House Of Commons
Monday, 7th March 1898.
MR. SPEAKER took the Chair at Three of the Clock.
Private Bills
MR. SPEAKER laid upon the Table Report from one of the Examiners of Petitions for Private Bills, That, in the case of the following Bill, referred on the First Reading thereof, Standing Order No. 62 has been complied with, viz.:—
Norwich Electric Tramways Bill
Ordered, That the Bill be read a second time.
Devonport, Plymouth, And Stoke Tramways Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Lancashire And Yorkshire Railway Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Lancashire, Derbyshire, And East Coast Railway Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Plymouth And Stonehouse Gas Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Sheffield District Railway Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Turnchapel Wharves And Warehouses Bill
Read a second time, and committed.
Petitions
East India (Contagious Diseases)
From Apperley Bridge (3), against State regulation; to lie upon the Table.
Food Adulteration
From Chaddesley, for alteration of Law; to lie upon the Table.
Habitual Drunkards
For alteration of Law, from Salford and Great Yarmouth; to lie upon the Table.
Sale Of Intoxicating Liquors On Sunday Bill
In favour; from St. Leonards, Bradford, Dewsbury, Tyholland, and St. Anne's-on-Sea; to lie upon the Table.
Returns, Etc
Bankruptcy Courts (Ireland)
Annual Returns presented, of the Official Assignees of the Court of Bankruptcy in Ireland and the Local Courts, Belfast and Cork, for the year 1897 [by Act]; to lie upon the Table.
Militia Act, 1882 (Deputy Lieutenants) (Ireland)
Copy presented, of Return of descriptions of qualifications of Deputy Lieutenants lodged during 1897, as furnished to the Chief Secretary for Ireland [by Act]; to lie upon the Table.
Soane's Museum
Copy of Statement of the Funds of the Museum of the late Sir John Soane on 5th January, 1898 [by Act]; laid upon the Table by the Clerk of the House.
Naval Expenditure And Mercantile Marine (Great Britain, Etc)
Return ordered, "showing Aggregate Naval Expenditure on Seagoing Force; Aggregate Revenue; Aggregate Tonnage of Mercantile Marine; Annual Clearances of Shipping in the Foreign Trade; Annual Clearances of Shipping in the Coasting Trade; Annual Value of Imports by Sea, including Bullion and Specie and Transhipment Trade; and Annual Value of Exports by Sea, including Bullion and Specie and Transhipment Trade, of various Countries, including British self-governing Colonies, for the year 1897 (in continuation of Parliamentary Paper, No. 416, of Session 1897)."— (Sir John Colomb).
Message From The Lords
That they have passed a Bill, intituled "An Act to amend the Law with respect to Bail." [Bail Bill.] [ Lords.]
Questions
The Organisation Of The Volunteer Force
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for War whether, having regard to the fact that, under the proposals of Her Majesty's Government, two Army Corps, which will include the bulk of the regular Cavalry regiments, Artillery batteries, and Infantry battalions at home, will be immediately available for foreign service, and that it is proposed to make a considerable part of the Militia also available for foreign service in time of war, and that, consequently, the defence of the United Kingdom will be left mainly to the Volunteers; if it is intended to make serious effort to organise this force for rapid mobilisation in more workable divisions and brigades than at present exist, with a proper complement of Artillery, Guns, Cavalry, and Auxiliary services, and at the same time provide for the efficient command of all units, the amalgamation of weak or under-officered regiments, and for the due training of all arms by the provision of adequate camp accommodation, drill grounds, and rifle ranges.
It would be impossible for me to answer my hon. and gallant Friend's queries within the limits of a reply to a Question. The organisation of the Volunteers for home defence has been steadily progressing, to enable it to fulfil all the duties that may devolve upon it in the case of an apprehended invasion of the country; and our efforts in this direction will not be relaxed.
What I want to know is, whether this matter, the organisation of the Volunteer forces, has been seriously taken in hand?
It certainly has been seriously considered. The Volunteers have been brigaded with a view to their employment, and the position the Volunteers will hold in case of invasion has been constantly stated. When my hon. Friend raises other important questions in his Question he is assuming a little unduly that no attention has been paid to the subject.
I shall call attention to the subject on the Estimates.
Cable Of Hms Victorious
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty if he can state how many anchors (and of what description), together with the length of cable, were lost from H.M.S. Victorious when on shore outside Port Said; also when and where the anchors and lengths of cable are to be replaced; has the hull outside been examined by divers below the water line; if not, how is the damage, if any, to be ascertained; and, can the vessel be docked at Singapore or Hong Kong; if not, is it intended to seek permission to dock at Port Arthur?
It is presumed that the Victorious recovered both her anchors and cables before proceeding through the Canal, as no report to the contrary has been received. The captain reported the ship in every respect in an efficient condition before leaving Port Said, but it was not stated how the examination was carried out. The vessel can be docked at Hong Kong.
was understood to ask if it were intended to bring home any portion of the broken cable in order to have it tested?
I have no information on that subject.
Withdrawal Of The Political Officer From The Khyber
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India if an inquiry is to be held into the circumstances which led to the withdrawal of the political officer from the Khyber in August last, and the refusal to support the Khyber Rifles by reinforcement from Peshawar?
The circumstances which have been reported to me in connection with this transaction show that the withdrawal of Captain Barton was only ordered after the military authorities on the spot decided that troops from Peshawar could not be pushed up the Khyber Pass, and the withdrawal was subsequently approved both by the local and supreme Governments. I do not propose, therefore, to institute any inquiry into this particular transaction, but in considering the arrangements which will be sent home from India for the future safeguarding of the Khyber Pass I shall take the opportunity of laying down what should be the principles governing the relations between tribal levies and their officers, so as to make clearer for the future the action to be taken at times of emergency.
Cadet Battalion, King's Royal Rifles
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for War whether he is aware that 200 of the establishment of the Cadet Battalion King's Royal Rifles are supplied with obsolete and unserviceable Martini-Henry carbines without swords; and that this number are, in consequence, unable to take part in parades or class firing; and whether sufficient serviceable Martini-Enfield weapons with swords can now be provided to complete the armament of the whole battalion?
Under the regulations, Cadet Battalions are entitled to serviceable arms up to 50 per cent. of their strength for members who are old enough to carry out rifle practice, and to unserviceable arms suitable for drill purposes and for firing blank ammunition for the other half of their strength. Sufficient serviceable weapons are issued to Cadet Battalions to enable them to carry out ball practice. The remaining weapons issued to the Corps are Martini-Henry carbines, for which a bayonet will shortly be provided. The action and general appearance of these weapons are similar to those of the Martini-Enfield carbines, and it is considered that they can be used together on parade.
