Appointment Turgot was summoned to the ministry of Louis XVI two months after his accession, and was appointed a month later as Controller-General of Finance. The king even defended the middle-class economist against the reaction of the aristocracy. Turgot owed his appointment as minister of the navy in July 1774 to
Maurepas, the "Mentor" of
Louis XVI, to whom he was warmly recommended by the abbé Very, a mutual friend. His appointment met with general approval, and was hailed with enthusiasm by the
philosophes. A month later (24 August) he was appointed
Controller-General of Finances.
On government spending His first act was to submit to the king a statement of his guiding principles: "No bankruptcy, no increase of taxation, no borrowing." Turgot's policy, in face of the desperate financial position, was to enforce the most rigid economy in all departments. All departmental expenses were to be submitted for the approval of the controller-general, a number of
sinecures were suppressed, the holders of them being compensated, and the abuse of the
acquits au comptant was attacked, while Turgot appealed personally to the king against the lavish giving of places and pensions. He also contemplated a thorough-going reform of the
Ferme Générale, but contented himself, as a beginning, with imposing certain conditions on the leases as they were renewed – such as a more efficient personnel, and the abolition for the future of the abuse of the
croupes (the name given to a class of pensions), a reform which Terray had shirked on finding how many persons in high places were interested in them, and annulling certain leases, such as those of the manufacture of gunpowder and the administration of the royal mails, the former of which was handed over to a company with the scientist
Lavoisier as one of its advisers, and the latter superseded by a quicker and more comfortable service of
diligences which were nicknamed
"turgotines". Turgot also prepared a regular budget. His measures succeeded in considerably reducing the deficit, and raised the national credit to such an extent that in 1776, just before his fall, he was able to negotiate a loan with some
Dutch bankers at 4%; but the deficit was still so large as to prevent him from attempting at once to realize his favourite scheme of substituting for indirect taxation a
single tax on land. Turgot suppressed, however, a number of
octrois and minor duties, and opposed, on grounds of economy,
the involvement of France in the
American Revolutionary War, though without success. His position was strengthened by the entry of
Malesherbes into the ministry (July 1775). Of the six edicts four were of minor importance, but the two which met with violent opposition were, firstly, the edict suppressing the
corvées, and secondly, that suppressing the
jurandes and
maîtrises, by which the
craft guilds maintained their privileges. In the preamble to the former Turgot boldly announced as his object the abolition of privilege, and the subjection of all three
Estates of the realm to taxation; the clergy were afterwards excepted, at the request of Maurepas. In the preamble to the
edict on the jurandes Turgot laid down as a principle the right of every man to work without restriction. He obtained the registration of the edicts by the
lit de justice of 12 March, but by that time he had nearly everybody against him. His attacks on privilege had won him the hatred of the nobles and the
parlements; his attempted reforms in the royal household, that of the court; his free trade legislation, that of the
financiers; his views on tolerance and his agitation for the suppression of the phrase that was offensive to
Protestants in the king's
coronation oath, that of the clergy; and his edict on the
jurandes, that of the rich bourgeoisie of Paris and others, such as the
prince de Conti, whose interests were involved.
The queen disliked him for opposing the grant of favours to her
protégés, and he had offended
Mme. de Polignac in a similar manner.
Proposals for a representative government With the physiocrats, he believed in an
enlightened political absolutism, and looked to the king to carry through all reforms. As to the parlements, he opposed all interference on their part in legislation, considering that they had no competency outside the sphere of justice. He recognized the danger of the recap of the old parlement, but was unable effectively to oppose it since he had been associated with the dismissal of
Maupeou and Terray, and seems to have underestimated its power. He was opposed to the summoning of the
states-general advocated by Malesherbes (6 May 1775), possibly on the ground that the two privileged orders would have too much power in them. His own plan is to be found in his
Mémoire sur les municipalités, which was submitted informally to the king. In Turgot's proposed system,
landed proprietors alone were to form the
electorate, no distinction being made among the three orders; the members of the town and country municipalités were to elect representatives for the district municipalités, which in turn would elect to the provincial municipalités, and the latter to a grande municipalité, which should have no legislative powers, but should concern itself entirely with the administration of taxation. With this was to be combined a whole system of education, relief of the poor, and other activities. Louis XVI recoiled from this as being too great a leap in the dark, and such a fundamental difference of opinion between king and minister was bound to lead to a breach sooner or later. Turgot's only choice, however, was between "tinkering" at the existing system in detail and a complete revolution, and his attack on privilege, which might have been carried through by a popular minister and a strong king, was bound to form part of any effective scheme of reform.
Place in the Ministry All might yet have gone well if Turgot could have retained the confidence of the king, but the king could not fail to see that Turgot had not the support of the other ministers. Even his friend Malesherbes thought he was too rash, and was, moreover, himself discouraged and wished to resign. The alienation of Maurepas was also increasing. Whether through jealousy of the
ascendancy which Turgot had acquired over the king, or through the natural incompatibility of their characters, he was already inclined to take sides against Turgot, and the reconciliation between him and the queen, which took place about this time, meant that he was henceforth the tool of the Polignac
clique and the
Choiseul party. About this time, too, appeared a pamphlet,
Le Songe de M. Maurepas, generally ascribed to the
comte de Provence, containing a bitter
caricature of Turgot. ==Fall==