The Statists initially tried to bring about a revocation of the reforms of the HabsburgEmperor Joseph II which they perceived as an attack on regional freedom. In 1787 they organized a wave of uprisings and rioting known as the Small Revolution and the resulting crackdown by the Austrian forces forced Van der Noot and his Statists into exile in the Dutch Republic.[3] The Statists supported Belgian independence but their main area of concern was protecting the local privileges and the Catholic Church.[3] After the proclamation of the United States of Belgium, the Statists managed to exclude the Vonckists from government and forced them into exile.[3] The new Belgian state was short-lived as Habsburg rule was restored at the end of 1790, forcing the Statists from power.
Ideology
The Statists were ideologically reactionary, opposing the liberal reforms of Joseph II. Furthermore, they actively defended many elements of the ancien régime, championed regional autonomy, and the status of the Belgian Catholic Church.[1]
In terms of government, the Statists favoured a confederation and were largely republican, though monarchist factions did exist.[1] When the Austrians returned to Belgium in late 1790, the Statists offered to make Belgium a monarchy with Charles Habsburg, third son of Emperor Leopold II, as grand duke of Belgium in exhange for maintaining the country's independence, though these plans never materialised.
Many Statists, including Van der Noot himself, also advocated for Pan-Netherlandism, ultimately aiming for a reunification of the Low Countries.[2]