The Ontario Scrapbook Hansard

Ontario Scrapbook Hansard, 6 Feb 1873, p. 4

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. ' "v 4N4; WV. '3" ' [I .. 7 , l _ n _ ' '",' " "%s V ' a pTNM 3"" e i iih, '. ','t,iai!itlii',i'iit, tltlid1et2tq,t u no -~ "r"",5,lIlll BlPthtr _"' "rom- ik'hiuintutioetiomtitxr." J, C"' 2 :aiall "B' ' - c. , ' 'tdb' m a, - in it we!" _ -' _ - '.'; "at". Hon. Mi. MXtrr--isir Fulton Blacks. viiiiiiialtgll . i " dhrtiatmt right of his Excellency to "hogs: " r' .1 A, Mr. RICHARDS said that the case of Sir F ft,t:r?rRtl9.ll I T , IMtte of the resigning my" " to off-71'. tV, Francis Bincks was not a parallel one,be- "riir. Fri-1&5, , , Ihom he should send for It ' A» cause thatgentlemau was a member pt. the -I .41}? A . . 'tneca that the Lieutenant Gov m . . . House and justasmuch a representative of I '. t . 4; . "rti',,7 g scold mt adviot but it was. hia :23: ' the wg?" he (the speaker) was. Arelative _ I .. , ' LT ' ask it it he desired it That advice could ot his i 0 Ttlt?) who had been appointed C . r " if; e - , ot be asked unless the real tion ten . . a member o a Government Went to a con- . . Ire, cred P0800 ally In this tet M 'éiak ' ' stltuenoy and was defeated through the . If l t eai ion could be as r. "101' exertions made by the Conservatives. The '_, l', my. tendered . porno y honourable Commissioner of Crown Lands he . _ I? r sixteen days after the written resl . . ation had arrived,not out were Mr Blah , believed took a hand in the work. He felt f u " i k' _ riends itutiiied in not lu,', in tbdt resi s that whenever the whole p0 Tor..ot. a party I T i l I ation immediately but it wags their dat 'IIS who concentrated Wt orMr individual hia . F _ i rT l tt send it in. ii'Gi no xcuse 1'l'l'll defeat was generally secured, though he ' i a i'." 'retsentjeg to the Home. o They would mightlmhmnth" con deuce of the ppkight y ' I 7 [l I rv WP violated their duty had the d rived ' it" o s. Sir Irranehtd bean "mm m _. , J, "is Excellenc' of the e'l',h'd'lUll'Trtt' 'tth','. but he was entitled to have a reason . , l I " should limits of asking Mr Blake's ad- . if time al1teyrd him m "uh to "ek am ' i . h, vice " to hiss r In Iii;,; of these ct " constituency. He thought that . l 1 . consid tiong ','l'it,'fl he apprehended, were what . was right for in ppositlon g , l those which ought to even: the' case to Watt right for . Government, "d be i I , which the hon. i'lu'l'nd had called their was not one ot that class of men whose poh- a I KI, . atteattioat, he would movein amendment that ties depended upon whether they were m . 1 ru" I ii ' all tuwovO after "tUt" be muck out power or out of t. lie had ttotntlt."P, an I ',. ' I and the following substituted- -" rust. this Hrcoy.st, of a public dinner held Itt this fttrt "I , House, while firmly adhering to the view :gfhifhg: nerd 'rt,',,,',,',',','). helix: , I that no person should for any length of time h . p f r: . . tr P tl. ' ' ", continue' a member of the Executive Council c .alrrnan o t e meeting grye the toast of " . . Withouta seat in this House, is of opinion Lieutenant-Governor, and stated that, it] , . d y that the resignations of; losers. Blake and ttell 'trt, had been grounds 9f oompUin I l ' . Mackenzie as members oNxeeutive Council, 35:221.; 1,t1t',tS,', " oned tdmtedei'fet till? I i ' hasringtreenutrderxrdtvt themlieet practicable good o inion t"h'ld,"'l'd"lfl'l l d." oThe j. . I 'l ' a moment after the return of Mr. Wake to this ""030, 'ld "mi: ','r'd ":0": t f tt r ii . I t I oountry,n"msindus time andthat the course J d l . . . s so o th "I [ J tsheum