Refine Search

Newspaper

Dundee, Perth, and Cupar Advertiser

Countries

Scotland

Access Type

79

Type

79

Public Tags

No tags available
More details

Dundee, Perth, and Cupar Advertiser

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, APRIL 30. There is not much appearance of Ministers gathering strength. Other ..

... measure which will damage the Whigs and secure a new election. It is under this chapter of accidents that they exprct to regain possession of the and they care not much what measure may in the mean time lead to it. ' Get the Whigs out on any pretence whatever ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. FRIDAY, MARCH 29. Parliament has adjourned for the Easter holidays, and the most ..

... expressed against the chief doctrines of the only party who could pretend to take office in the event of resignation by the Whigs, and it was the fear of those doctrines being strengthened, by the accession of the Conservatives to office, which made the ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, APRIL 16. The Ministry are not improving in their position. Dependent for their ..

... chance of it being changed for the better. The Whig journals are ever reminding the House, or rather the liberal part of it, that whatever their differences may be, it is better for them to support the Whigs than, refusing to support them, to lead to the ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, APRIL 23. We think a good deal of time is wasted the House of Commons the

... The lib** ral party, they mean to be successful, unite for some practical purpose which can pursued with safety; but the Whigs, mean to maintain their position, must sati the liberals in general that they will go ha in hand with them in practicable reforms ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, JULY 16. The Chandos clause was a heavy blow to the Reform Bill. It perpetuated one

... Conservatives —a battle which, in the present state of matters, we suppose the Whigs are not very anxious to engage in ; but sooner or later it must be fought, and if the Whigs refuse to give battle, it will be forced on otherwise. ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, JULY 2. The long debate on the Greek question has, at last, been brought to end,—a

... Greek question, and the general foreign policy of the Whig Government,—und we have little doubt that many members stretched a point iv voting for Mr Roebuck's motion, —one thing is clear, that the Whigs possess its confidence. This it has declared in spite ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. FRIDAY, JUNE 28. We believe that however good a * may be, it is for the benefit

... nist £oa * the signal of their resignation. h» tives are furious against the Whig 9 as they allege, compromised the country by an unjust and rash attac Greek Government,—the Whigs, ojfl trary, are strong conscious innoce that their foreign policy has mainta ...

or a portion of them, against the rest of the in habitants of this country. On the broad territory of

... protection is their ultimate object, when they have succeeded in driving the Whigs from power. In this they may succeed but, in their ultimate object, never. It is not with the Whigs they have to fight for corn duty; is with every liberal man and every labouring ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERT ISER. TUESDAY, JUNE 25. . There is no time which excites rest among all classes of Great

... country. We have arrived at a great crisis* o of the Whig Ministry depends upon a vote in the House of Commons. Mr Roebuck was to test their credit tffi House a motion which cannot and which the Whigs had no objecti cuss at the shortest notice. expected ...

The Division on the Vote of Confidence Lord Palmer^ToN.—This division w«s the roost remarkable one of tbe ..

... trade. Sir E. Buxton, a Whig, voted in the majority, but Sir R. H. in the minority. Lord Ashley and Lord Jocelyn are both married to daughters of Lady Palmnrston. L ;rd Drumlanrig is son to the Marquis of Queensberry, who Whig; and though returned as ...

THE DUNDEE ADVERTISER. TUESDAY, JULY 23. The present session of Parliament has not been one of great ..

... assailed as they were with the most vigilant and vindictive of enemies, and uncertain at the same time of their own troops. The Whigs have shown more than ordinary courage during the session, and, in the great foreign policy question, they were chivalrous. ...

STATE OF POLITICAL PARTIES

... entire isolation. The Protectionists they will not join—the Whigs they scarcely can join. _ But if, as now seems inevitable, the House of Commons will be hereafter ranged in two great parties, the Whigs and Conservatives, or in terms more appropriate to the ...