England's Case Against Home Rule by Albert Venn Dicey
Author:Albert Venn Dicey [Dicey, Albert Venn]
Language: eng
Format: epub, pdf
ISBN: 9781362175766
Google: PvBFvgAACAAJ
Publisher: Creative Media Partners, LLC
Published: 2016-08-26T00:15:22+00:00
* * *
II. Home Rule as Colonial Independence.âThe modern Colonial policy of England has, or is thought to have, achieved two results which impress popular imagination:âit has relieved English statesmanship from an unbearable burden of worry and anxiety; it has (as most people believe) changed Colonial unfriendliness or discontent into enthusiastic or ostentatious loyalty. Some politicians, therefore, who are anxious to terminate the secular feud between England and Ireland, and to free Parliament from the presence, and therefore from the obstructiveness, of the Home Rulers, readily assume that the formula of "Colonial independence" contains the solution of the problem how to satisfy at once the demand of Ireland for independence and the resolution of Great Britain to maintain the integrity of the Empire. This assumption rests on no sure foundation, but derives such plausibility as it possesses from the gross ignorance of the public as to the principles and habits which govern the English State system. A mere account of the constitutional relations existing between England and a self-governed colony is almost equivalent to a suggestion of the reasons which forbid the hope that the true answer to the agitation for Home Rule is to be found in conceding to Ireland institutions like those which satisfy the inhabitants of New South Wales or Victoria. To render such a statement at once brief and intelligible is no easy matter, for, among all the political arrangements devised by the ingenuity of statesmen, none can be found more singular, more complicated, or more anomalous than the position of combined independence and subordination occupied by the large number of self-governing colonies which are scattered throughout the British Empire. Victoria, which may be taken as a type of the whole class, is, for most purposes of local and internal administration, and for some purposes which go beyond the sphere usually assigned to local government, an independent, self-governing community. Victoria is at the same time, for all purposes in theory and for many purposes in fact, a merely subordinate portion of the British Empire, and as truly subject to the British Parliament as is Middlesex or the Isle of Wight.
Let us try in the first place to realizeâfor this is the essential matter as regards my present argumentâthe full extent of Victorian independence.
Victoria enjoys a Constitution after the British model. The Governor, the two Houses, the Ministry, reproduce the well-known features of our limited monarchy. The Victorian Parliament further possesses in Victoria that character of sovereignty which the British Parliament possesses throughout the dominions of the Crown, and is (subject, of course, to the authority of the British Parliament itself) as supreme at Melbourne as are Queen, Lords, and Commons at Westminster. It makes and unmakes Cabinets; it controls the executive action of the Ministry; who, in their turn, are the authorized advisers of that sham constitutional monarch, the Colonial Governor. The Parliament, moreover, recognizes no restrictions on its legislative powers; it is not, as is the Congress of the United States, restrained within a very
Download
England's Case Against Home Rule by Albert Venn Dicey.pdf
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Evolution of an Empire: A Brief Historical Sketch of France by Mary Platt Parmele(414)
An Introduction to the Philosophy of Law by Unknown(308)
Astounding Stories, August, 1931 by Various Authors(305)
B-12's Moon Glow by Charles A. Stearns(298)
Historia Amoris by Edgar Saltus(287)
Arsene Lupin vs. Herlock Sholmes by Maurice Leblanc(285)
The Fade Tabletop by Jeremy Harris(272)
The Scottish Fairy Book by Elizabeth W. (Elizabeth Wilson) Grierson(267)
BY Arthur H. Smith, Smith A.H. by Village life in china(253)
The Courtship of Morrice Buckler by A. E. W. Mason(249)
The story of Sigurd the Volsung and the fall of the Niblungs by William Morris by Unknown(242)
Memoirs of a Veteran: Personal Incidents, Experiences and Observations by Isaac Hermann(235)
Cottage Economy, to Which is Added The Poor Man's Friend by William Cobbett(226)
A History of Witchcraft in England from 1558 to 1718 by Wallace Notestein(226)
Euthenics, the science of controllable environment by Ellen H. (Ellen Henrietta) Richards(224)
Folk-Tales of the Khasis by Mrs. Rafy(222)
The Black Douglas by S. R. Crockett(219)
The moral and intellectual diversity of races, with particular reference to their respective influence in the civil and political history of mankind from the French by Count A. De by Gobineau Arthur comte de(213)
Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester: A Biography by Kenneth Hotham Vickers(210)