After two days of staff meetings, the Government Reform Committee finished its preliminary blueprint for downsizing the Cabinet. |
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I have read some whacky things in my time but the latest report of the Electoral Reform Society takes some beating. |
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I went off to the General Meeting, on the Great Education Reform Bill, which, this week, was quorate, though it was a struggle! |
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Like Burke, Scott was suspicious of the French Revolution and was much alarmed by Napoleonic Imperialism and Whigs ' Reform Bill. |
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He fell away from Reform Judaism, the religious stream with which his family had long been affiliated. |
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A party vote was called for on the question, That the Aquaculture Reform Bill be now read a second time. |
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The votes will be counted up to Monday, July 28 and the election is being overseen by the Electoral Reform Society. |
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The first priority of the revolution became the redistribution of land under the Agrarian Reform Act. |
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This led him to the political and theological right, far from his liberal roots in German Reform Judaism. |
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From Reform Judaism to the Episcopal Church, religious bodies across the nation are grappling with the same issue. |
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After the Law Reform Act 1996, it is not necessary that the death takes place within a year and a day of the unlawful act or omission. |
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The U.S. House Committee on Government Reform presented its annual cybersecurity report card in February. |
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Section 3 of the Law Reform Act provides that section 4 is not retrospective. |
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The Electoral Reform Society has produced a damning analysis of the anti-democratic nature of the 2005 general election. |
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The Reform Party national committee will vote on whether to oust the pugilistic arch-conservative who is seeking that party's candidacy. |
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The Electoral Reform Society welcomed the commitment to a free vote on the composition of the Lords. |
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However, because the state senate must convene again by July 19, the prospects for Real Reform are still very much alive. |
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Just beyond the far end of Reform Street lies the birthplace of Kirriemuir's most famous son, JM Barrie. |
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The proposed legislation drew criticism from the opposition Reform party for being too easy on youth who get in trouble with the law. |
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Even though my father kept his store open on Saturday, he and my mother made fun of the Reform rabbi who drove to the shul down the block. |
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There is virtually no common ground between the two opposing sides in the debate over the Constitutional Reform Bill. |
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The Federation for American Immigration Reform says the increase has put a strain on city and state budgets. |
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Success was due in part to a solidly managed mail list from the Reform Party. |
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There are plenty of complaints in the UK spearheaded by the Electoral Reform Society. |
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He said the Health Service Reform would be achieved in a way that would not result in victors or vanquished. |
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Prices of steel products and non-ferrous metals, such as copper, are sliding, the State Development Reform Commission said. |
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This year the government hopes to bring them together under a new Fire Safety Reform Act. |
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We are less familiar with his skills as an infighter seeking to take over the Reform Party and treat it as his personal property. |
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As the Law Reform Commission report records, there was some research into the number of fiats granted and there are a regular number of fiats. |
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Liberal and Reform synagogues have abandoned their erstwhile preference for confirmation over Bar and Batmitzvah. |
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The proposed Employment Law Reform Bill will change the requirement for instant dismissal in the case of serious misconduct. |
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The Electoral Reform Commission might have been a bit more inventive in relation to that matter. |
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But the Police Reform Act 2002 had added in the power to require the forced resignation of a chief constable. |
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The Minister said that a decision to fully decouple support payments from production was made as a consequence of the 2003 CAP Reform Agreement. |
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The number of people serving life sentences in British prisons, revealed by the Prison Reform Trust. |
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The Electoral Reform Society said there was a strong case for proportional representation via the Single Transferable Vote. |
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The Law Reform Commission recommended that the offences be prosecuted summarily. |
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The Reform Act of 1832 eliminated many anomalies, and enfranchised the new industrial towns, which had hitherto been unrepresented. |
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If couples were treated equally before the law, we would be looking at a Marriage Reform Bill. |
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It fought elections, and sought to multiply supporters on the electoral registers and expel opponents, by exploiting the registration provisions of the 1832 Reform Act. |
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The founding father of the American Reform Movement was Isaac Meyer Wise. |
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In furtherance of this idea, the administration last year poured financial and political resources into a foredoomed mission of passing three Police Reform Bills. |
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Another segment of American Judaism is Reconstructionist Judaism, which is sometimes lumped together with Reform and Conservative Judaism as Progressive Judaism. |
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A study by the Irish Penal Reform Trust last year found that 20 per cent of drug addicts had injected for the first time when they were in prison. |