Irish Parliamentary Registers
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he will have the register of voters entitled to vote in counties under the provisions of the Local Government Bill for Ireland arranged (instead of the present system now used in preparing the register for Parliamentary voters in counties) in the following order:—In counties and county divisions the townlands in each polling district of each Parliamentary division shall be placed in alphabetical order, and the names of the voters in each townland shall be placed in alphabetical order; in towns comprised in counties and county divisions the names of the streets in each town in each polling district shall be placed in alphabetical order, and the names of the voters in each street shall be placed in alphabetical order; and whether he will consult the clerks of the unions who now prepare the register of Parliamentary voters as to the advisability of the change?
On the registers of counties, voters are arranged alphabetically for each polling district in order to facilitate voting at the election, and this plan serves its purpose effectually. The proposal of the hon. Member would lead to loss of time at elections, townlands being so numerous, and the areas and populations in many instances being so small, and, moreover, in the event of a rated occupier's qualifying premises extending into several town-lands, inconvenience would be caused if he were doubtful in which he was registered. The new Registration Bill will substitute electoral divisions for polling districts, and will go as far towards meet- ing the hon. Member's suggestion as it is proper and reasonable to do without sacrificing the convenience of the general public.
British Losses On The North-West Frontier
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India whether he is now able to state how many officers and men of the British forces engaged in the Indian Frontier operations have died of their wounds or of sickness, in addition to the 499 stated by him to have been killed in action; and whether he can say if any considerable proportion of the wounds were probably inflicted by Dum-Dum bullets or other projectiles of English manufacture?
The total casualties from 10th June, 1897, to date are: Killed, including those who have died of wounds—British officers, 44; British non-commissioned officers and privates, 136; Native officers, 6; Native non-commissioned officers and privates, 320—total, 506. Wounded, not including those who have died of wounds—British officers, 93; British non-commissioned officers and privates, 404; Native officers, 36; Native non-commissioned officers and privates, 845;—total, 1,378. Died of disease: British officers, 10; British non-commissioned officers and privates, 250; Natives of all ranks, 220—total, 480. It is not possible to state how many of the casualties were caused by any particular kind of bullet.
Bonds In The Postal Service
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury, as representing the Postmaster General, whether the recommendation of the Tweedmouth Committee that bond giving should be abolished in the case of pensionable Post Office servants has been considered, and with what result?
The matter has been considered by the Postmaster General, who has recently made proposals to the Treasury on the subject. Speaking for the Treasury, I may add that the recommendation of the Committee is in general accordance with the policy pursued by the Treasury in recent years in dealing with the question of bonds as it has arisen in other than Revenue Departments. The latter Departments, however, stand to a great extent in an exceptional position, and the matter is receiving very careful consideration in connection with bonds, not only in the Post Office, but also in the Customs and Inland Revenue. The Treasury is averse to deciding upon the application from the Post Office before it is in possession of the views of the Customs and Inland Revenue on the subject as it affects their own officers.
Bridget Stephens And The Tighe Estate, County Mayo
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether his attention has been drawn to the fact that a sum of £1,900 was, on the representations of Father Stephens, P.P., granted, through the Congested Districts Board, to Bridget Stephens, to enable her to purchase in the Land Judges Court portion of the estate of Mr. John Edward Tighe, at Coarsefield, in the congested district of Cloghermore, county Mayo; and that the tenants on this portion of the estate wished to become the purchasers of their holdings, and instructed Father Stephens, their parish priest, to take the necessary steps on their behalf; whether he is aware that the Mrs. Stephens, to whose credit this £1,900 was paid into Court on the 23rd of August, is a relative of the Reverend Father Stephens, and that there is much discontent amongst the tenants, who allege that they were deceived, and their homes purchased under false pretences over their heads and without their knowledge; whether he has received a memorial from the tenants; and whether, under the circumstances, he will stay the issue of the £1,900 to Mrs. Stephens and investigate the case with the view of giving the tenants the option of purchasing their farms?
I am informed by the Registrar of the Land Judge's Court that on the 16th July, 1897, Mrs. Stephens was declared the purchaser of the lands referred to, and that she paid the purchase money into Court the following month. No advance out of the public funds was made either by the Land Commission or by the Congested Districts Board in respect of this transaction.
Has the right hon. Gentleman received a memorial from the tenants?
Yes, Sir.
Has he made any representations to the rev. gentleman?
As there has been no advance out of the public funds I could do nothing.
Hms Powerful
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty if he will state the total quantity of coal taken on board H.M.S. Powerful before leaving Spithead for China; the quantities taken on board at Las Palmas, the Cape, Mauritius, Colombo, and Singapore; and the total cost of the whole; and how long she took to cover the distance between Mauritius and Colombo?
The total quantity of coal taken on board by the Powerful when leaving Portsmouth was 2,796 tons; she shipped at Las Palmas 800 tons, the Cape to Hong Kong was about 8,300 tons, at Colombo 2,115 tons. Her total estimated consumption of coal during the voyage to Hong Kong was about £8,300 tons, at a total estimated cost of about £11,000. The hon. Member will understand that the figures for the consumption of coal which I have given are for all purposes, but as to the appropriation of the consumption between propelling and auxiliary machinery it is not possible to form any definite conclusion until the Engine Room Register has been received. As I stated in reply to the hon. and gallant Member for the city of York, the bearings became heated during the steam trial, after leaving Mauritius, and the brasses were injured; consequently, for five days one engine was under repair, and the other working at slow speed. She took 10 days in the passage to Colombo.
. What was the total quantity of coal?
8,300 tons.
Major-General Kinloch
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India whether the sole reason for cancelling Major-General Kinloch's command of a first class district, subsequent to the Chitral Expedition, consisted in his having written a letter to Sir R. Low, in which he pointed out the difficulties in the way of the contemplated Forward movement towards Chitral, such communication having been made confidentially and by special permission of Sir R. Low?
Perhaps my hon. Friend will permit me to answer this question. In 1895, the late Commander-in-Chief, after the fullest consideration of Major-General Kinloch's case, as reported by the Commander-in-Chief, India, decided that it was undesirable to retain that officer in command of a first-class district. The Secretary of State declines to re-open the question.
