GREAT WHIG MEETING
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... THE DISOXVFITURE OF THE WHIGS, 1 AND THE DECAY OF WHIGGISM. TO THE EDITOR OF HEYmqOLD8 NEWSPAPHB Su,-Lord Palmerston's Ministvyxnow exists only by sufferance. At the termination of the last session it a could command a bare, scant, and precarious majority ...
... of Mr. Roundell Palmer for the important office of Solicitor- General. Mr. Palmer has always been more of a Tory than of a Whig. Indeed, the reactionary party have hardly yet ceased to look up to him as one of their ablest champions. Mr. Gladstone having ...
... to the spirit, of his master's injunction. In the same manner, when Lord Palneerston and Lord John Russell said to the Whig and Whig Radical 'menials, Mind you don't put our poor-little Bill under the pump of your eloquence, Messrs. Adam Black, Massey ...
... nothing bat the iiiaeautarnc (i Lurd A1neck being a nobleman, and having, whilst in pariiamen preved himself a thorougbpaced Whig hack, can accoeut for his nomination to the government of Canada. Possibly, the choice may be an excellent one. 31t have we ...
... chance who cleaves to office, no matter what may be the policy It was Tory, it was Whig, it was Coneervative, it Wvas Peelite, it was Liberal, and now it is Coalition, or Whig Radical. It is all the same to the man determined that politic should not hinder ...
... (but in stronger terms) Sir Hugh Cairns and Mr. Qusin's opinion. The general meeting came off ou Thursday. The well- known Whig partisan, the Right Hon. Edward Ellice, better known as Beaor Ellice, was voted to the chair by the Parkes party. It was ...
... mooney goes-goes-goes with a rapidity whicli would drive an English House of Commons mad.-Preess. iRW4 TuE PARTY STRUGGLS-The Whigs must improve their party organization. Mever so strong as that of their opponents, it has sustained, in the death of Mr. Coppock ...
... money goes-goes-goes with a rapidity which would drive an English Rouse of Commenan mad.-1'ress. THE PARTY STRUGGLE. -The Whigs. must improve their party organization. Never so strong as that of their opponents, it has sustained, in the death of Mr. Coppock ...
... are the c onstant, unchangeable charac- teristics ef Toryism, The Whigs' hatred of true liberty and popular government is as .deep and fervent as that of their-rivals. But the Whigs have, always had :sense enough to discover that the poliqyof absolutism ...
... Churchman thrusts his hand into the fire, neither political nor theological orthodoxywill -prevent thathand from being burnt. If a Whig gets drunk of a nkiht; neither his principles of ' civil and 'religious liberty nor his attachment to the. immortal memory ...
... (Laughter.) You Whigs have had peoer since 1832. You pledged yourselves to economly and retrenchment, but I have never seen you carry it out. The expenditure in 1836 amounted to litts more than 40,000,0001. a year ; but what is it now P You Whigs have made ...