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The King had to reinstate the Whigs, but he was at least spared the humiliation of creating new peers, as the Duke withdrew his opposition to the Reform Bill. |
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He was inspired by the Conservative and Reform movements to reinvigorate Orthodoxy, to make it modern. |
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During the seventeenth century heraldic windows adorned the naves of Dutch Reform churches, a custom dating back several centuries in the Netherlands. |
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In 1972 the Presbyterian church of England merged with most of the congregational unions to create the United Reform Church, but the decline in membership was not arrested. |
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He represents the high-water mark of Ross Perot's Reform Party, which collapsed into irrelevance during the next decade. |
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It also happened that the former Reform party accepted pragmatism and gradualism. |
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The power to apportion responsibility under the Law Reform Act 1945 afforded a far more appropriate tool for doing justice than the blunt instrument of turpitude. |
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The report card is generated by the House Government Reform Committee's Subcommittee on Technology, Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and the Census. |
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Conservative Judaism combines elements of Orthodox and Reform Judaism. |
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The Boy Scouts of America has barred gay people from joining their troops, and now Reform Judaism leaders are asking parents to keeping scouting out of their homes. |
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Rabbi Eric H. Yoffie is President of the Union for Reform Judaism. |
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While the Baptist sanctuary was undergoing minor construction and painting, the congregation met once again for worship in the historic synagogue of Reform Judaism. |
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Sheldon Zimmerman resigned as president of the four-campus Hebrew Union College on December 4 shortly after Reform Judaism's rabbinic association suspended him. |
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Jason Willamson, staff attorney for the criminal law Reform Project, is strongly against it. |
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The Prison Reform Trust said today that overcrowding is a problem in three quarters of jails and the figures should act as a wake-up call to the government. |
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The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 outlined plans for a Supreme Court of the United Kingdom to replace the role of the Law Lords. |
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The Reform League campaigned for manhood suffrage in the 1860s, and included former Chartists amongst its ranks. |
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The Reform and the others dropped all the things a woman has to do like the kashruth and the mikvah. |
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The Whigs introduced the first Reform Bill while Wellesley and the Tories worked to prevent its passage. |
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Iron shutters were installed in June 1832 to prevent further damage by crowds angry over rejection of the Reform Bill, which he strongly opposed. |
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Chartism emerged after the 1832 Reform Bill failed to give the vote to the working class. |
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The Whigs became champions of Parliamentary reform by making the Reform Act of 1832 their signature measure. |
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In 1832, the Reform Act extended the vote in Britain but did not grant universal suffrage. |
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The Scottish Reform Act 1832 increased the number of Scottish MPs and widened the franchise to include more of the middle classes. |
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In 1832 Parliament passed the Great Reform Act, which began the transfer of political power from the aristocracy to the middle classes. |
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The Temperance Reform was too serious a matter for trifling jokes and buffooneries. |
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Before the Reform Bill anything resembling the neurosis of English Basileolatry was even more completely unknown. |
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The Reform Act itself did not affect constituencies in Scotland or Ireland. |
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However, reforms there were carried out by the Scottish Reform Act and the Irish Reform Act. |
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Tradesmen, such as shoemakers, believed that the Reform Act had given them the vote. |
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The Reform War wrecked Mexico's economy and it found itself unable to pay debts it owed to Europe. |
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Most of the pocket boroughs abolished by the Reform Act belonged to the Tory Party. |
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The Reform Act strengthened the House of Commons by reducing the number of nomination boroughs controlled by peers. |
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However, no proposal was successful until 1867, when Parliament adopted the Second Reform Act. |
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An area the Reform Act did not address was the issue of municipal and regional government. |
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In 1996, as the nominee of the Reform Party, Perot did better in Maine than in any other state. |
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Several historians credit the Reform Act 1832 with launching modern democracy in Britain. |
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Evans concludes the Reform Act marked the true beginning of the development of a recognisably modern political system. |
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A new state constitutional convention could not limit individual liberties, according to the proconvention group Con Con for Court Reform. |
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He had already turned his attention to politics in 1832, during the great crisis over the Reform Bill. |
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Before the Reform Act 1867, the working class did not possess the vote and therefore had little political power. |
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Views in Judaism range from the stricter Orthodox sect to the more relaxed Reform sect. |
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The Tories pursued a Reform Bill in 1859, which would have resulted in a modest increase to the franchise. |
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One of Russell's early priorities was a Reform Bill, but the proposed legislation that Gladstone announced on 12 March 1866 divided his party. |
