Lords must yield whenever the opinion of the Commons is also the opinion of the nation, and when it is clear that the nation has made up its mind. Whether or not the nation has made up its mind is a question to be decided by all the circumstances of the... The English Constitution - Página xxviiipor Walter Bagehot - 2007 - 368 páginasVista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro
| Walter Bagehot - 1872 - 382 páginas
...to surmount the whole one. We have to frame such tacit rules, to establish such ruling but unenacted customs, as will make the House of Lords yield to...questions are decided. There are some people who lay down a sort of mechanical test : they say the House of Lords should be at liberty to reject a measure passed... | |
| Robert William Dale, James Guinness Rogers - 1884 - 1122 páginas
...conditions of the representation, and one passage is so timely and so wise that we cite it in full : u The House of Lords must yield whenever the opinion...questions are decided. There are some people who lay down a sort of mechanical test ; they say the House of Lords should be at liberty to reject a measure passed... | |
| Walter Bagehot - 1889 - 494 páginas
...to surmount the whole one. We have to frame such tacit rules, to estabhsn such ruling but unenacted customs, as will make the House of Lords yield to...nation, and when it is clear that the nation has made I up its mind. Whether or not the nation has made up its mind is a question to be decided by all the... | |
| Walter Bagehot - 1891 - 608 páginas
...to surmount the whole one. We have to frame such tacit rules, to establish such ruling but unenacted customs, as will make the House of Lords yield to...questions are decided. There are some people who lay down a sort of mechanical test : they say the House of Lords should be at liberty to reject a measure passed... | |
| 1894 - 970 páginas
...unenacted custom " of the constitution, the lords must yield "whenever the opinion of the house of commons is also the opinion of the nation, and when...it is clear that the nation has made up its mind;" but it is also true that the right of suspensory veto is recognized by independent critics as a working... | |
| John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler - 1899 - 830 páginas
...' to the Commons, and reaches the singularly stultifying conclusion to his main argument that it is 'whenever the opinion of the Commons is also the opinion of the nation.' " As no hint is given of what Bagehot's main argument was, nine readers out of ten will surely conclude... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - 1898 - 884 páginas
...to the Commons, and reaches the singularly stultifying conclusion to his main argument that it is " whenever the opinion of the Commons is also the opinion of the nation." — EDITOR, able to transform itself by gradual usurpations into an independent and aristocratic body,... | |
| John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler - 1899 - 842 páginas
...' to the Commons, and reaches the singularly stultifying conclusion to his main argument that it is 'whenever the opinion of the Commons is also the opinion of the nation.' " As no hint is given of what Bagehot's main argument was, nine readers out of ten will surely conclude... | |
| 1884 - 646 páginas
...House of Lords,' says Mr. Bagehot, in his Essays on Parliamentary Kef or in, 'must yield whenever 4 the opinion of the Commons is also the opinion of...is clear that the nation has made up ' its mind.' If there ever was a question on which the mind of the nation was clearly made up, it is that the counties... | |
| Bagehot - 2001 - 300 páginas
...to surmount the whole one. We have to frame such tacit rules, to establish such ruling but unenacted customs, as will make the House of Lords yield to...questions are decided. There are some people who lay down a sort of mechanical test: they say the House of Lords should be at liberty to reject a measure passed... | |
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