May I ask the right hon. Gentleman whether there is any precedent for a responsible officer making a confidential communication of this sort and being condemned for so doing?
Is the right hon. Gentleman aware that, in consequence of these representations made by Major-General Kinloch, considerable alterations and modifications were introduced into the plan of operations; and whether the cancellation of Major-General Kinloch's command does not amount to casting a serious slur on that officer's reputation?
Order, order! The hon. Member is commenting on the answer.
Will the right hon. Gentleman make further inquiry into the matter?
This case was decided three years ago, and has now passed beyond the phase of inquiry. Full inquiry was certainly made at the time, through officers responsible on the spot, by the Commanders-in-Chief in India and at home, and the conclusion they arrived at was sanctioned by the then Secretary of State. The decision remains.
The right hon. Gentleman has not answered my Question, which is whether any other reason is alleged for depriving Major-General Kinloch of his command than the fact that he wrote this letter to Sir R. Low, in which he took objection to certain details of the proposed operations. Are we to understand that there is no other reason?
I said that all the circumstances of the case were considered, and Major-General Kinloch's services were considered at the same time.
Are we to understand that there was no other reason for the cancellation of his command than his writing this letter?
I did not say that. What I stated was, without giving any reasons, that the whole of the circumstances of the case were fully considered by the officers mentioned, who arrived at the conclusion which has been indicated.
Physical Laboratory For India
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India whether he can say what is the result of the recommendation which he is understood to have made in the summer of 1897 to the Government of India, in support of the establishment of a physi- cal laboratory in that country for advanced scientific teaching and research; and, if so, what sum is to be allocated to that object, and when will the work be commenced?
The Government of India reported in a dispatch received last week that the initial outlay on a physical laboratory of the kind described would be 60,000 tens of rupees, and that they regretted, in the present state of the finances, to be unable to entertain so costly a scheme.
"Abstractors" At The Treasury
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury whether, in addition to those permanent clerks designated "abstractors" and "assistant clerks," the following are intended by the Treasury to come within the provisions of the Treasury Sick Leave Memorandum to Heads of Departments, dated 24th April, 1896, viz., posting clerks at the Stationery Office, index compilers and statistical abstractors at the General Register Office, and supplementary clerks at the Inland Revenue Office.
The rule as to sick leave embodied in the Treasury circular of the 24th April, 1896, applies to all persons serving in the established Civil Service, and, therefore, to the several classes named in the Question. It must be understood that the grant of sick leave within the limits specified is in the discretion of the responsible head of the officers' department, on his being satisfied of the merits of the application.
Traffic On Blackfriars Bridge
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether, having regard to the fact that the traffic over Blackfriars Bridge is under the control of the City police, he will suggest to the proper authorities the desirability of stationing a City constable at the southern end of the bridge (where the gradient is steep) with instructions to prevent over-loading, and to see that gravel is applied when the roadway is slippery?
The Commissioner of City Police, with whom I have communicated, informs me that the bridge is constantly patrolled by a constable, whose chief duty is to pay attention to the traffic, and that it does not seem necessary to station him at the spot suggested in the Question. The gradient at the South end, in fact, begins some distance beyond the City boundary. The Commissioner has, however, again instructed the police on the subject, and has communicated with the authorities who are responsible for supplying the gravel.
Twyford Mill Landslip
I beg to ask the President of the Board of Trade whether his attention has been drawn to the finding and recommendation of a coroner's jury, who sat in the case of the death of a platelayer named Thomas Clarke, who died in the service of the London and North Western Railway Company whilst engaged in watching a landslip near Twyford Mill—viz., that the death was caused by exposure, and recommended the railway company should pay greater regard to the men employed on night duty, especially during severe weather; whether he has noticed the death of five workmen on the Mallaig and Inverary Railway recently from exposure; and if he will use his influence with the railway companies concerned and other railway companies to protect the lives of their employees when working in winter in exposed positions?
My right hon. Friend is making inquiries, and will communicate with the hon. Gentleman.
Rabies In Foxhounds
I beg to ask the President of the Board of Agriculture what number of cases have been recorded during the years 1895, 1896, and 1897 of foxhounds being captured when wandering about suffering from rabies?
We have no record of the occurrence of any case such as that to which the hon. Member refers during the years named.
Gold Standard For India
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India whether the original estimate of the Indian Minister was that a sum of £15,000,000 in gold would be sufficient to secure a gold standard for India, and to guarantee the inter-convertibility of the sovereign and the rupee; and whether, as £16,000,000 has already been borrowed since the mints were closed in 1893, the gold standard for India has now been secured, or will a further loan for this purpose be necessary?
Sir David Barbour, when Financial Member of Council, in a minute dated June 21st, 1892, expressed an opinion that gold coin to the amount of Rx23,000,000—say, £15,000,000—would be a sufficient proportion to the active circulation in India to maintain a gold standard effectively. No sterling debt has been incurred since the closing of the mints to provide any such fund; whatever debt has been raised has been exclusively for other purposes. The latter part of the hon. Member's Question is, in effect, a question as to particular Measures which the Government of India might or might not consider necessary to secure the maintenance of the gold standard, and as to these I am not now prepared to give any information.
Indian Currency Notes
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India if any gold has been deposited at the Bank of England under the recent Act passed in India for the issue of currency notes in exchange for gold deposited in London?
No gold has been deposited in the Bank of England under the recent Act, but I have reason to believe that the passing of the Act had the effect of improving the financial situation, and was by no means ineffective.
The Postmen's Park
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury, whether, with regard to the purchase for the completion of the Postmen's Park, it is proposed that the Post Office authorities should be relieved from their obligation to pay £200 a year and instead contribute £150 a year for the maintenance of the park; whether the Treasury contribution of £5,000 would be diminished by the capitalised value of the gain arising out of the reduced amount of the annual payment by the Post Office; and whether the total net balance of contribution made by the Treasury and the Post Office towards the purchase and maintenance of the Postmen's Park by direct payment and in the capitalised value of the annual payment taken altogether would be about, or less than, £3,000.
The Post Office authorities are not under an obligation to pay £200 a year as stated in the Question. They pay £100 a year to the City Parochial Trustees, in consideration of certain important easements of light, air, and passage over the land in Little Britain. The contribution from the public purse offered towards the acquisition of this land was £7,500, not £5,000. The original proposal was that in consideration of finding this amount the Post Office should cease to pay the £100 a year, and should receive from the City Parochial Trustees the sum of £100 a year. The garden was to be maintained by the parish of St. Botolph out of their own funds. Since this was agreed to an attempt has been made to make the Government responsible for the maintenance, at a cost of £150 a year; and to this new and onerous condition the Treasury, as I have already stated, are unable to assent.
