Refine Search

Newspaper

Daily News (London)

Countries

England

Place

London, London, England

Access Type

374

Type

285
89

Public Tags

More details

Daily News (London)

LONDON, THURSDAY, NOV. 26

... the evening be effaced by the arguments of the morrow, and will the deceptions which have been too often practised on the Whigs ever allow the re-establishment of that entire and absolute confidence in the present cabinet without which there can be no ...

LONDON, SATURDAY, NOV. 28

... point in Whig policy; and the discredit which former financial difficulties brought on Whig governments, very naturally makes the present Chancellor of the Exchequer unusually sensitive on this subject. What will the country say if another Whig Chancellor ...

ELECTORAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND

... of Surrey returned W. J. Denison, Esq., and C. Barclay, Esq., a Whig and Conservative ; the defeated candidate was W. Long, Esq. In 1837 remarkable contest took place. Mr. Denison, a Whig, was again returned by 1586 votes, and the Hon. Capt. Perceval, ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... to review our finances, with a view of equalising our income and expenditure. The hon. member for Coventry had charged the Whig Chancellor of the Exchequer with having acided sixty millions to the national debt. Now, referring back the years from 1834 ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... they would leave them to pay for themselves, and trust to their political principles for their support, whether they were Whig, Conservative, or Radical. It was said that it was a defect in the Reform Bill that the period of registration came too suddenly ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... we may hope r as regards ex-offi.no guardians any other T, viety, we shall see Proteftant and Catholic, we 4 ® 00 lory and Whig, Radical and Repealer differing, j[i future times, on political questions, 'etiierin social harmony, and combine to act and ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... Lvnn, who had taken straight, forward course with to tliis question, and maintain*) that the government, the ex-governuient, Whigs, Tories and Radicals were all wrong, that the clement emperor had dona no more than his duty, and that he for one would support ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... to know whether those opinions were be allowed to stand in the way of their professional advancement. It was said that the Whigs had done no good for the army, but they had done more within the last year to benefit the private »oWier, than had been done ...

LONDON, SATURDAY, APRIL 10

... visibly weakened in parliamentary warfare. This measure would do much propagate through the country the improved feeling has made whig and tory almost empty shibboleths in the capital. When we set against all thess advantages the one counterweight of narrowly ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... ion, seeing the great fault they had committed, would constitute himself the liberal who would do aU those thing, that the whig, had failed to do • aa the past was a directing index of the future, the hand which struck down the corn-laws might be the ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... assisting education altogether. 1 hat consideration shut the Roman catholics out in the years 1839, 1810, and 1841, when the whigs were oriice, but it likewise shut them out in the several years from 1841 when the right honourable gentleman was the committee ...

IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... could afford to drink it. He saw reason why they should not have such treat at the present time. It was only in 1839 that a whig ministry had sent a gentleman to Paris to arrange the terms of a treaty under which the duty on claret wines was to be reduced ...