Faced with Grand Duke Maximilian's condition that his father either personally or appoint someone to the cabinet, Mr. Weir Aid felt somewhat tempted.
Whether it was his father personally forming the cabinet (which was almost impossible, as Prince Czartoryski was already 84 years old), or appointing someone to form the cabinet, it would allow him to accumulate deep connections in the newly established Kingdom of Poland, which would also benefit his future political career.
It should be known that Weir Aid was only in his early thirties now.
For an ordinary person, being in their early thirties might mean a life of mediocrity ahead, but for a politician, being in their thirties is precisely a golden age for political development.
Once the new cabinet, appointed by his father, was established (Weir Aid assumed his father couldn't form a cabinet), Weir Aid could fully inherit his father's favor and serve as the Prime Minister of the Grand Duchy of Warsaw in his lifetime.