Will the right hon. Gentleman state how the Treasury claim the right to £200 a year, when they do not pay the £100 a year in respect of the light easements? And—
Order, order! The hon. Member is now putting what is really an argument.
Relief For Irish Agricultural Land
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland if he can state the average annual value per acre of agricultural land in Ireland, the average amount of rate in the pound on such land, and what is the proportion of the proposed new grant of £730,000 that will be distributed to holdings of over £15 per year annual rental.
Perhaps the hon. Member will repeat this Question to-morrow. I very much doubt, however, whether the last portion could be answered without an elaborate investigation, which would not be justified by the value of the results obtained.
Saturday Mails For Belfast
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury, as representing the Postmaster General, whether he has seen a communication from the Secretary of the General Post Office, Dublin, stating that it is not practicable to have letters which are sent from London by the night mail on Saturday delivered in Belfast before the following Monday morning; and, if in future he will have the night mails for the North of Ireland on Saturday forwarded viâ Liverpool for Belfast, so as to reach there on Sunday morning.
The Postmaster General has seen a communication from the Secretary of the General Post Office, Dublin, stating that it is not practicable to have letters which are sent from London by the night mail on Saturday delivered in Belfast before the following Monday morning. It would not be possible to have the night mails for the North of Ireland forwarded on Saturday viâ Liverpool and Belfast, as the boat leaves Liverpool some hours before the arrival of the night mail at that port, and reaches Belfast on Sunday morning after the early delivery at that town. Inquiry shall, however, be made as to the practicability of giving a delivery to callers on Sunday evening, which is the remedy suggested in a Belfast newspaper.
Treatment Of Prisoners In Strangeways Gaol
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department whether he has received a Report from the Commissioner appointed to inquire into the circumstances under which a prisoner in Strangeways Gaol, named Cox, was so injured that on his arrival at Prestwich Asylum, whither he was removed as insane, it was found that eight of his ribs had been broken; and will he lay this Report upon the Table?
Yes, I have received the Commissioner's Report, and have consented to the Visiting Committee embodying it in their annual report to the Manchester Justices. I am not sure that the matter is of sufficient importance to justify my laying the Report on the table of the House, but I shall be happy to show it to the hon. Member if he wishes to see it.
Criminal Procedure In India
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India if he is aware that doubts have arisen in this country whether Section 439 of the Indian Code of Criminal Procedure Bill, 1898, in so far as it restricts the revisory powers of the High Courts of Judicature at Fort William, Madras, and Bombay, is not in conflict with Article 28 of the Letters Patent establishing the said Courts respectively, which were issued by Her Majesty under the authority of the Statute 24 and 25 Vic, c. 104; and will he say whether he has been advised that the said section is intra vires of the Legislative Council of the Viceroy?
I was not aware that any such doubt had been suggested in this country, but some of the Indian, opinions which I have seen raise objections to the clause as drafted, to which the hon. Member refers. These objections will doubtless receive full consideration from the Government of India and the Select Committee to which the Bill has been referred; and if I find, after consultation with my legal adviser, that there is any inconsistency between the clause, as ultimately settled, and the Letters Patent, I shall know how to act.
Russia, Deer Island, And Port Arthur
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether Her Majesty's Government have information confirming the reports that the Russians proposed to occupy and annex Deer Island, opposite Fusan; that Russian forces are strengthening the forts at Port Arthur, and that Port Arthur has been practically ceded to Russia?
We have received no confirmation of any of these reports.
Perhaps the right hon. Gentleman will be able to say, without notice, whether the reports as to the demands of Russia regarding Port Arthur which appear in the Times of this morning are confirmed?
These reports are equally unconfirmed with the reports mentioned in the Question.
Will any steps be taken to secure the mainland at Hong-Kong and the islands contiguous?
Order, order!
Swaziland
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies whether he can give the House any information as to the condition of Swaziland, and especially as to the reports that the country has been practically annexed to the Transvaal; and what steps are being taken by Her Majesty's Government to preserve the rights of the Swazi people?
I have no special information to communicate to the House respecting Swaziland—there has been no change in the political condition of the country since the Convention of 1894. I have received from the hon. Member certain complaints on behalf of the Swazis, and have forwarded them to the High Commissioner, with a request that they should be inquired into, but I have not yet received the High Commissioner's report.
Has the right hon. Gentleman no reports from Her Majesty's representative in Swaziland that he can lay before the House?
No, Sir; I have nothing of general interest, though I have continual reports from him.
The Parliamentary Debates
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury whether, in connection with the changes made in the reporting of the "Parliamentary Debates," instructions have been given not to send proofs of Questions asked in the House and Answers given by Ministers to Members; and, if so, whether, seeing the difficulty in many instances of obtaining the answers, he will give instructions for the former practice to be renewed, so that two proofs of each Question may be sent to each Member?
Questions printed on the Notice Paper naturally need not be sent for correction. Supplementary questions are speeches, and proofs of them should be sent in the same way as those of ordinary speeches. Proofs of answers are, of course, only sent to those who make the answers—just as other speeches are only sent to those who make them. No contract has ever provided for the answers being sent to those who put the Questions, as it is not for the questioner to correct the answer. No instructions one way or the other have been given, as the contract in no way differs in this respect from those previously made.
I would like to ask the right hon. Gentleman, arising out of that answer, whether a change has not been made in the custom of the House; and whether it does not arise from the fact that a much smaller amount is being paid for the contract?
Order, order! There is nothing about the custom of the House in the Question.
In the last line of the Question, with great respect to you, Sir, there is a distinct allusion to the practice of the House, and, as I have suffered great inconvenience, I should be very glad if the right hon. Gentleman can give me fuller information.
Two proofs of all supplementary Questions will, of course, be sent.
I disapprove of supplemental Questions. It is the answer to the Question itself I like to get proofs of.
The Question itself is actually printed on the Notice Paper, and I do not see how it is possible to correct it.
It is the answer I want to get hold of.
These proofs are only sent to the persons making the speeches or giving the answers.
Why do we not get them?
Because you do not give the answers.
I would ask whether it is not of vital importance to the person who asks the Question to get the answer.