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Under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 the Lord Chancellor is no longer a judge. |
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Disraeli's cabinet of twelve, with six peers and six commoners, was the smallest since Reform. |
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The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 removed this function, leaving the choice of a presiding officer to the House of Lords itself. |
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Gemayel said that the basic problem in Lebanon is Hizbullah and the problem with Change and Reform bloc is that it is covering Hizbullah. |
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Waxman, the California Democrat who chaired the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. |
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When the House of Commons passed a Reform Bill to correct some of these anomalies in 1831, the House of Lords rejected the proposal. |
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The greatness of the Great Reform Bill lay less in substance than in symbolism. |
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The Hatchery Reform Project is the first time anyone has taken a big-picture, systemic look at the Puget Sound and coastal hatcheries. |
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The Reform Act 1832 reduced the number of parliamentary boroughs by eliminating the rotten boroughs. |
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The Swedish Reform Church was in a sloughy, weedy district, near a group of factories. |
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In 2002 the Prison Reform Trust warned that Dartmoor Prison may be breaching the Human Rights Act 1998 due to severe overcrowding at the jail. |
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The 1867 Reform Act passed and enfranchised roughly three million people, around half of whom were working class. |
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Prior to the coming into force of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, the Privy Council was the court of last resort for devolution issues. |
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In addition, many Reform temples use musical accompaniment such as organs and mixed choirs. |
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The voters use a secure online website to vote, and the voting is scrutinized by Electoral Reform Services. |
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In 1832, after much political agitation, the Reform Act was passed on the third attempt. |
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Legislation, which was originally proposed in the Commonhold and Leasehold Reform Act 2002, but not implemented, would have been far preferable. |
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The saltire was incorporated in the badge of the Reform Movement, for some time after its inception in 1998, but this no longer so prominent. |
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Thieves broke into the car, outside the United Reform Church on Hillmorton Road, on Friday night, and stole a squash racket and rugby ball. |
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At one point in the closing show, the pair visited the Reform Club in London where mock turtle soup was on the menu. |
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Macclesfield was first represented in Parliament after the Reform Act of 1832, when it was granted two members of Parliament. |
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A correspondence ensued and in February 1909 James invited Walpole to lunch at the Reform Club in London. |
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The Chartist movement of 1831 did not consider the reforms put forward by The Reform Act of 1832 to be extensive enough. |
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In 1832 the Great Reform Act divided larger counties for parliamentary purposes. |
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Even Beatrix's father, Rupert, buys a copy of one of her books after hearing how his friends at the Reform Club were buying them. |
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While many ancient boroughs remained as municipal boroughs, they were disenfranchised by the Reform Act. |
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The towns of Alsace were the first to adopt German language as their official language, instead of Latin, during the Lutheran Reform. |
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His 1833 Principles of Church Reform is associated with the beginnings of the Broad Church movement. |
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This teaching of German, referred to as the Holderith Reform, was later extended to all pupils in the last two years of elementary school. |
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Interest in the 1688 Glorious Revolution was also rekindled by the Great Reform Act of 1832 in England. |
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In 1919, the FPU joined with the Liberal Party of Newfoundland led by Richard Squires to form the Liberal Reform Party. |
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These functions remain intact and unaffected by the Constitutional Reform Act. |
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This was the longest filibuster since the 1999 Reform Party of Canada filibuster, on native treaty issues in British Columbia. |
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In the UK the Electoral Reform Society estimates that more than half the seats can be considered as safe. |
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Other historians have argued that genuine democracy began to arise only with the Second Reform Act in 1867, or perhaps even later. |
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The 1832 Reform Act subsumed the Old Sarum area into an enlarged borough of Wilton. |
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As the conservadores refused to recognize it, the Reform War began in 1858, during which both groups had their own governments. |
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The Reform Party and the Pro Patria and Res Publica Union form the current majority government with 32 and 19 seats in parliament, respectively. |
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The Reform is administered by the Puerto Rico Health Insurance Administration. |
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During the Reform War, the major player was Ignacio de la Llave whose name is part of the state's official designation. |
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These provisions were repealed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 which created the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. |
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The Reform Act's chief objective was the reduction of the number of nomination boroughs. |
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As soon as the new session began in December 1831, the Third Reform Bill was brought forward. |
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The Reform Bill was again brought before the House of Commons, which agreed to the second reading by a large majority in July. |
