The Constitutional History of England from 1760 to 1860 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 614 pages of information about The Constitutional History of England from 1760 to 1860.

The Constitutional History of England from 1760 to 1860 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 614 pages of information about The Constitutional History of England from 1760 to 1860.
Blackstone as testifying to the existence and steady increase of that influence, and “could affirm of his own knowledge, and pledge his honor to the truth of the assertion, that he knew upward of fifty members in that House who always voted in the train of the noble lord in the blue ribbon,[64] but who reprobated and condemned, out of the House, the measures they had supported and voted for in it.”  Mr. T. Pitt even instanced “the present possession of office by Lord North as an indubitable proof of the enormous influence of the crown.”

It was not strange that Lord North opposed a resolution supported by such arguments with all the power of the government, basing his own opposition chiefly on the wisdom “of maintaining the rule long since established by Parliament, never to vote abstract propositions.”  But he presently saw that he was in a minority, and was forced to be content with adopting and carrying an amendment of Mr. Dundas, one of the members for Edinburgh, who flattered himself that by the insertion of now he converted a general assertion into a temporary declaration, which might at a future time be disavowed as no longer applicable.  A majority of eighteen[65] affirmed the resolution; and when the mover followed it up by a second, declaring that “it is competent to this House to examine into and to correct abuses in the expenditure of the civil list revenues, as well as in every other branch of the public revenue, whenever it shall seem expedient to the wisdom of this House to do so,” though the minister, with what was almost an appeal ad misericordiam, “implored the House not to proceed,” he did not venture to take a division, and that resolution also, with one or two others designed to give instant effect to them, were adopted and reported by the committee to the House in a single evening.[66] The first resolution did, in fact, embody a complaint, or at least an assertion, which the Rockingham party had constantly made ever since the close of the Marquis’s first administration.  In a speech which he had made only a few weeks before,[67] Lord Rockingham himself had declared that “it was early in the present reign promulgated as a court axiom that the power and influence of the crown alone was sufficient to support any set of men his Majesty might think proper to call to his councils.”  And Burke, in his “short account” of his administration of 1765, had not only imputed both its formation and its dismissal to the “express request” and “express command of their royal master,” but in the sentence, “they discountenanced and, it is to be hoped, forever abolished, the dangerous and unconstitutional practice of removing military officers for their votes in Parliament,” condemned with unmistakable plainness some acts of the preceding ministry which were universally understood to have been forced upon it by the King himself.  General Conway had been deprived of the colonelcy of his regiment; Lord Rockingham himself, with several

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The Constitutional History of England from 1760 to 1860 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.