The hon. Member is now discussing the matter. The Question has been fully answered.
. With regard to the remark as to a supplemental Question, would you, Sir, not stop it if you considered it a speech?
I do not think that question arises out of the answer.
I beg to give notice to call attention to the matters in the Estimates.
As the answers are not given so fully as formerly, will the right hon. Gentleman impress upon his colleagues the necessity of speaking out?
[No Reply.]
Thomason Civil Engineering Colleges
I beg to ask the Secretary of State for India whether his attention has been directed to a change in the rules for the admission of Natives of India to the engineer class of the Thomason Civil Engineering College at Rurki, which up till 1896 mark statutory Natives of India competent for admission, whereas by the rules of 1897 the privilege of admission is confined to statutory Natives of India, other than Natives of pure Asiatic descent, whose parents and guardians are domiciled in Bengal, Madras, or Bombay; and on what grounds are young men of pure Asiatic descent excluded from education as engineers in India, notwithstanding the provisions of many proclamations which declare that the Queen's subjects in India, of whatever race or creed, shall be impartially admitted to all the advantages and privileges of their country?
I am not aware of the change in the rules to which the hon. Member refers. According to the 1897 Calendar of the Thomason Civil Engineering; College at Rurki, candidates for admission to the Engineer and Telegraph class "must be statutory Natives of India." No limitations such as are described in the Question have been inserted in the rules.
May I ask the noble Lord if the rule has not been changed by adding after "statutory Natives of India" the words "other than Natives of pure Asiatic descent, etc"?
I have no information to that effect. Perhaps the hon. Gentleman will furnish me with information, so that I may inquire.
Election Petition Costs
I beg to ask Mr. Attorney General whether full consideration has yet been given to the question of adequate security for costs being given by the petitioner in all election petitions, as promised by him in this House on 19th March, 1896; and what action it is proposed to take to prevent any repetition in future of the waste of time and money incurred during the hearing of the St. George's-in-the-East petition?
The Committee appointed last Session took a considerable amount of evidence, but was not able to present its Report. The Committee is to be re-appointed, and it is hoped that its Report will assist in determining what course should be taken.
Royal Visits To Ireland
I beg to ask the first Lord of the Treasury whether, in view of the success- ful visit of their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of York to Ireland last year, Her Majesty's Government can see their way to advising another Royal visit in 1898?
In, answer to my hon. Friend, I have to say that, as I think he will himself see, this is a matter which concerns the domestic arrangements of the Queen and the Royal Family, and can hardly be said to come within the sphere of the Government.
May I ask the right hon. Gentleman, can the Government see their way to establishing a permanent Royal residence in Ireland?
NO, no!
We do not want it.
The Royal Arms
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury if Her Majesty's Government will take into favourable consideration the desire of the Welsh nation that the arms of Wales should be represented upon the Royal Shield and Standard of the United Kingdom, and also upon the Union Jack?
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury whether he will advise the inclusion in the Royal Arms, according to the practice of all Sovereigns from Edward the Third to William the Fourth, of quarterings representing the principal countries in the Empire?
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury whether Her Majesty's Government can see their way to advise the propriety of a change in the Royal arms of Dominion, embodying a recognition and commemoration of the extension of Her Majesty's territories in the Colonies and the Empire of India during; Her Majesty's reign?
I may answer all these questions at the same time. I have the utmost sympathy with the sentiments of Welshmen for their Principality. In my belief there is no antagonism whatever, quite on the contrary, between such sentiments of local patriotism and the wider national and Imperial loyalty. But I think my hon. Friends will feel with me that if we alter the Royal Arms many other parts of Her Majesty's dominions besides Wales will have to be considered. As regards the Union Jack, it will be no light matter to alter a flag under which we have fought since the days preceding Trafalgar.
Foreign Trawlers In The Moray Firth
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury whether, in view of the special interest due to the presence recently of foreign trawlers in the Moray Firth, and of the general interest and importance of the subject, he will put down the Vote for the Scottish Fishery Board first for discussion on an early day voted to Supply?
I will consider that.
Did not the right hon. Gentleman on Friday night promise to put down the Supplementary Estimates as the second Order for to-day and make report of Supply practically the third Order?
Yes, but since that promise was made some new Supplementary Estimates have been issued, and I should not propose to take them to-night. The spirit of the management I made on Friday will be adhered to strictly.
Is the Grant for the West Indies provided for in the Supplementary Estimates?
Order, order! That does not arise out of this Question. The hon. Member must ask it later on.
When will the Supplementary Estimates be taken?
If, as I imagine, and as indeed have no doubt we are able to take the Navy Estimate on Friday, the Supplementary Estimates will come on next week.
As to the Navy Estimates, can the right hon. Gentleman say—
Order, order! The Question before the House is one as to trawling.
International Maritime Sanitary Board
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether he is aware that the International Maritime Sanitary Board in Egypt only employ three Englishmen out of 50 Europeans in carrying out their work, and that 29 out of the 50 Europeans are Italians; and, whether he will point out to the Board that as almost 90 per cent. of the shipping passing through the Suez Canal is English, it is only fair that a large proportion of Englishmen should be employed?
We have received the following information from Lord Cromer: The total number of employés is 75, of whom 18 are Italians; 17 British subjects, of whom 9 are English; 7 French, 4 Greek, 4 Austrians, 1 Swiss, 1 Belgian, and 23 Natives. An English veterinary surgeon has recently been appointed. The same number of English candidates do not apply as foreigners.
Transit Of Scotch Cattle To Ireland
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland why expensive formalities are necessary when shipping sheep and cattle from Scotland to Ireland, whereas no similar difficulties are met with when transporting live stock from Ireland to Scotland?
In order to guard against the introduction of disease into Ireland, the importation of cattle and sheep from Great Britain has, for many years past, been prohibited, except with the consent of the Lord Lieutenant. Such consent is given for the importation of cattle for breeding purposes on satisfactory evidence that the cattle are free from disease, and that they have not been in any district infected with pleuro-pneumonia, or in contact with diseased cattle. Pleuro-pneumonia has, at great expense, been eradicated from Ireland, no outbreak having occurred there since September, 1892. On the other hand, the disease has continued to exist in Great Britain. Several outbreaks occurred in England during last year, and a further outbreak occurred in January of the present year. Although Scotland appears to be free from pleuro-pneumonia, there is entirely free movement of cattle between England and Scotland, and in these circumstances it is not considered desirable to make any change in the existing conditions regarding the importation of cattle into Ireland. Sheep are allowed to be imported if accompanied by a veterinary certificate of health and a declaration that they have not been in contact with diseased or suspected animals. Sheep-scab is very prevalent in Great Britain. No cattle or sheep are allowed to be exported from Ireland to Great Britain until they have been examined by a Veterinary Inspector at the port of embarkation, and certified to be free from disease.
