The English ConstitutionGarland Pub., 1978 - 291 páginas THE ENGLISH CONSTITUTION provides the most lucid and readable account of what has been termed the "Golden Age" of the nineteenth century constitution, before the advent of universal male suffrage and the rise of party as the overriding force in the British policy. Many of Bagehot's insights remain either true, as a statement of basic principle, or even if no longer strictly accurate, fascinating in their partial applicability today. they convey a sharp sense of how the constitution has radically changed since the Victorian era, and yet paradoxically at a more basic level, remained the same. |
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Página 131
... representatives from the town lowest class , and one sort of representatives from the agricultural lowest class . The genuine representa- tives of the country would be men of one marked sort , and the genuine representatives for the ...
... representatives from the town lowest class , and one sort of representatives from the agricultural lowest class . The genuine representa- tives of the country would be men of one marked sort , and the genuine representatives for the ...
Página 198
... Representatives , but in the Senate . The President can only make treaties , ' provided two- thirds of Senators present ' concur . The sovereignty therefore for the greatest international questions is in a different part of the State ...
... Representatives , but in the Senate . The President can only make treaties , ' provided two- thirds of Senators present ' concur . The sovereignty therefore for the greatest international questions is in a different part of the State ...
Página 263
... representatives from those classes , and gave those representatives much licence . If a hun- dred small shopkeepers had by miracle been added to any of the '32 Parliaments , they would have felt outcasts there . Nothing could be more ...
... representatives from those classes , and gave those representatives much licence . If a hun- dred small shopkeepers had by miracle been added to any of the '32 Parliaments , they would have felt outcasts there . Nothing could be more ...
Contenido
PAGE | 115 |
ON CHANGES OF MINISTRY | 156 |
ITS SUPPOSED CHECKS AND BALANCES | 194 |
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Términos y frases comunes
able action administration American argument assembly authority better body cabinet cabinet government called chamber choose constitution course critical defect difficulty discussion duties educated effect elected England English equal executive existence experience fact feeling force foreign function George give greatest head House of Commons House of Lords ideas imagine important influence institutions interest keep king leader least legislation legislature less living look majority matter means ment mind minister ministry monarch nation nature never object once opinion Parliament party passed peers perhaps persons political popular possible present President Presidential system principle probably Queen question reason representatives requires respect result rule society sort sovereign speak sure things thought tion true vote whole wish