After some time he became one of the founders of the Supreme Council Grade 33, this institution extolled him in this position on July 8, 1895, with Eleuterio Correo, Antonio Taboada and Cecilio Báez.
In 1891 he left Ex-Chancellor Colonel Juan Crisóstomo Centurión with plenipotentiary power in front of the governments of the United Kingdom, France and Spain; that year the diplomatic mission of the Bolivian representative Mariano Baptista failed.
On July 16 the first Doctors in Law and Social Sciences graduated in a solemn ceremony, they were: Emeterio González, Cecilio Báez and Gaspar J. Villamayor, the sponsor was Ramón Zubizarreta.
The Argentine Code of Commerce was adopted in Paraguay, the Palace of López was repaired, many new colonies were founded and 1723 immigrants arrived.
José Segundo Decoud was appointed as Paraguayan representative in Uruguay and Brazil, César Gondra in the Vatican and Juan Durán y Cuervo in Spain.
González was supposed to give power to his brother-in-law José Segundo Decoud, but on the morning of June 9, 1894, because of political disagreements, a delegation that included Rufino Mazó, Eusebio Mongelós and Rufino Careaga came to his office and in the name of General Egusquiza asked him to resign.
González refused quitting again, but the Congress ended up giving the presidency to Vice-President Marcos Morínigo.