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Lancashire, England

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WHIG POLICY IN THE ENSUING SESSION

... friteliberpiot intrru~sry. -ALIuSPOPULI LBX BUPREMMA. FRIDAY. JANUARY5, 1844. WHIG POLICY IN THE ENSUING SES SI ON. It is not to be supposed that the Parliamentary hi vacation has been passed in inactivity,, or that the b Anti.Ccrf-LBw L~eague's new agitation ...

THE SESSION

... Radicals because 3 they do not efficiently support the Whigs, as if a party 'nd could be held together by the supremacy of one see- alL- tion, and the unquestioning submission of the other. If the Whigs ani adicals are expected to work toge- thbt, ther, it ...

THE SESSION

... - national and partisan -has been thrown away; because they to whom it was vouch- safed were incapable of grasping it. The Whigs, with their surplus revenue, have totally failed to recover their place in the waning confidence of the pablic, by applying ...

LORD STANLEY AND THE CORN LAWS

... the event of the Whigs meddling with Church property ;-2dly, That since 1834 he has been in close and confidential intercourse with Sir Robert Peel. Bat the difference oil one question was no justification for his opposing the Whigs on all; and confidential ...

COURT AND FASHIONABLE LIFE

... Chichester. Upon reading the above, a waggish neighbour of ours exclaimed, What! another of the clique Well, now, indeed, the Whigs have got past Baring !' —Albion. ...

SOUTH LANCASHIRE ELECTION SPEECH OF MR. TURNER

... parliament questions. These were not his, nor were they Mr. Gladstone's principles, and had that confidence ir. the moderate Whigs Manchester that they would not throw over their principles the question of church and state. He was against the ballot, believing ...

THE SESSION

... effects be produced. Mr. a I DIsRAEnL is believed to have'no convictions, and t e ¢,who knows that he will not outbid the Whigs, and exi introduce a measure of Parliamentary Reform far eIE d better than anything they would offer ? He is known TE never ...

THE NEW POOR LAW

... clanseurers against Whig bastiles have as yet bot taken by their motion, is to install a Government strong dogtin enough to carry out the measures most obnoxious to was e, them, without caring for their opposition. In breaking and hr up the Whig, Ministry at ...

THE LIVERPOOL COURIER AND THE NEW POOR LAW

... as the Whigs. Our contempory of the Li- verpool Courier has a furious article on the subject in his e pane of Wednesdny last; and we suppose that we must d mclude him amongst the honest opponents of the law, because, whilst he abuses the Whigs for its ...

CLAIMS OF LITERARY MEN

... very justlyv boasted ; and one (the Standard, of April 16th,) affirms sthat of Sir Robert's pensioners the majority were whigs ;. and it adds, VWe. should like to! see what Sir Robert's predecessors for four years can seti Itof' against these pensions ...

TRIAL OF MR. COBBETT

... Si together, and the prisons would have to ho enlarged under the' al administration of this whig government. ,Much had been said of; fo the love which tho whigs bore to the liberty of ties press, and no tu one professed a greater regarsf for it than one ...