Agricultural Grant (Ireland)
I beg to ask the Chief Secretary to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland whether he will state approximately the proportions of the proposed new grant of £730,000 a year to Ireland that will be used to relieve the rates of non-occupying owners, occupying owners, and tenants respectively?
To give the information desired in this Question would necessitate the examination of the whole of the Valuation Lists, which comprise between one and two million entries, and would occupy a period of several months. The results would not be commensurate with the expenditure of labour and money, and I see no sufficient reason for incurring the expenditure.
I only ask for the proportion approximately.
I am afraid that to get at the proportion, even approximately, would involve the expenditure of too large an amount of time.
Yorkshire Regiment (1St Batallion)
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for War, whether he is aware of the fact that the 1st Battalion of the Yorkshire Regiment (Princess of Wales's Own) has only been stationed in its own county for nine months in 116 years, and the 2nd Battalion for eight months in 40 years; and whether the arrangements can be made for stationing the two battalions of the Yorkshire Regiment in the North Riding of Yorkshire on their return from foreign service?
The number of stations for infantry in the North of England is very small compared with the number of regiments having their territorial districts there. It is, therefore, not easy to locate a Northern battalion in its own county; but every effort will be made to station battalions in or near their own district.
Pay Of Royal Marines
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty, whether similar concessions with regard to pay and deductions will be accorded to the Royal Marines as to the Army?
The pay of the Marines will be considered, but the hon. Gentleman is aware that, in many respects, the emoluments of the Marine differ from those of the soldier.
British Ships And The Russian Coasting Trade
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs whether, under the existing Russian law, British ships are excluded from the coasting trade between Russian ports in Europe on the same sea—e.g. the Baltic or the Black Sea; whether under a law recently enacted, which comes into force in 1900, British ships will be excluded from the ocean trade between Russian ports—e.g. between Russian ports on the Black Sea and in the Far East; and whether he will obtain from the British Embassy at St. Petersburg a report on the steps taken by the Russian Government in recent years for the benefit of the Russian mercantile marine?
Her Majesty's Consul General at St. Petersburg reports as follows—
The report in question, which contains further particulars respecting steps taken by the Russian Government for the benefit of Russian shipping, will shortly be laid with a collection of similar reports from other countries."The privilege of the coasting trade, hitherto confined to Russian subjects and vessels plying between ports situated in the same sea, will, from 1–13 January, 1900, be extended to all Russian ports situated in different seas. In this manner foreign vessels, which had been allowed to carry goods, say, from a Russian port in the Baltic to one in the Black Sea, Sea of Azov, or White Sea, and vice versâ, or from any Russian port in the Far East, will from the above period be precluded from doing so. Exception, however, will be made in favour of salt shipped from Russian, Black, and Azov seaports to those of the Baltic, which may be carried in foreign bottoms until notice to the contrary shall be given."
Entries Of Engineer Officers
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty how many engineer officers have entered during the current year; how many of these officers entered from Keyham and how many from outside; and, how many engine-room artificers have entered in the same period?
Forty-eight engineer officers have been entered during the current year, 1897–8, of whom 26 were entered from the Training School at Keyham, and the remainder from outside; 321 engine-room artificers have been entered during the same period up to the 26th February.
Castlebar Post Office
I beg to ask the Secretary to the Treasury, as representing the Postmaster General, if he would cause inquiry to be made as regards the present post office at Castle-bar; whether he is aware that the present office is only 12 feet by 14 feet in size, in which 14 officials are employed, without any sanitary arrangements whatsoever; and if he will have this state of things remedied?
The hon. Member has himself given two different measurements of this office—both of which very much understate the actual area. The post office at Castlebar is stated to measure about 20 feet by 14 feet, and the whole staff numbers 16 persons, including two town postmen, six rural postmen, and one telegraph messenger, who are only in the office at intervals. There is sanitary accommodation on the premises of the kind usual in houses of the same class. A proposal for providing a new Crown post office at Castlebar is now under consideration.
Navy Estimates
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Admiralty with reference to the announcement that the Navy Estimates will be taken on Thursday and Friday, when the Navy Estimates will be in the hands of Members; when, also, we shall have the First Lord's printed statement; and whether it is intended to take the discussion on the statement of the right hon. Gentleman and the Estimates this week?
I hope that the Navy Estimates will be in the hands of Members on Wednesday, but I am not in a position to actually guarantee it; and I say certainly that my own statement will be ready on the same day. What I should propose to do is to move the Speaker out of the Chair on Thursday and to proceed with the discussion of the Estimates on Friday. I do not know whether that will be convenient to the right hon. Gentleman.
Will the right hon. Gentleman make his statement to the Speaker in the Chair, or after the Motion that the Speaker leave the Chair has been agreed to? I would venture to suggest that if the Estimates are not in the hands of hon. Members on Wednesday, it would be scarcely possible to discuss them either on Thursday or Friday.
[No Reply.]
Pillage In Crete
I beg to ask the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, what is the position of a British subject or a Native who has lost property by pillage or destruction during the recent disturbances in Crete, and to whom should he apply for redress?
In the case of disorders and loss of property by pillage, where no complicity or negligence can be ascribed to the local authorities, foreigners domiciled in a country are not entitled to compensation other than such as is accorded to Natives. In the present provisional state of things in Crete it is difficult to state to whom a claim for redress should be addressed, except in the districts occupied by the international troops, in which case the matter should be brought before the admirals for such steps as they may deem proper.
Swaziland
I wish to ask the Secretary of State for the Colonies, arising out of his answer to a former Question, are we to understand that he denies the accuracy of the report that Swaziland has been practically annexed to the Transvaal?
I have already answered that Question by saying that no change has taken place in the condition of the country since the Convention of 1894.
Relief For The West Indian Islands
I beg to ask the First Lord of the Treasury a Question of which I have given him private notice—namely, whether the grant to the West Indian Islands provided for in the Supplementary Estimates issued to-day covers the promise of assistance made to those Colonies in the Queen's Speech, and, if so, when he intends to take the discussion on the Vote; if not, when will we have the full proposals of the Government?