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Despite the high attendance, the second reading was approved by only one vote, and further progress on the Reform Bill was difficult. |
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On 1 March 1831, Lord John Russell brought forward the Reform Bill in the House of Commons on the government's behalf. |
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The Reform Act was the climax of Whiggism, but it also brought about the Whigs' demise. |
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The Constitutional Reform and Governance Act 2010 is a piece of constitutional legislation. |
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By the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 it has the power to remove individual judges from office for misconduct. |
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This is particularly true in understanding David's enthusiasm for the Gregorian Reform. |
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In October 2010, the House of Commons Political and Constitutional Reform Select Committee reported on the bill. |
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Following the Gregorian Reform, an assertive, reformist papacy attempted to increase its power and influence. |
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Before the Reform Act 1832, Bath elected two members to the unreformed House of Commons, as an ancient parliamentary borough. |
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On Michaelmas in 1102, Anselm was finally able to convene a general church council at London, establishing the Gregorian Reform within England. |
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The Tory Reform Committee, consisting of 45 Conservative MPs, demanded the founding of a Ministry of Social Security immediately. |
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The next Reform Act which came into force at the 1868 election, reduced Ripon's representation from two MPs to one. |
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The Education Reform Act 1988 abolished the Inner London Education Authority and made the inner London boroughs education authorities. |
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During William IV's reign, the Reform Act 1832, which reformed parliamentary representation, was passed. |
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The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 makes provision for a new appointment process for Justices of the Supreme Court. |
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Before the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 this role was held by the House of Lords. |
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Odinga's Coalition for Reform and Democracy is supporting Luos, Kamba and Luhya tribes and Kenyatta's Jubilee coalition represents the Kikuyu and Kalenjin. |
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Samye Dzong Dundee is a Buddhist Temple based in Reform Street. |
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Rochdale was also prominent in the movement for parliamentary reform, by which the town successfully claimed to have a member allotted to it under the Reform Bill. |
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The Constitutional Reform Act realized the hopes of the Law Society. |
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In 1962, the Joint Committee on House of Lords Reform rejected such plans. |
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A series of Reform Acts and Representation of the People Acts followed. |
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It was thus only 28 years after the initial, quite modest, Great Reform Act that leading politicians thought it prudent to introduce further electoral reform. |
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In 1866, the Prime Minister, Lord Russell, introduced a Reform Bill. |
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Despite the fact that he had blocked the Liberal Reform Bill, in February 1867, Disraeli introduced his own Reform Bill into the House of Commons. |
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The act was repealed by the Constitutional Reform Act 2005, which transferred the judicial functions from the House of Lords to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. |
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The 1832 Reform Act created two members of parliament, the 1835 Municipal Reform Act allowed the election of magistrates, borough councillors and aldermen. |
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However, Korstanje adds, though Weber was in the correct side by confirming the connection of Reform and Capitalism, the key role played by Norse Mythology was left behind. |
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The Reform Act of 1832 abolished its representation as a rotten borough. |
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The Riot Act was read in 1852 on election day following a mass public brawl over the Reform Act, and irregularities with parliamentary candidate nominations. |
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Jane Roe, campaign manager for the Abortion Law Reform Association, said the Cardinal had allowed his religious principles to totally override his common sense. |
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Rabbi Sherwin Wine, an ordained Reform Judaism rabbi, founded the Humanistic Judaism movement in 1963 at Birmingham Temple in a suburb of Detroit. |
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Before the Tax Reform Act of 1986 imposed restrictions on the use of leveraged life insurance policies, leveraged life was a popular means of funding these benefit packages. |
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Work began in 1832, the year when the Reform Act finally gave the town representation in Parliament, and municipal incorporation followed within the same ten years. |
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Several decades into the twentieth century, it was clear that Conservative Judaism was offering a mighty challenge to the Reform movement's hegemony over American Judaism. |
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I would have preferred him to repeal the Welfare Reform Act in its entirety and commit to replacing it with a Welfare State based on universalism. |
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Haredim oppose Reform and Conservative Judaism as well as secularism. |
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The Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 created the DIF, which the FDIC uses to manage failures of insured banks, and this fund has been depleted. |
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The USPS Classification Reform will affect First-Class, Second-Class, Third-Class and Fourth-Class mail and reward mailers who prepare mail for automated processing. |
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The Coalition Against Public Funding For Stadiums is cochaired by Angela Roffle, executive director of the Reform Organization of Welfare, and the Rev. |
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During the reforms of the 19th century, beginning with the Reform Act 1832, the electoral system for the House of Commons was progressively regularised. |