debylug, the ;iiiiiiiiiia till Mr. l can" trvmg the Judicial bench to be. ! l , ' l r . ly" retynieitytitied by sound cousti- , (thee 21/aterlea,ti'd/dd f Mimkitd; , g in I ' (r 2eee) "2tlh' and correct constltn tional of such a toast depepdedupon whether recent 2 i h i a - ""gt'UJl1Tlcidaus,w, notioed 32:03:." (1'.t,t,,',,'ttt.h,:ditTid ','fc,"'fti",' I I N porno 2n previously that the motion now be.. :fhthc preselnt "Edwin party had been {oi-met; _i, , ii, " ' l ore e ousc was coming up, but he had l c the o d Reform , he would have I F , s' 't, i, had no opportunity of reading it until a few supported it; but he mdoticed men who . , 2 i , , i |.hours ago.. If it was the case. as the honour. had opposed the Government of a mun who ' I th' l i l able Premier had intimated, that the motion had bum l Reformer for thirty years in pub. , ll, , r was the result of a general agreement between liv life because he had two Conservatives in ' , l ' , b I g: lira-trim; "d Jiit/etl't'aalt2l side of it. and then they A.ttetl.rf1in their advent ' I i N , , , l0 party to to power took in s gunners inc 4 I l .I _ any such arrangement. However, he would been a member oi .'no consort": 'r Mty. V . , I g i i! vote in favouro ithe honourable member for Vt Un these gentlvrr an laid ricer I . Illich 4 "hi. i ' , x Lineoln'a resolution, believing that it set should guide them when in pawn as oell as .' tq l I , forth correctly a principle of constitutional in Opposi' 11, they might get Reform _ . (ill F, ' law which declared that when gentlemen in support. tglut the would have to be _ ' V t' the Government of this country lad declare" under a different leadershi . They did t 'I' $, ls _ publicly that they did not any longer intend. . not want to be governed by that institution ' '. 1 , I l r, to take. part in the affairs oi the Province, in King-street controlled by an irresponsible . ' il, ir , L lr, as Cabinet Ministers, they should immedi- party havingno Voice in the House. The l. i d}: l " t' I ately resign. m did not understand the Reform party, now so called,received no sup- 3 )t',r' ' ),i, ' ' I i j} in logic of the Attorney-Generals opinion in port from the members of the old Reform _ i 7 J, I _ , i I - regard to members of the Government party. l f, tE 'i i 1 W." resigning their seats when defeated in their Bon MrhrcKEL0it--They are all ex- . i I". lit I I 'Ill censtlultnciei. f0; i(t did not foils: u. tinct. iiuiTiG.T _ Q 4 y ' "w cause amrm ero a lm'ernmeut been ' . ., ' MI ' . defeated that he should resign his seat. No f P. I'ICHABrlzfd-ghe hon dingy," him. ' i 5 , . one would put forth such a ridiculous propo- so Wall a come llrT, an ore were ' .. sition. It such a rule were laid down, the three or four more of them on the opposite 7 I _ country would be deprived of, in many in. henchtts." PG, speaker ',,t',ts, on t to T' . ' _ stances, cservicos of its moat able states- repea l u enever . mom r .o, . - , . A " man. . Gladstone, for instance Went to Government showed that he did not intend ' ' , "E one of the tter. of Lanoaahirrs for election :19 T": 11:1?th twat: Jd'fl',t,f t,',. w . Mls J') and was defeat: , but no person thought that ' 'ld',' o of th "t ' h. g ht 1'lt,,dll V , i Ble' if: he should have resigned for that reason. and ', e case 0 t we Ine,','? 