| William Renwick Riddell - 1917 - 212 Seiten
...United Kingdom as circumstances would allow.13 Lord Durham wrote that it was not "possible to secure harmony in any other way than by administering the...been found perfectly efficacious in Great Britain," and while he would not "impair a single prerogative of the Crown," and he believed "that the interests... | |
| Augustus Henry Frazer Lefroy - 1918 - 380 Seiten
...legislature. He diagnosed the constitutional disease of Canada: " I know not how it is possible to secure harmony in any other way than by administering the...prerogative of the Crown ; on the contrary, I believe that Jhe interests of the people of these Colonies require the protection of prerogatives which have not... | |
| 1885 - 476 Seiten
...Government was responsible to the popular branch. 'I would not impair,' he wrote in his Report of 1839, 'a single prerogative of the Crown ; on the contrary,...believe that the interests of the people of these provinces require the protection of prerogatives which have not hitherto been exercised. But the Crown... | |
| Charles Strachan Sanders Higham - 1921 - 292 Seiten
...be thought of. To conduct the government harmoniously in accordance with its established principle is now the business of its rulers ; and I know not...been found perfectly efficacious in Great Britain." Of these two recommendations, the first was quickly adopted, though the second only came gradually.... | |
| William Paul McClure Kennedy - 1922 - 636 Seiten
...government by an executive responsible to the majority. ' I know not how it in possible to secure . . . harmony in any other way than by administering the...; on the contrary I believe that the interests of these colonies require the protection of prerogatives which have not hitherto been exercised. But the... | |
| Basil Williams - 1928 - 276 Seiten
...government of the North American colonies. . . . [But] I know not how it is possible to secure . . . harmony in any other way than by administering the...would not impair a single prerogative of the Crown. . . . But the Crown must . . . submit to the necessary consequences of representative institutions... | |
| Canada. Parliament. House of Commons - 1914 - 1088 Seiten
...grievances became acute was to refuse supply. Lord Durham had said that it was not possible to secure harmony in any other way than by administering the Government on those principles which had been found to be perfectly efficacious in Great Britain, and while he would not impair a single... | |
| 1839 - 610 Seiten
...constitutional power is not to be thought of. To conduct their government harmoniously, in accordance with its established principles, is now the business...contrary, I believe that the interests of the people of those colonies require the protection of prerogatives which have not hitherto been exercised. But the... | |
| Royal Society of Canada - 1923 - 1144 Seiten
...elementary that Durham marvelled at the obtuseness of the political theorists in overlooking it — "by administering the government on those principles...been found perfectly efficacious in Great Britain." The Crown chooses as ministers those, in the historic phrase, in whom the "representative body has... | |
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