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In the ensuing years, the Commons grew more assertive, the influence of the House of Lords having been reduced by the Reform Bill crisis, and the power of the patrons reduced. |
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It was not until 1867 that urban working men were admitted to the franchise under the Reform Act 1867, and not until 1918 that full manhood suffrage was achieved. |
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There are a number of groups in the UK campaigning for electoral reform, including the Electoral Reform Society, Make Votes Count Coalition and Fairshare. |
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Historically its system of government was not unusual, but it was not reformed by the Municipal Reform Act 1835 and little changed by later reforms. |
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In 1831 citizens rioted in protest against the Duke of Newcastle's opposition to the Reform Act 1832, setting fire to his residence, Nottingham Castle. |
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The Department outlined its aims for this Parliament in its Business Plan, which was published in May 2011 and superseded its Structural Reform Plan. |
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Around this time period, he wrote the essay The Philosophical View of Reform, which was his most thorough exposition of his political views to that date. |
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He was defeated in Preston in 1826 and Manchester in 1832 but after the passing of the 1832 Reform Act Cobbett was able to win the parliamentary seat of Oldham. |
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In August 2016 the Electoral Reform Society published a highly critical report on the referendum and called for a review of how future events are run. |
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Changes also include the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 which alters the structure of the House of Lords to separate its judicial and legislative functions. |
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After the Third Reform Act, fewer Whigs were selected as candidates. |
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The leading Radicals were John Bright and Richard Cobden, who represented the manufacturing towns which had gained representation under the Reform Act. |
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As these divisions indicated that Parliament was against the Reform Bill, the ministry decided to request a dissolution and take its appeal to the people. |
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When the Lords rejected the Reform Bill, public violence ensued. |
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After the Reform Bill was rejected in the Lords, the House of Commons immediately passed a motion of confidence affirming their support for Lord Grey's administration. |
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Other historians have taken a far less laudatory view, arguing that genuine democracy began to arise only with the Second Reform Act in 1867, or perhaps even later. |
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The abolition of the office was rejected by the House of Lords, and the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 was thus amended to preserve the office of Lord Chancellor. |
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Symbolically, however, the Reform Act exceeded expectations. |
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The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 eliminated the Lord Chancellor's judicial functions and also reduced the office's salary to below that of the Prime Minister. |
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However, the Reform movement has indicated that this is not so cut and dried, and different situations call for consideration and differing actions. |
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The Reform movement mostly refer to their synagogues as temples. |
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He points out that the debates on the 1832 Reform Bill showed that reformers would indeed receive a hearing at parliamentary level with a good chance of success. |
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The University is a higher education corporation established under Section 121 of the Education Reform Act 1988 and is an exempt charity under charity legislation. |
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This pattern slowed due to the 1975 Land Reform program instituted by the government, which provided incentives for people to stay in rural areas. |
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While the Reform Party is the new kid on the block, its members who attended its first national convention this weekend acted like delegates to any other political convention. |
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Furthermore, until the Reform Act 1832, underage MPs were seldom unseated, with Viscount Jocelyn being 18 when elected in the 1806 general election. |
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In October 2014 the House of Commons Political and Constitutional Reform Committee heard evidence that was critical of the timetable set for the Smith Commission. |
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In the wake of the Reform Act of 1832 the county returned two members for two divisions, and the boroughs of Gateshead, South Shields and Sunderland acquired representation. |
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It was originally a mere parliamentary borough that returned two MPs until the Great Reform Act of 1832, when its representation was cut to a single member. |
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In August 2012 the House of Lords Reform Bill 2012 was dropped by the Government, after disagreements between members of the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties. |
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These parties have included the Bahamas Democratic Movement, the Coalition for Democratic Reform, Bahamian Nationalist Party and the Democratic National Alliance. |
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The program is designed to help former gang members who are trying to reform. |
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The drive to achieve this was spearheaded by the African National Congress as a central element of its programme of reform. |
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Many Irish economists and politicians realised that economic policy reform was necessary. |
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The reform movement succeeded in limiting the Lusignan influence, however, and gradually Edward's attitude started to change. |
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Political debates, however, have centred themselves predominately on universal suffrage and education reform. |
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Article 29 reflects a debate on territorial reform in Germany that is much older than the Basic Law. |
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In 1259, he briefly sided with a baronial reform movement, supporting the Provisions of Oxford. |
