| John Adams - 1851 - 572 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution, without an executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance...them, and decide when they cannot agree. If it is asked, When will this negative be used ? it may be answered, Perhaps never. The known existence of... | |
| Correa Moylan Walsh - 1915 - 400 Seiten
..."can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution, without an executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance even between them" (vi. 65). These views he held to the end. " Two such parties," he later wrote, "always will exist,... | |
| Vernon Louis Parrington - 1927 - 452 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution, without an executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance...between them, and decide when they cannot agree." Such in brief was the master principle of that system of mixed government which John Adams advocated... | |
| Charles Austin Beard - 1915 - 492 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution without any executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance even between them, and to decide when they cannot agree." In this balanced government, it is necessary to keep the executive... | |
| Paul Studenski, Herman Edward Krooss - 2003 - 548 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution without any executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance...between them, and decide when they cannot agree." (Ibid., Vol. Ill, p. 294.) 3 The Massachusetts constitutional convention declared that those who did... | |
| 1882 - 646 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the Constitution without an executive power, vested with a negative equal to either, to hold the balance...between them, and decide when they cannot agree." To the question interposed by himself, "When will this negative be used?" Mr. Adams also himself answered,... | |
| Vernon Louis Parrington - 1927 - 456 Seiten
...can be defended by their respective guardians in the constitution, without an executive power, vested with a negative, equal to either, to hold the balance even between them, and decide when they cannot agree.16 Such in brief was the master principle of that system of mixed government which John Adams... | |
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