place from the emperor's control. Echávarri, the trusted friend, proclaimed the plan of Casa Mata at the head of the troops given him to put down Santa Anna. Other military officers enjoying Iturbide's confidence were equally perfidious. But the chief trouble was the faithlessness of his army. Iturbide had himself set a bad example to his troops. It was a pernicious lesson to teach soldiers; and unfortunately for Mexico's future, it was too well learned. Thenceforth all pretensions, whether personal or otherwise, found a ready support in that large and demoralized element of the army which had no respect for public opinion, personal rights, or any interest in the national welfare, and was always willing to fight for those who paid best, either in money or some species of personal advancement.
The national congress, as heretofore narrated, having been reinstalled on the 29th of March, 1823,[1] decreed on the 31st the cessation of the powers conferred on the executive created on the 19th of May, 1822, appointing in its place a triumvirate, consisting of generals Nicolás Bravo, Guadalupe Victoria, and Pedro Celestino Negrete. This selection of military men exclusively established a bad precedent. The next day Mariano Michelena and Miguel Dominguez were chosen substitutes to discharge the duties of the regular triumviri in the event of absence, or inability to act from death or any other cause.[2]
The executive authority, now held by Bravo, Negrete, and Michelena in Victoria's absence, at once entered upon its duties. One of its first acts was the construction of a cabinet: Lúcas Alaman, minister of foreign and interior relations; Pablo de la Llave, of
- ↑ Bustamante, Cuad. Hist., MS., viii. 135-51; Alaman, Hist. Méj., v. 744-6, 759-60, 766-7; Gaz. de Mex., i., 1823, 171-4; Dispos. Var., iii. 122; Mex. Col. Dec. Sob. Cong. Mex., 92-3.
- ↑ Mex. Col. Leyes, Órd. y Dec., ii. 89-91, 118; Mex. Col. Dec. Sob. Cong. Mex., 93-4; Bustamante, Hist. Iturbide, 149-50, 158; Id., Cuad. Hist., MS., viii. 163-4; Ward's Mex., i. 281