THE WHIGS AND MR GLADSTONE
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... of coalition between Whigs and Conservatives in keeping out the Parnellite will work. The con- stituency, according to the register just issued, numbers 5045 voters, of whom 1700 are computed to be Conservatives. about 600 Whigs, and the remainder National ...
... accept the merely subordinate part assigned to them by a W~hig Cabinet. Underneath this question of detail lies the more Ifundamental one of who is a Radical, and in wvhat does he differ from a Whig? On the land q~uestion,, which nsay he talken as almost ...
... the Bouse into Whigs, old Tories, new Tories, Liberals, Radicals, and Home Rulers. The Whigs ye needed a great deal of description-(laughter)- e- because they were called Whigs without being a- quite clear as to what Whigism meant. Whigs in as1688 had ...
... the Constitution which s were not nsed ameng the old Whigs, especially in Scotland, who, among other principles, held that I government was practical and not merely theo. 3 retical. But theiold Whigs were extinct, and there I was no necessity for dwelling ...
... 'been to Ireland, and had endeavoured to make a bargain between the Whigs and the Conservatives. Lord Hartington said it was of the utmost ins- portance that there should be Irish Whigs in the next Joose of Commons. Hle did not agree with him. The irish ...
... name of Whig, and ha no '~said that he. still continued to maintain and Of M upheld true Whig principles. (Laughter.) Now, thRI .s 'what were the Whig principles ninety or a tib k hundred years aga ? Ini apeaklug of the co hmasm of mmn the old Whig always ...
... votes of- 35 Irish Whigs and nominal Home Rulers. (Cries of Shame.') Cloture., coercion, and the bloody foreigulpilcy of the preseut Government were carriedby majorities of fromr 1 to 40 votes. lithe nominal Home 3tulers and the Irish Whigs bad acted honestly ...
... denlhiratione of I Air Gladstone have inet with leads us to think that f the agreement so didficult to be re-established 8 between Whigs anid Radicals in a prograulss I could at least bo eflected around the most popular of all names. I Tho T'lcyjroaphe says:- ...
... Tories and National- I ists as against the Whigs, but the Nationaiists X should be careful not to nllow themselves to be ; carried too far, for it m -ight be their policy Yet in ! the north to, ?? offenlsive Whigs uniting with I the Tories. Mr Sn ALL, M ...
... is heaped with broken vows and cathe aud pledgrs frail. And tern we thought of Party, and all aloug o r vac, Say which is Whig or Tory,' was passed frolm lunn io But our spelri ail the leaders, No Unionist is far, But ?? reith every Gladitenite who ...
... seated, if it can still resist rmore than one secret danger, to whom is it indebted, except to these prudent but resolute Whigs, who have forced it to enter the path of progress and have provided a safety valve for popular feeling; No matter Until ir ...