0 gen . Mi " ' qt _ [" , . to whom allusion had u made they do. ' I ; , it ' . Mr. Gladstone wont to another constituency -. r, = . l llBri',' and wasretursed. The merefaot of . matt aided that they would f, to the House ot. , . . _ . lt,), being defeated, he being a member of the wringing of Canada}; an :3. JegTe,tg I ", i' ti g h ' i -f, GOVOI'NM", left it incumbent upon him to ' tIO . course a, m t a" . on . ' _ 1 i , r resign, was . mu idea. There "m hardly if the Premier could show human instance _ k l ill; . a constituency in the country where. if all 1 "reg . ',t,ei,ttheul, remedin that? I . " i Ir,, influeno" at command were rcught to bear I"! .o.vemRen . . ' menu " , , ' i ' ' , c, ' aiuat . member ot the Government. au' l intention of rtu.riyg.a1tog"ur, then he 112' I l I _ these influences concentrated in one partitu. would admit that M. "'3" were wrong. lie Il l lar co nstitu euoy, that member could not be however, felt certain that the resolution r' , if I, defeated, although " the some time he t',C.'ll' ld if" deal-ryh ; It T,t,tg who a l i ' ' might ssessthe confidence M the country Ita .c eere w t? t ° "we" was . ' , l, eneraila There was also the case of the Speaking were quite numerous enough l I rr . glen. Robert Baldwin, who, in 1812, when a to do "if ithLglt1,t't", still ll t dd ' ' , 'l I I member of the Baldwin-Lsfontaine Goveru- Ice. mom " or . n; ut a l l ' , ' meat sought election in the County of tu.." 2'e,t'fdh,1' questionat all.. The speaker . a ' __ 5 Hastings and was unsuccessful but no conclude by alluding tothe time when mr. I f', I one considch it was incumbent sponsible Government was being contended " if 7 g) n.3,; u him to resi n for that reason for, and said that the Commissioner of Crown i , i r j W k't'l'u'll men would have been compelled Lands was probably opposed to the principle i i, a . l I i y r . to leave public life If thtm had had to resign then, and he did not think that the honour. '. v Sk Bil ' because of being dot-sit in certain consti- able Premier " that period cast in his in- . ' . ill, _ tueucio" The principle that had always fluence with the Reform party. ' r I i 5 lil I I been laid don. audio hoped sling: would Hon Mr. PARDEE. referring to the re. I ( I iN , be, was ttut is" bu,,, Tll" iggut marks of gentlemen opposite respecting l y - . 1. Governm Jk' tr,'l h t to k Robert-Baldwin, said they all had (great re. n t t Ir4 to retire and It! 0 menu ht sec spool: for that gentleman; but the lfl'erence r _ for: re-eleotwlfo he "Wild have . reasons 3 time between them and gentlemen cp- | lg". a'lcwed himin g,'tht,',ter,'t' his cou- poms w" that they were 0 lug , e l "r , stitnentlo Arty gule tttan . " 'onld h". ' out the rinciples ot Robert 'ltgrl'lf, - V t Pull . , iireiyruitt1rt? 3 but he did not understand while ba'l'Jll opposite were departing _ fi " V Sy 'l I the hon. menUe tor Lincoln to MN that " from them. The hon. member for Niagara , ' 1llit . i, such should be the case. The purport of the had said that he belonged to the out. of I lil M resolution was that when Emulator of the po.1ititAae who always sdvocatedthe um, i, . Government had reigned pod " tn P rlneiplcs, and yet he himself, while once. a , M House. and had exactly dUsiarsd by yy informer, was now a follower of one of the I Fl j, i, acts that le. '"d loavllg t,eeult most extreme Conservatives, in this country. I . . , Itj, " in" ",2huuQ'tr" that mambo; 3 lion. Mi. RicBAItD8--T deny that lam . , gb'-', mum!) his seat in the G'overautenE Ho a follower of any. member of this House. . . & ' . - ', _ , t tgh' ask honourable gentlemen to point to (Checrc) 1 rooogmu no leader,not even the . ' ti I , Ig IP, . _ a "no, where . man had held his seat -..f hon. gentleman opposite. "t p. , l P' , 1llllllll. ' , -, - ' not... Mr. PARDEE observed that in that .I :- Illllil .

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