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Proposals to reform the Security Council began with the conference that wrote the UN Charter and have continued to the present day. |
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Pitt also supported parliamentary reform measures, including a proposal that would have checked electoral corruption. |
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Pitt was an outstanding administrator who worked for efficiency and reform, bringing in a new generation of outstanding administrators. |
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It stimulated the demand for further reform throughout Ireland, especially in Ulster. |
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Feminism emerged in Paris as part of a broad demand for social and political reform. |
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Parliamentary reform in 1832 saw the influence of the West India Committee decline. |
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Political agitation at home from radicals such as the Chartists and the suffragettes enabled legislative reform and universal suffrage. |
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The House of Commons underwent an important period of reform during the 19th century. |
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The triers and the ejectors were intended to be at the vanguard of Cromwell's reform of parish worship. |
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Reform of London local government sought to regularise this arrangement. |
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The social priorities did not, despite the revolutionary nature of the government, include any meaningful attempt to reform the social order. |
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This so-called reform of our wage agreement was really just one big hatchet job! |
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Cromwell seems to have expected this group of 'amateurs' to produce reform without management or direction. |
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Since the police reform movement of the 1930s, the primary job of the public police has narrowed to that of crime-fighter. |
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He also made statutory provision to reform and promote the teaching of music, seeing the two in connection. |
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Olivares realized that Spain needed to reform, and to reform it needed peace, first and foremost with the United Provinces. |
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Republicans planned to use the reconciliation process to go it alone on both health care and tax reform. |
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Mary drafted plans for currency reform but they were not implemented until after her death. |
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Supporters of reform will surely countermobilize, leading to more outbursts and demonstrations. |
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The other group not to be tolerated was people who wanted reform to go much further, and who finally gave up on the Church of England. |
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The building works, including that at Berwick, along with the reform of the militias and musters, were eventually finished under Queen Mary. |
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He sneers alike at those who are anxious to preserve and at those who are eager for reform. |
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Wolsey had many years before conducted the censuses required for an overhaul of the system of militia, but no reform resulted. |
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The report made very specific recommendations for policy reform. |
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Churchmen such as Erasmus and Luther proposed reform to the Church, often based on humanist textual criticism of the New Testament. |
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They have been unable to reach agreement about how to achieve reform. |
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Meanwhile, Edward VI, despite the fact that he was only a child of nine, had his mind set on religious reform. |
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Oh, we've been talking about constitutional reform since 1927. I've been going to these gabfests since the fifties. |
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Yet the most significant legal reform was probably that concerning the Justices of the Peace. |
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The midget-minded masochists among us, it seems, cannot bear even the slightest hint of progress toward law reform and justice for Gays. |
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On the River Lagan, it had a population of 286,000 at the 2011 census and 333,871 after the 2015 council reform. |
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The bull granted Henry the right to invade Ireland in order to reform Church practices. |
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There are however few signs that reform of the Security Council will happen in the near future. |
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No further constitutional reform was proposed until Labour returned to power in 1997, when a second Scottish devolution referendum was held. |
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The permanent members, each holding the right of veto, announced their positions on Security Council reform reluctantly. |
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The initial movement within Germany diversified, and other reform impulses arose independently of Luther. |
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In 1539, the King sent a new governor to Iceland, Klaus von Mervitz, with a mandate to introduce reform and take possession of church property. |
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Acceptance of the Restoration was reluctant in some quarters as it highlighted the failure of puritan reform. |
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This was an ongoing process of constitutional reform with the Ministry of Justice as lead ministry. |
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The Coalition also promised to introduce law on the reform of the House of Lords. |
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Such a charge was devastating to troops struggling to reform their lines, or fix the recently introduced 'plug' bayonets. |
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This can be interpreted as an institutional reform which reduced the cost of doing business. |
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All Liberals were outraged when Conservatives used their majority in the House of Lords to block reform legislation. |
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In 1783, Pitt became Prime Minister but was still unable to achieve reform. |
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Despite this reaction, several Radical Movement groups were established to agitate for reform. |
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He did not propose any specific scheme of reform, but merely a motion that the House inquire into possible improvements. |