The Vote will be duly proposed; but the Supplementary Estimates do not in any sense cover the whole ground of the statement made in the Queen's Speech. It is, relatively speaking, but a small matter which is dealt with in the Supplementary Estimates. Of course, if the Navy Estimates are taken this week, as I still hope they will be, the Supplementary Estimates cannot come on until next week. But if the arrangement in regard to the Navy Estimates should break down, which, however, I am loath to believe, we may have to take the remainder of the Supplementary Estimates this week.
When shall we have the full proposal?
It is quite impossible that the full proposal can be taken before Easter. There are conclusive reasons against giving at present the date when my right hon. friend the Colonial Secretary will make his statement.
Will the reasons be given on the discussion on the Supplementary Estimate?
The reasons are that we are engaged in negotiations with the United States and Canada in regard to a possible reciprocity arrangement. Until these negotiations are concluded, and until any results at which we may arrive have been submitted to the Legislatures of the United States and Canada and accepted by them, it is quite impossible to give any idea as to what the condition of the West Indian islands will be, and under the circumstances it will be impossible to make a proposal.
Cannot the Supplementary Estimates be deferred until the time of which the right hon. Gentleman speaks has arrived?
No, Sir. The hon. Member will see that the Supplementary Estimates merely carry out two among many of the recommendations of the Royal Commission, one being to clear off certain floating debts which are found to be a great impediment in the case of the smaller Colonies, and which they cannot possibly clear off themselves, and the other is a small grant for roads in two of the Colonies which are at the present moment practically without these means of communication.
Swine Fever In The North Riding Of Yorkshire
I beg to ask the President of the Board of Agriculture whether, in view of the great decrease of swine fever in the North Riding of Yorkshire, he can relax the restrictions with regard to the sale of pigs within some districts of the Riding; whether he can remove the Rabies Muzzling Order from the Western parts of the North Riding, which consists chiefly of moorlands and sheep farms; and will he undertake to publish diagrams showing the extent of rabies in England on 1st March, 1897, and 1st March, 1898?
Although there has been some decrease in swine fever in the North Riding, the re-appearance of the disease from time to time indicates that it still lingers, and that there remain undiscovered centres of infection from which it may spread. I regret, therefore, that it is not possible for me to give effect to the wish expressed by my hon. Friend. With regard to rabies, the position of the western part of the North Riding has greatly improved, and if the improvement be maintained I trust that I may be able at no distant date to give relief in the direction suggested. We propose in connection with the Annual Report of proceedings under the Diseases of Animals Acts for the year 1897, which will shortly be issued, to publish a series of maps illustrating the progress made in the suppression of rabies.
Greenwich Hospital Bill
To amend the Greenwich Hospital Acts, 1865 to 1892; Ordered to be I brought in by Mr. Attorney General, Mr. Solicitor General, and Mr. Austen Chamberlain; Presented, and read the first time; to be read a second time upon Thursday, and to be printed. [Bill 114.]
Business Of The House
Private Bill Procedure (Scotland) Bill
, in introducing the Private Bill Procedure (Scotland) Bill, to provide for improving and extending the procedure for obtaining Parliamentary powers by way of Provisional Orders in matters relating to Scotland, said: I will not detain the House with many observations, except by stating its essential and general policy. As hon. Gentlemen are aware, the necessity for some alteration in the procedure, by which Parliamentary powers are obtained for Scotland, has long been recognised and most urgently called for in many quarters. The outcome of that was, as hon. Members are aware, that a Bill was introduced last year. As they will remember that Bill contained many provisions which attempted a solution of the question. But it differed in this respect—it differed in regard to the Provisional Order system as against the Private Bill System. There are, I believe, three points that are best kept in view in any legislation in this direction. The first refers to the means of obtaining unopposed Orders; secondly, there is the provision of a local inquiry, instead of forcing people to come to Westminster; and, thirdly, there is the proper safeguarding of Parliamentary control. I believe that, in the Measure which I am asking leave to introduce, it will be found that adequate provision has been made for all these three points. I will take, first of all, the last point. Hon. Members will remember that Parliamentary control is of two characters. In the first place, there are certain subjects which are subject-matter, obviously of such a character that they are not capable of being disposed of by Provisional Order, and only fit for procedure by Private Bill. Accordingly, in this Measure there is provision for the matter being determined by the Chairmen of the Committees of both Houses. Then there is another sort of Parliamentary control. There might be the possibility, under the Provisional Orders, of getting things, so to speak, smuggled in, which would not be allowed to pass if they proceeded by way of Private Bill. Accordingly, there are provisions for submitting these Provisional Orders to Private Bill Committees. As to the local inquiry, the difficulty has always been the selection of the panel. The scheme of the Bill is that there should be a panel of 20, with a reserve of 20, to fill up vacancies which may occur during the period of five years in which the panel survives. They have to be elected by a body of five members—namely, the Secretary for Scotland, two members representing the burghs, and two members representing the counties. Fifteen thousand has been taken in burghs as representing more or less a unit of population which corresponds with counties, and accordingly the county councils are to elect two representative members. The burghs of Scotland with a population of about 15,000 have two representative members, and those, along with the Secretary of Scotland, are to make that body and who are to form this panel of 20 and 10. To the persons selected from that panel, for each particular inquiry, is to be added a sheriff selected by the Lord President of the Court of Session. After the local inquiry an Order will be framed, and, if no representation is made against it, it will have the effect of an Act of Parliament.
Read the first time; to be read a second time upon Monday next, and to be printed. [Bill 115.]
