THE REFORM BILL
... of the '■ j Bright and Baines kidney to resist the restriction sub- | mitted by the government, hut for mere Liberals, or i Whigs, as thoy us ...
... of the '■ j Bright and Baines kidney to resist the restriction sub- | mitted by the government, hut for mere Liberals, or i Whigs, as thoy us ...
... ing over and over for a long time past. One man may boast a traditional attachment to what for con- venience sake we call the Whig or Liberal party, aßd another, loving the old distinctive designation by which he has rallied to the rescue during the whole ...
... made by my father. Mr. Cloy; Have you noticed that when the Whigs were in office they promoted more Whigs than Tories; and that when the Tories were in office they promoted more Tories than Whigs ?—I certainly think so, and have not noticed any difference ...
... 5 Lord John made his selection, and preferred Palmerston as 8 This is an offence whieh has never been forgiven, though the Whig party have done e ing they possibly could to compensate the Earl for the loss of Jt Mr. THe Consrrvitive Parry.—The Daiiy News ...
... democracy out and out, and se helped to prepare tbe way for that absorption of tbe older Whigs in tbe Conservative party which must take place when the present Whig leaders become materially, a. they already are morally, .defunct. — Edinburgh Courant. ...
... professed by Mr. Disraeli, and the voluntary principle emembodied in the Government measure. Lord Stanley is at heart a Whig, and, like every Whig who is an absentee Irish landlord, he would, if he could, level upwrrels instead of levelling downwards, simply ...
... from tbe woollen manufacturers of Rochdale to meet him in Paris. With true liberality Mr. Kelsall sent cir- culars to 10 or 12 Whig and Radical manufacturers, and these met in a room of the Wellington Hotel on Monday afternoon, our correspondent being informed ...
... to fall • nl . ** ' For in that Opposition sleep *>L 7^* ** r._ May come, when we have fairly _.„£!? This weary coil of Whigs, to ?? * For wbo would bear tbe scorn of lake The taunts of foes, the goads of r> Jjl^ : ' r -*a; The pangs of despised zeal ...
... THE BLUSHES OF FACTION. Tbe other day Mr. Brand, lata Whig whipper in, when addresaing the Cambridgeshire electors, was such fool, or something worse, to declare the exiatence the Irish Church made him blush, or made the nation blush, or something to ...
... especially distinguished as a mover of the resolution on the Irish Church, which in 1834 led to the secession of a portion of the Whig Minis- try. Sir H Ward was Secretary to the Admiralty in Lord John Russell s Government from 1846 to 1849, in which latter ...
... at present conducted. In political principle the SpecTaToß 15 Whig, but with a more decided tendency towards reforms at home and the extension of orderly freedom abroad than the old Whigs were supgoud to have. Bince its establishment, however, in 1828 ...
... great divisions are to be found in different lob- bies. In Parliament its voice gives out a most un- certain sound, neither Whig nor Tory, but half one and half the other. And, strange to say, though an election is fast approaching, the local Conservative ...