A Leap in the Dark - A Criticism of the Principles of Home Rule as Illustrated by the - Bill of 1893 by Albert Venn Dicey
page 36 of 237 (15%)
page 36 of 237 (15%)
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Parliament with an action within the appointed sphere of the Parliament
of Ireland. If such interference were attempted, the presence in this Parliament of eighty Irish members--a number which had been found to be sufficient to initiate an Irish constitution--would be found sufficient to protect an Irish constitution when it was given.'--Mr. Sexton, Feb. 13, 1893, _Times Parliamentary Debates,_ p. 318. [24] For evidence that the power of the Imperial Parliament is intended under the new constitution to be subjected to at any rate a moral limit, the reader should note particularly the terms of the Home Rule Bill, clause 12, sub-clause (3). CHAPTER II THE NEW CONSTITUTION A critic of the new constitution, intent on ascertaining how it affects the relation of Great Britain and Ireland, will do well to divert his attention from the numerous details of the Home Rule Bill, important as many of them are,[25] and fix his mind almost exclusively upon the four leading features of the measure. These are:-- _First_. The supremacy of the Imperial Parliament. |
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