St Stephens in the Fifties the Session 1852 3 a Parliamentary Retrospect

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St Stephens in the Fifties the Session 1852 3 a Parliamentary Retrospect
Edward Michael Whitty
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Besides, when we accept a Coalition Government, we must expect only average liberalism — a " mean " result, in fact — and it is our duty, consequently, to take the Cabinet policy, as we take the Budget, " as a whole. " There is a good deal that is pleasant to balance against the police system of the perquisitioning Palmerston. We have to ask, " if under such and such circumstances Palmerston, who at least has pretensions to sustain, does so and so, what would Malmesbury have done ? " Palmerston... may have yielded slightly to the pressure from within — Malmesbury might have had Kossuth in Vienna by this time. We cannot compare the present Government with the possible coming men of an abstract model Cabinet : we must calculate whether they are not generally preferable to the only contingent successors. Fortunately for the Coalition, it is no longer in the melancholy position painted by Lord Derby, when he retired from office, and when he observed, that as Lord Aberdeen and he generally agreed on most points, he could not understand what practicable change of policy there was going to be : Lord Derby having relieved his old friend from the difficulty by drawing a bold line between them — by presenting a tangible distinction for the use of a public who would otherwise have remained puzzled.

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