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Baldwin's London Weekly Journal

POSTSCRIPT. LONDON-FRIDAY, OCT. 23

... fraudulent votes, that offence has been committed and brought home—brought home to whom? to a Whig—to what Whig? to a Whig member of the Reform ministry. To what Whig member of the Reform ministry? It has been brought home, through his agent—To THE A OR OF ...

! an attack upon the House of Lords serve you to get , rid of Mr. O'Connell? 'With that low

... empire—the Whig-Popish- Radical party on one side, and the Conservative party on the other. 'Whoever promotes by any means disunion in either party, obviously ministers to the designs of the other; and this is well known to the Conservative-Whigs. They will ...

Published: Saturday 26 December 1835
Newspaper: Baldwin's London Weekly Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 561 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

WEST SUFFOLK

... Notwithstanding all this, the rapacious Whig journals in the country have the impudence to place him in the lists of the opponents of the present government. From what has been already done by the London Whig journals, I cannot doubt but that Mr. Wilson ...

LL4NELLY

... poll for the first day 49 No doubt is entertained of the return of Mr. Lewis. Despair is written in the countenances of the Whigs. The Tory candidate must succeed. The few votes remain. ing unpolled are mainly in his favour. CARLISLE, JAN. 5. Mr. W. Garnett ...

ctINaERVATIVISM IN NOMIX

... Paul Methuen and Mr. Walter Long, the two Whig Radicals who misrepresent the loyal and Conservative farmers of this division of the county. Considerable disunion and jealousy appeared to prevail; the two great Whig leaders of this neighbourhood were absent ...

BRISTOL

... THE WHIGS. / The organs of the Whigs have seldom, on the ere of a ' general election, been so chop-fallen as at present. One of them (an Essex paper) thus gives vent to its spleen : We much regret to see so extraordinary an apathy among the Whigs of ...

Published: Saturday 10 January 1835
Newspaper: Baldwin's London Weekly Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1325 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

CITY-THIS DAY, ONE O'CLOCK

... against any public man in this empire, as the bargain driven by the Whig faction with O'Connell and the band of Ipolitical desperadoes amongst ourselves, who have received from the Whig ministers an open carte blanche to drive the country into the deepest ...

OUNTItY NZIWS:

... find four hundred Whig Radicals sitting down to dinner with Lord John Russell, and only seventy dining with the politico. charitable society, it is impossible to escape from one of two couclusions,:—lst, That there are only seventy Whigs in Bristol who are ...

Published: Saturday 21 November 1835
Newspaper: Baldwin's London Weekly Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1717 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

[No. 3,916

... Herald.) , If we are to believe the prognostications of the Whig- Radical journals, the result of the working of the New Corporation Act will be to give a decided preponderance to the Whig-Radical party, not merely in the local government of boroughs ...

Published: Saturday 02 January 1836
Newspaper: Baldwin's London Weekly Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1951 | Page: 1 | Tags: none

DUKE OF WELLINGTON-PUBLIC MEETING

... general,' is, we understand, to take the cornmandl THE WHIGS AND. THE RADICALS.: • • (From the Constitutional, a Radical paper.) All Radical writers should aim at producing union, not so much between Whigs and Radicals—that would inevitably follow—but between ...

Published: Saturday 22 October 1836
Newspaper: Baldwin's London Weekly Journal
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2923 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ting off, at once, the profits of trade, and the public revenue, and closing up those sources from which the

... sooner, is certainly no fault of the Whigs. That so much of debt has been paid -- so much of interest has been reduced since the peace, as have been, is due altogether to the resistance, though imperfect, which Whig principles have met with. That, however ...

not intended for the use or benefit of any thing Protestant; it is intended for the assurance of a seat

... be most beneficially instructive. The Whigs owe every thing to the blundering and weakness of the Tories: if the difficulty of forming a Tory Cabi- net (it is false to talk of impossibility in the case) is the Whig tenure of office, so the neglect of the ...