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Electoral reform, which had been frequently discussed during the preceding parliamentary session, became a major campaign issue. |
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Lord Grey's first announcement as Prime Minister was a pledge to carry out parliamentary reform. |
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In these circumstances, the Duke of Wellington had great difficulty in building support for his premiership, despite promising moderate reform. |
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The 1850s saw Lord John Russell introduce a number of reform bills to correct defects the first act had left unaddressed. |
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Until the rebellion, they had enthusiastically pushed through social reform, like the ban on suttee by Lord William Bentinck. |
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By 1900 reform movements had taken root within the Indian National Congress. |
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A small number of Radicals, generally from northern constituencies, were the strongest advocates of continuing reform. |
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The currency reform in 1948 was headed by the military government and helped Germany to restore stability by encouraging production. |
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The calendar reform became a major point of tension between the Anglicans and Puritans. |
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Most notably these included paramilitary decommissioning, police reform and the normalisation of Northern Ireland. |
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In the UK, Big Bang became one of the cornerstones of the Thatcher government's reform programme. |
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The Labour Government introduced legislation to expel all hereditary peers from the Upper House as a first step in Lords reform. |
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At the 2005 election, the Labour Party proposed further reform of the Lords, but without specific details. |
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This reform of the post of Lord Chancellor was made due to the perceived constitutional anomalies inherent in the role. |
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Using his Whig victory as a mandate for reform, Grey was unrelenting in the pursuit of this goal, using every Parliamentary device to achieve it. |
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This was an extensive reform of the law in the Byzantine Empire, bringing it together into codified documents. |
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In recent years there have been repeated calls for reform, most arguing for a move to only two verdicts. |
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By the war's end, everyone realised the profound weaknesses of the Russian armed forces, and the Russian leadership was determined to reform it. |
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This situation led to objections from the other republics and calls for the reform of the Yugoslav Federation. |
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Territorial reform is sometimes propagated by the richer states as a means to avoid or reduce fiscal transfers. |
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Henry's desire to reform the relationship with the Church led to conflict with his former friend Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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Evidence for Edward's involvement in legal reform is hard to find but his reign saw a major programme of legal change. |
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If radical reform was not undertaken, warned Mohamed Sahnoun, then the UN would continue to respond to such crisis with inept improvisation. |
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This is a reform that the ancien regime, always with a finger to the wind of public opinion, spotted as an electoral nightmare and ducked. |
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Since its founding, there have been many calls for reform of the UN but little consensus on how to do so. |
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Alfred undertook no systematic reform of ecclesiastical institutions or religious practices in Wessex. |
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In a process known as the Marian reforms, Roman consul Gaius Marius carried out a programme of reform of the Roman military. |
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The modern region Normandy was created by the territorial reform of French Regions in 2014 by the merger of Lower Normandy, and Upper Normandy. |
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The Heart of Oak Society was previously a friendly society, but had to reform in 1989 to keep the tradition going. |
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Samaranch set up a commission to investigate the corruption and introduced reform of the bid process as a result of the scandal. |
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A period of reform occurred between 49 BC, when Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon, and 29 BC, when Octavian returned to Rome after Actium. |
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The great Chartist rally in 1848, a campaign for social reform by the working class began in the square. |
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Higham argues that Bede designed his work to promote his reform agenda to Ceolwulf, the Northumbrian king. |
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It has also been suggested that the rhyme records the attempt by King Charles I to reform the taxes on liquid measures. |
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During this time he became interested in social reform and the works of John Stuart Mill. |
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Attended by 600 people, it was presided over by Sir Francis Burdett, who, like Cobbett, was a strong voice for parliamentary reform. |
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By 1560, a relatively small group of Protestants were in a position to impose reform on the Scottish church. |
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She thereby implicitly endorsed a conservative vision of gradual evolutionary reform. |
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Among his many proposals for legal and social reform was a design for a prison building he called the Panopticon. |
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Radically reduced in price to ensure unprecedented circulation, it was sensational in its impact and gave birth to reform societies. |
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Yorkshire and the Humber has distinctive characteristics which make it an ideal test bed for further reform. |
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The goal of this piece was to show that Ireland was in great need of reform. |
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In scholasticism, Ockham advocated reform in both method and content, the aim of which was simplification. |
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