Reform of Procedure in Parliament to Clear the Block of Public BusinessW.H. Allen & Company, 1882 - 232 pages |
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Page 16
... statutes , for which everything else is obliged to give way , there never will be time for keeping our word with India , or beginning even to try to understand the retributive difficulties and dan- gers of Empire , won as we won it ...
... statutes , for which everything else is obliged to give way , there never will be time for keeping our word with India , or beginning even to try to understand the retributive difficulties and dan- gers of Empire , won as we won it ...
Page 21
... statute authorising the House of Lords to defer , after Second Reading , the further stages of any Bill sent up after the 1st of June by the Commons , until the ensuing Session . 3. A motion for adjournment of the House to be ...
... statute authorising the House of Lords to defer , after Second Reading , the further stages of any Bill sent up after the 1st of June by the Commons , until the ensuing Session . 3. A motion for adjournment of the House to be ...
Page 53
... statutes few . One volume , no bigger than our annual tome , contained the net results of their labours during a century , and as time was no object , the pre - eminent indi- vidual in the chair presided over deliberations in detail ...
... statutes few . One volume , no bigger than our annual tome , contained the net results of their labours during a century , and as time was no object , the pre - eminent indi- vidual in the chair presided over deliberations in detail ...
Page 72
... statute , may be traced to hasty con- cession extorted , or compromise made , in the grey dawn . But what is the use of railing at any particular knot of guerillas as if they were the inventors or authors of this mode of warfare ...
... statute , may be traced to hasty con- cession extorted , or compromise made , in the grey dawn . But what is the use of railing at any particular knot of guerillas as if they were the inventors or authors of this mode of warfare ...
Page 90
... statutes at large , of greater length , and with fewer palpable flaws in them might , and probably would , be rolled forth yearly from the legislative mill ; but would that after all be an unmixed good ? Would it be desirable upon the ...
... statutes at large , of greater length , and with fewer palpable flaws in them might , and probably would , be rolled forth yearly from the legislative mill ; but would that after all be an unmixed good ? Would it be desirable upon the ...
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Reform of Procedure in Parliament to Clear the Block of Public Business William Torrens McCullagh Torrens No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
able adjournment administration adopted amendment appeal assembly attempt authority benches Bill called Chair chief clauses Cloture consider constitution Court debate discussion divisions doubt duty empire equal Executive Government experience friends Government Grand Committees half hand hear honour hope hour House of Commons House of Lords impartiality Ireland late lative legislative liberty Long Parliament Lord Palmerston majority Manners Sutton matter measure ment Ministers minority mischief mittee morning motion move never Obstruction opinion Opposition Panel Committees Parlia Parliament Parliamentary party passing Peelite Peers practice present Previous Question privilege Privy Councillors procedure proposed public business purpose Quorum reason Reform remedy reported resistance rule second reading seldom Select Committee Senate Session Sir James Graham Sir Robert Peel sitting Speaker speech Standing Orders statutes thing thought tion tives vote wants waste week Whig whole House
Popular passages
Page 242 - By none ; and if not equal all, yet free, Equally free ; for orders and degrees Jar not with liberty, but well consist.
Page 49 - April, 1604, rule conceived, that if any man speak impertinently, or beside the question in hand, it stands with the orders of the House for the Speaker to interrupt him, and to show the pleasure of the House, whether they will farther hear him.
Page 112 - Id be divided into Six Grand Committees, consisting of about 110 members each, to whom would be added fifteen or twenty Ministers and others who would be nominated to serve on all the Grand Committees. The members would be distributed by a Committee of Selection, subject to approval by the House, in such a manner as to secure an equal representation of political parties, interests, and classes, in all the Committees ; and at the same time to maintain in each a preponderance of members more particularly...
Page 57 - ... of opponents, though few in number, may, by debating every sentence and word of a bill, and by dividing upon every debate, so obstruct the progress of a bill through Parliament that a whole session may be scarcely long enough for carrying through one measure ; and of course the Irish members on our side, and all the English and Scotch Radicals, would sit from morn till eve, and from eve till dewy morn, to prevent any more stringent law being enacted.
Page 4 - I believe, towards the close of the last century, and the beginning of the present, sent out more living writers, in its proportion, than any other school.
Page 112 - Edinburgh article — should be divided into Six Grand Committees, consisting of about 110 members each, to whom would be added fifteen or twenty Ministers and others who would be nominated to serve on all the Grand Committees. The members would be distributed by a Committee of Selection, subject to approval by the House, in such a manner as to secure an equal representation of political parties, interests, and classes, in all the Committees ; and at the...
Page 49 - On the 19th of May, 1604, Sir William Paddy entering into a long speech, a rule agreed, that, if any man speak not to the matter in question, the Speaker is to moderate." So it is said on the 2d of May, 1610, when a member made what seemed an impertinent speech, and there was much hissing and spitting, "that it was conceived for a rule, that Mr. Speaker may stay impertinent speeches.
Page 114 - ... would be heard without impatience. In each Grand Committee the Government would be represented by its official members, who had charge of any Bill, and by independent members co-operating with them ; and the Opposition and other parties would have equal opportunities of advancing their own opinions. .... Every vote would be open to revision by the House ; and their minutes of proceedings and division lists would show how far they had paid attention to their duties, and were entitled to support....
Page 113 - The main object in view is to invest the deliberations of these committees with as much importance as possible, and to delegate to them the discussion, and, as far as possible, the decision, of questions which now devolve wholly on the House. If this could be accomplished, the labours of the House would be, to that extent, diminished. Perhaps the number of days in the week on which the House would sit might be diminished : at all events the length of the sittings might be curtailed, and the two or...