Caziot lacked enthusiasm for corporatism and delayed implementation of the Peasant Corporation. The Commission d'Organization Corporative (COC) was established on 21 January 1941 as an agency to construct the Peasant Corporation. The commission, headed by Count
Hervé Budes de Guébriant, was mostly made up of leading conservative landowners and took nearly two years to develop the legislation that became effective on 16 December 1942. De Guébriant and his main associate Rémy Goussault identified "corporatist" local agrarian organizations, which would become the departmental branches of the corporation. They excluded organizations associated with the Left in the
Third Republic. They favored traditional notables as regional Corporation heads (
syndics) for each department, but included four followers of
Henry Dorgères who had strong local support. When elections were introduced for Corporation leaders, in some cases peasants were elected in place of large landowners. However, the Dorgérists did not gain an important role in the corporation. In 1941–44 Adolphe Pointier, a large-scale wheat and sugar beet farmer in the
Somme department, was
syndic national or chief executive of the corporation. Louis Salleron was made the corporation's delegate-general for economic and social questions. On 15 July 1941 Dorgères was made delegate-general of propaganda of the corporation. Henri de Champagny was second in command of the organizational committee launched in September 1941 to develop the corporation's structures. The corporation struggled to become effective, handicapped by a temporary structure, internal conflicts, and actions by the Ministry of Agriculture that reduced its authority and introduced reforms without consultation. By the end of the first year Salleron gave vent to his frustration, In response, Salleron was dismissed from his position in the Corporation in late 1941, and his weekly journal
Syndicats paysans was closed soon after. Caziot was succeeded as Minister of Agriculture on 18 April 1942 by
Jacques Le Roy Ladurie, who was also a passionate agrarian.
Max Bonnafous assisted Le Roy Ladurie as Secretary of State for Agriculture and Supplies. Le Roy Ladurie soon came into conflict with
Pierre Laval over German demands for workers and agricultural produce. He resigned in frustration on 11 September 1942. Bonnafous succeeded him as Minister and Secretary of State for Agriculture and Supplies until 6 January 1944 in Laval's 2nd cabinet. Bonnafous tried to speed up the formal creation of the Peasant Corporation, which would unite rural producers in France and give them the apparatus of self-government. In December 1942 Bonnafous told a German official, "So far the Peasant Corporation has been merely an organization for peasant demagoguery, and has handicapped the government. It has been necessary to convert it into an organization that helps the government. ==Operations==