upon the Assembly, which had once again become conservative in the aftermath of the
June Days uprising in 1848. He broke away from the control of the Party of Order and created the
Ministère des Commis, appointing
General Hautpoul as its head, in 1849. On 3 January 1850, he dismissed
Changarnier, a dissident in the Party of Order, thereby provoking an open conflict within the party. He also actively encouraged the creation of numerous anti-parliament newspapers and acquired the support of 150 members of Parliament, the "Parti de l'
Elysée". The provisions of the constitution that prohibited an incumbent president from seeking re-election appeared to force the end of Louis-Napoleon's rule in December 1852. He therefore spent the first half of 1851 trying to force changes to the constitution through Parliament so he could be re-elected. Bonaparte travelled through the provinces and organised petitions to rally popular support. Two-thirds of the General Council supported Louis-Napoleon's cause, but in the Assembly, supporters of the
Duke of Orléans, led by Thiers, concluded an alliance with the far left to oppose Louis-Napoleon's plans. In January 1851, the Parliament voted no confidence in the Ministère des Commis. On 19 July, it refused the constitutional reform proposed by Louis-Napoleon, also scrapping universal male suffrage in an effort to break popular support for Bonaparte. == Preparations for the coup ==