Parliament from the Press GalleryMacmillan, 1967 - 176 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 26
Página 61
... argument . It has , like Monsieur Jourdain , talked prose all its life without being exactly aware of the fact . It can appreciate the solitary flight into moral poetry of an individual Member , but the verse which it writes col ...
... argument . It has , like Monsieur Jourdain , talked prose all its life without being exactly aware of the fact . It can appreciate the solitary flight into moral poetry of an individual Member , but the verse which it writes col ...
Página 151
... argument seeks to preserve its own hallowed rights at too great an expense in the denial of equally hallowed rights ... arguing with it . I myself happen to like it , and there is no arguing with me either . I see dignity where Mr Emrys ...
... argument seeks to preserve its own hallowed rights at too great an expense in the denial of equally hallowed rights ... arguing with it . I myself happen to like it , and there is no arguing with me either . I see dignity where Mr Emrys ...
Página 169
... argument is plain . None the less , his action was widely held to have represented yet another abdication on the part of the Conservative majority in the Upper House . On being pressed by his critics he further explained that , in his ...
... argument is plain . None the less , his action was widely held to have represented yet another abdication on the part of the Conservative majority in the Upper House . On being pressed by his critics he further explained that , in his ...
Contenido
What Do They Do? | 12 |
How Do They Do It? | 26 |
Calm and Storm | 45 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
accepted amendments argument back-benchers Bagehot become Bernard Crick Black Rod Budget certainly Chamber colleagues committee stage Conservative constituency course Crick critics debate decision defence discussion division lobbies doubt Election electorate Emrys Hughes Finance Bill front bench full Cabinet functions Gaitskell Gerald Nabarro give Government Government's Hansard Harold Wilson Heath honour hour House of Commons House of Lords important journalists kind Labour Member Labour party later Leader legislation less majority means Members of Parliament ment Michael Foot ministerial modern Morning Sittings motion of censure never occasion once Opposition Palace of Westminster Parlia Parliamentary party political Peers perhaps Points of Order practice Press Gallery Prime Minister privilege procedure proposal question rarely Report Second Reading Secretary seen Serjeant-at-Arms side Sir Frank Sir Gordon Touche Snooks Speaker specialised committees speeches stand Suez summon taken television tion turn vote Whips Whole House