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PARLIAMENTARY PAPER—A RETROSPECT OF THIRTY YEARS

... of surplus than in the Whig years of deficiency. - The difference was brought about in two ways; first, by e the imposition of an income-tax to the amount of more than piece of finance very simple and t rou but which the Whigs had not strength to aceomg ...

Published: Thursday 12 May 1853
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1909 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

PROJECTED COALITION OF TIIE MINISTERIAL OPPONENTS

... to be distributed in the usual way of Whig scramble. Messrs Cobden and Co. are as far as present arrangements go, if possible, to be kept out. The support of this section is calculated on, becruse they hate the Whigs less than they bate Lord Derby—an odd ...

THE EDINBURGH REVIEW ON REFORM

... may not be uninstructive to do an equal service for the Whigs, as the principles of that party are enunciated in the last number of the Edinburgh. It is not in the nature of any of the leading Whigs to make a bid until they see clearly what their opponents ...

supremacy of certain great constitutional principles; the latter would submit everything to the popular will of ..

... North American independence, having passed under whig presidents, and 8 of thoselB years were those of the great Washington's tenure of that office. Strange to say, during these last 10 years, first one whig president, Mr Harrison, died shortly after his ...

IRELAND

... a Peelite Cabinet, there could not the shadow a pretext for his retention of place in a Government composed exclusively of Whigs. The Late Irish Chancery Case.—The case of Handcock v. Delacour, which occupied so much time in the Court of Chancery last ...

Published: Thursday 08 March 1855
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 328 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

reform,

... as the leader of the Conservative opposition to the Whigs fallowed. For the first two-or three years it comprised resistance, first to the Reform measure itself, and then to the measures which the Whigs introduced in the exercise of th power it had conferred ...

Published: Saturday 20 July 1850
Newspaper: Nairnshire Mirror
County: Nairn, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 141 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

WHAT WOULD FOLLOW THE RESIGNATION OF LORD DERBY?

... ask, what to be the composition of the Cabinet ? In these days, is needless to say that the old Whig team is oat of the question. Are we, then, to have a Whig-Radical combination in which Lord John Russell and Mr Bright are to have the joint treatment of ...

Published: Thursday 17 March 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 989 | Page: 7 | Tags: none

Latest News

... several Counties-. The Whigs will have a majority in both branches the Legislature, the Senate, which holds over from last year, being composed of 17 Whig* and Opposition, and the Assembly, chosen at the recent election, of 82 Whigs, 44, Opposition and 2 ...

Published: Friday 29 November 1850
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 1201 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

IRELAND

... terms of reaped and admiration. That paper wishes it to be understood that while it hails with pleasure the restoration of a Whig to the Vice-royalty, it must not be considered detracting one particle from the high merit which distinguished the personal ...

Published: Thursday 23 June 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 123 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

MINISTERIAL HINT AS TO THE REFORM BILL

... the Whigs, and the Radicals the Conservatives are the parties that ought to bring it forward. Observe the reason. Twenty-five years ago Reform Bill, which has formed the constitution of this country since that time, was brought forward the Whigs. It was ...

Published: Thursday 16 December 1858
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 357 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE STATE OF POLITICAL PARTIES

... however, a revival of the Whig Government is to be deprecated wellnigh as fervently. There is much well expressed truth in the following sentences:— At the point of time and of progress at which we have now arrived, Whig Government can never be else ...

THE CONSTITUTIONAL PRESS

... foriunately for the country, brings no locusts of Egypti u Radicals with him. The limpets, baru;icles, and leeches of the four Whig families, needy hangers-on, under Lords Palmerston and Shaftesbury, absorlied the emoluments and suffocated the talents of ...

Published: Thursday 01 April 1858
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 410 | Page: 7 | Tags: none