The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates that Have Occured in the Two Houses of Parliament, Volum 3 |
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Side 4
... authority completely supported his opinion , that offices were not in the nature of estates granted by the Crown , but that they were indisputably under the controul and power of Parliament . In fact , every session offered proof of the ...
... authority completely supported his opinion , that offices were not in the nature of estates granted by the Crown , but that they were indisputably under the controul and power of Parliament . In fact , every session offered proof of the ...
Side 12
... authority sufficient to continue his confidence to those individuals who , anxious for the well - being of the em- pite , had conducted its affairs with as able a judgment and as firm a hand as any of their rivals , ( Loud cheers . ) If ...
... authority sufficient to continue his confidence to those individuals who , anxious for the well - being of the em- pite , had conducted its affairs with as able a judgment and as firm a hand as any of their rivals , ( Loud cheers . ) If ...
Side 19
... authority was clear as to the constitutional right of copy- holders to vote . He ( Mr. B. ) therefore , in proposing that they should be admitted to the elective franchise , was pro- posing nothing foreign to the ancient Constitution ...
... authority was clear as to the constitutional right of copy- holders to vote . He ( Mr. B. ) therefore , in proposing that they should be admitted to the elective franchise , was pro- posing nothing foreign to the ancient Constitution ...
Side 31
... authority , by reducing its great counterpoise , the aristocracy . Thus he thought that he had established that Parliamentary Reform could not remedy the two great grievances under which we at present laboured , excessive taxation and ...
... authority , by reducing its great counterpoise , the aristocracy . Thus he thought that he had established that Parliamentary Reform could not remedy the two great grievances under which we at present laboured , excessive taxation and ...
Side 35
... authority ? Not- withstanding the inconsistencies in the speech of the ho- nourable Member ( Mr. Ward ) who , condemning in the strangest manner the expedition to Walcheren , was yet dis- posed to favour the principles and practices ...
... authority ? Not- withstanding the inconsistencies in the speech of the ho- nourable Member ( Mr. Ward ) who , condemning in the strangest manner the expedition to Walcheren , was yet dis- posed to favour the principles and practices ...
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The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates ..., Volum 3 Great Britain. Parliament Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1795 |
The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates ..., Volum 1 Great Britain. Parliament Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1797 |
The Parliamentary Register: Or an Impartial Report of the Debates ..., Volum 2 Great Britain. Parliament Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1809 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Address Adjourned Administration agreed alluded Amendment America answer Bill Brougham brought Cabinet called Catholics circumstances Committee concurred conduct consideration considered Constitution contended Crown declared discussion duty Earl of Liverpool Exchequer expence expressed favour feelings felt Government grant hear honourable and learned honourable baronet honourable Member hoped House of Commons HOUSE OF LORDS Ireland Irish late learned gentleman Lord Castlereagh Lord Chancellor Lord Holland Lord Liverpool Lord Moira Lords Grey lordships Magistrates Majesty's manufacturers Marquis Wellesley measure ment Ministers motion moved necessary negociation never noble earl noble friend noble lord noble marquis object observed occasion opinion Orders in Council Parliament Perceval persons Petition present Prince Regent principle proceeding proposed proposition question Reform repeal Report Resolution respect right honourable friend right honourable gentleman Royal Highness shew situation thing thought tion trade vote Whitbread wished
Populære avsnitt
Side 735 - That an humble address be presented to His Royal Highness the Prince Regent to...
Side 484 - I rejoice that America has resisted. Three millions of people, so dead to all the feelings of liberty as voluntarily to submit to be slaves, would have been fit instruments to make slaves of the rest.
Side 735 - Slaves to be manumitted and set free by virtue of this Act for the Loss of such Services, His Majesty's most dutiful and loyal Subjects the Commons of Great Britain and Ireland...
Side 464 - That this house will, early in the next session of parliament, take into its most serious consideration the state of the laws affecting his majesty's Roman catholic subjects in Great...
Side 748 - Then a commission for proroguing the parliament was read. After which, the Lord Chancellor said, " My Lords and Gentlemen, — By virtue of the commission under the great seal, to us and other lords directed, and now read, we do, in...
Side 748 - ... these outrages ; and he has commanded us to thank you for the wise and salutary measures which you have adopted on this occasion. It will be a principal object of his royal highness's attention, to make an effectual and prudent use of the powers vested in him for the protection of his majesty's people, and he confidently trusts, that on your return into your respective counties, he may rely on your exertions for the preservation of the public peace, and for bringing the disturbers of it to justice.
Side 163 - Wellesley should conduct the formation of the administration in all its branches, and should be first commissioner of the treasury ; and that Lord Moira, Lord Erskine, and Mr Canning, should be members of the cabinet. That it was probable, that a cabinet, formed on an enlarged basis, must be extended to the number of twelve or thirteen members : that the prince regent wished Lords Grey and Grenville, on the part of their friends, to recommend for...
Side 747 - Gentlemen of the House of Commons, I thank you for the liberal provision which you have made for the services of the present year.
Side 717 - Majesty should have power to remove from, and to nominate and appoint such persons as she shall think proper to the several offices in His Majesty's household, and to dispose, order, and manage all other matters and things relating...
Side 85 - Pitt be interred at the public charge, and that a monument be erected in the Collegiate Church of St. Peter, Westminster, to the memory of...