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WHIGS AND TORIES

... WHIGS AND TORIES. (From the Times.) It is really incomprehensible how a reforming Ministry should, after six years of office, leave to its successors so many useful and necessary things to do, to which no one can reasonably object, and which they themselves ...

LIBERAL TORIES AND ILLIBERAL WHIGS

... reformers of 1830? Not seventy men in Parliament. They made up the Whig majority. Ifter 1832 they numbered a hundred and fifty, and the political organs of that day exhibited the Whigs petitioning the Radicals for alms, and praying not only for support ...

THE OLD WHIGS ALARMED AT THE rROORESSIVE TORIES

... THE OLD WHIGS ALARMED AT THE rROORESSIVE TORIES. Manchester Examiner't London correspondent write! »s follows:—Many persons of traditional habit of mind have been seriously alarmed during the past session and the present recess. Alarmed at the progressive ...

band, the Conservatives retort the Whigs that they are not liberal enough, and that they are much too exclusive in

... band, the Conservatives retort the Whigs that they are not liberal enough, and that they are much too exclusive in the formation of their Governments. The three nights’ debate on the address was of the most animated kind Mr Disraeli came out in grand ...

SPIRIT OF THE JOURNALS. THE WAY IN WHICH MR DISRAELI DEFEATED TIIE WHIGS. ( From the Times of Wedneettay.)

... which was not a Whig party, it mum sooner or later step into those seats which the Whig party would evacuate. This infallible maxim of British polifics had acquired, bo, extraordinary force by the ciralmstances of the conjuncture. The Whigs had succeeded ...

A SERIES OF POLITICAL PORTRAITS. (From the second rolume—just published—of Memoirs of the Whig party during my ..

... A SERIES OF POLITICAL PORTRAITS. (From the second rolume—just published—of Memoirs of the Whig party during my Time, by Holland):— LORD TRURLOW, Lord Thurlow bati — besta --- Loid High Chancellor for fourteen years; and had then and since enjoyed ...

1-Whig Cabinet, itioniit Ministry ;ical parties into ibinations. The allation in office has been a re* old ..

... formerly lied into renewed mount subscribed was ££5,709. topics, must f the poet Moore, gave life just er. . The Whigs aureate, for such ist as the Whigs sappear from the least happy of ase in which he Regent, but they it. The contest than a mere party every ...

Published: Tuesday 16 March 1852
Newspaper: Nairnshire Mirror
County: Nairn, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 461 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE STATE OF PARTIES

... strength of the Manchester and the Whig parties in the House of Commons. There is so muoh bad blood between them that 1 see little prospeot of their acting harmoniously together even in opposition, much less in office. The Whigs, I aui sorry to say, have no ...

Published: Thursday 28 October 1852
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 515 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

LORD PANMURE'S REPLY TO MR KINLOCH

... proceed to accuse the Whigs of not efficiently working out 'the Reform Bill,' and of becoming 'as great jobbers as once the Tories were.' I have often heard the former expression, but 1 confess I do not fully understand its meaning. The Whigs did pass many measures ...

Published: Thursday 27 January 1859
Newspaper: Inverness Courier
County: Inverness-shire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 616 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

AMERICA

... King; but an intelligent co respondent of the Times is of opinion that the profound difference* in the Whig party, added to the abstraction of Free Soil Whig votes, will render the chances ofGeneral Pierce fairer than ever. The nomination of Mr - Hale, says ...

ELGIN DISTRICT

... Votes w . Claims lodged and supported by Whig agents, 4 Whereof re-eurolments. 2 I New Votef, Conservative gain, NAIRN COUNTV. Olaima lodged and supported Conservative agent, 14 Claims lodged and supported Whig agents. Whereof re-eorolmeuts, Presentation ...

ENTRANCE TO WICK FREE CHURCH. TO THE EDITOR OF THE JOHN O’GROAT JOURNAL. entrance to the Free Church, Wick, was

... is Mr Laing the Whig they ve got. It is true that some of his friends that his Whig sentiments are not real, but issued to conciliate opponents, and as he has a great ject in view, viz., to secure for him- self a seat in the first Whig cabinet, it is necessary ...

Published: Thursday 02 June 1859
Newspaper: John o' Groat Journal
County: Caithness, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 771 | Page: 2 | Tags: none