From 1791 onwards,
Montmorin, Minister of Foreign Affairs, started to organize resistance to the progress of the Revolution; he thought that Radix de Sainte-Foix had the right financial and various other skills for this sort of business. And so, the funds of the Civil List (
la Liste civile), voted annually by the
National Assembly were partially assigned to secret expenses. These were the considerable amounts of money traditionally assigned to the princes' expenses. It was the idea of
Mirabeau to use them to preserve the constitutional monarchy.
Arnault Laporte was in charge of the Civil List and he collaborated with both Montmorin and Mirabeau. After the death of the latter, Radix de Sainte-Foix took his place in trying to manipulate the course of the Revolution with money. It was Radix who encouraged Louis XVI to place
Dumouriez into the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to replace
Valdec Lessart. Radix was so convincing that Louis XVI never had any doubts that his commitment to the good cause was sincere. The king, who had no overall strategy, often seemed to place his trust in people who did not really deserve it. At the beginning of the Revolution, Radix was selling some of his Paris properties in order to acquire great estates in the provinces, that were then being sold off as
biens nationaux. These were highly successful speculative investments that he acquired at low cost. Thus, for example, he purchased the
Château de Neuilly, located at
Neuilly-sur-Seine, but early in 1792 sold it to
Madame de Montesson. He placed most of his funds in England and, in 1792, lived modestly in a large apartment - part of the arcades of the
Palais-Royal. He shared this apartment with Geoffroy Seiffert, a former doctor, and one of the co-founders of the
Jacobin Club. At his apartment, he entertained such regulars as Dumouriez,
Talleyrand,
Ivan Simolin (Russian ambassador to France), Montmorin,
Rayneval, and the
General Biron. Thus, he was able to interest some popular leaders such as
Georges Danton in the money from the Civil List; the benefit of it all, as history proved, was rather poor. ==Radix taken to account==