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第七章 Bourgeois Revolution 资产阶级革命 (第28/45页)
allow one vote per member, rather than one vote per estate. The “Committee of Thirty”, a body of liberal Parisians, began to agitate against voting by estate. This group, largely composed of the wealthy, argued for the Estates–General to assume the voting mechanisms of Dauphiné. They argued that ancient precedent was not sufficient, because “the people were sovereign”. Necker convened a Second Assembly of Notables, which rejected the notion of double representation by a vote of 111 to 333. The King, however, agreed to the proposition on 27 December; but he left discussion of the weight of each vote to the Estates–General itself. ??Elections were held in the spring of 1789; su
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