Orders Of The Day
Benefices (No 2) Bill
, formally moved the Second Reading of the Benefices Bill.
moved as an Amendment, That the Bill be read a second time that day six months. He said: I desire to repeat the complaint made by an hon. Member on Thursday that the Government has not allowed us enough time to consider the provisions of the Bill, which the First Lord has laid on the Table of the House; but I think I may go further than my hon. Friend, because I think we have grounds for complaining of the prominence which the Government is giving to this question. I have looked at the Queen's Speech, and I find that there are some very weighty matters referred to, and some important Bills promised. I can hardly understand why it is that the right hon. Gentleman should give one of the most useful Mondays of the whole Session to a Measure of such a subordinate character. I look at the Queen's Speech, and I find mentioned a Bill for the creation of municipalities in the administrative county of London. What has become of that Bill? What about Camberwell? Camberwell, I say on unimpeachable authority, has a very interesting history; Camberwell has its own local pride; and Camberwell has its own celebrities. How long is the Government going to ignore the history of Camberwell, insult its local pride and disappoint the legitimate ambition of its celebrities? I justify my objection to the Bill on three grounds: first, that it abridges the power of patrons of livings without giving compensation or conferring any increased powers on parishioners or congregations; secondly, that it increases the power and jurisdiction of the bishops of the Church of England, a course which, in my opinion, is inexpedient; and, thirdly, that it creates a new appellate court, in which, with the obvious intention of aggrandising the power of the archbishops, the temporal judge is to be subordinate to the spiritual judge. The bishop's powers to refuse a presentee are increased by this Bill, and, therefore, the patron's rights abridged. The grounds on which a bishop may refuse to institute are set forth in Clause two, but the language used is not plain. What is the meaning of the words "unfit for the discharge of the duties of the benefice by reason of physical or mental infirmity or incapacity?" They are so vague as to give a complete discretion to the bishop. Again, take the words "evil life." In regard to many things the question whether a life is or is not evil is matter of opinion. Some of the bishops are total abstainers, and I wish to know whether a bishop is to have the right of refusing to institute a donee to a living who is in the habit of taking a glass of port wine and playing a game of whist? The ambiguous language of the Bill will permit that. By the third clause the right which a patron of a living has to appeal from the bishop to the High Court of Justice in order to force the bishop to make a clear declaration of his objection is done away with. I think that any change of the law ought to have been in the direction of giving greater power, not to the bishop, but to the parishioners or congregations. The Bill is in fact designed to assimilate to a larger degree the organisation of the Church of England to that of the Church of Rome. The Bill manifestly increases the episcopal authority. Our experience in Wales shows that this course is inexpedient, and I am not relying on merely theoretic arguments. I should like to bring before the House the case of the Rev. Mr. Jenkins, Rector of Man-avon, who in 1891, when he was about 61 years of age, was, under circumstances of which he complains—and most justly complains—incarcerated in a lunatic asylum. After being two years there his case was heard before a Master in Lunacy, who declared he was a man of sound mind. He went back to his parish, but was afterwards accused of being drunk and assaulting the police. His case came on before a Court constituted in accordance with the provisions of the Clergy Discipline Act. He objected to the constitution of the Court, because he said that one of the assessors on the Court was appointed by the Bishop of St. Asaph, and two others owed their promotion to the bishop, who was patron of the living, and therefore an interested party. The objections taken by Mr. Jenkins to the constitution of the Court were overruled, and he asked for an adjournment to obtain the services of counsel, or of a solicitor. The adjournment was refused, and Mr. Jenkins left the Court. Upon the evidence of a constable and some one else he was deprived of his freehold at the age of 61 years. I do not say whether that decision was right or wrong, but speaking on behalf of the laity of the Church of England, and on behalf of the rights of property, I say it is not right or fair that a Court constituted in that way should dispose of a man's freehold, and deprive him of the means of livelihood at 61 years of age. Sir, let me now call attention to the exercise of his power by the Bishop of St. Asaph. I will not say what I think of it in my own words, because I find—and upon authority more worthy of attention on the other side of the House than my own—a very pronounced opinion. TheRecord newspaper has the following observation—
A memorial was presented against the conduct of the bishop, signed by 76 out of the 200 beneficed clergymen in the diocese. They said:—"The condition of affairs in the diocese of St. Asaph is probably without a parallel. A revolt of the clergy against the use of his patronage by the bishop is a spectacle which compels attention, and cannot be dismissed as a matter of merely local or party concern."
This memorial was, as I have already stated, signed by 75 beneficed clergymen, including one archdeacon, the chancellor of the cathedral, four rural deans and one proctor, and the signatories belong to the most important parishes in the diocese. I refer to these matters in order to show why Welshmen distrust any increase of the powers of the bishops. But I will not labour that part of the case further. I come now to my third ground of objection, which is to the creation of this new Court. There can be no doubt that the right of the patron is further abridged by the proposed constitution of a spiritual Court, with a lay element which is to oust the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Judicature. Clause 5 of the sub-section 3 provides that—"We observe with pain that there has been for some time wide and deep dissatisfaction among the clergy of the diocese, mainly on two grounds—namely, in the first place, that a large number of senior and capable men have been overlooked in the exercise of patronage since your Lordship has come to the diocese, while important and valuable preferments have been repeatedly conferred on a few young men of comparatively little experience in this work; in the second place, that clergymen have been promoted to high and important positions in the diocese who are incapable of discharging the duties of their office owing to total ignorance or insufficient knowledge of the Welsh language.
I could understand the framers of this Bill taking up the position they had done if the judges were of equal authority. But that is not the case. The judge of the High Court is placed in a subordi- nate position. The intention of the framers of the Bill is to put the civil judge in the position of a jury, and to give the supreme direction to the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop of York. That meant the subordination of a temporal Court to a spiritual Court. It was evidently the idea of the promoters of this Bill to aggrandise the power of the Church at the expense of the State. I do not know that I need delay the House longer, except to make one observation in respect to a remark made by the right hon. Gentleman the Leader of the House last Wednesday, which I thought was inaccurate. He said, in speaking of Benefices Bill No. 1, that, so far as he could gather, the only solid foundation for our hostility—"If in any case to which this section applies, the bishop signifies his refusal in manner provided by this section, no proceeding shall be taken in any other Court in respect of the refusal."
Order, order! The hon. Member is not in order in referring to what was said on another Bill in the present Session.
I rise to a point of order. Is it not the case that there is a ruling to the effect that a subject which has been previously discussed may be referred to in the same Session of Parliament in the discussion of a subject which is exactly identical?
There is nothing in the circumstances of this case to prevent the application of the general rule.
I will not ask you to rule further, Sir, but say that if any one alleges that our objection to this Bill is founded on hostility to the Church he is inaccurate. It is right we should take this opportunity of stating our attitude on this subject. We believe in the principle of religious equality, and we say that it is an obvious inference from that principle that it is unfair to confer upon the clergy of any particular denomination of the Christian religion great privileges, and the control of public funds, which have been dealt with over and over again by Parliament. We say that if you consent to Disestablishment and Disendowment you may reform and improve the Church in any way you like. If you do not accept this boon of freedom, we pin you down to the position you have voluntarily taken. We regard the Church as a Church controlled by Acts of Parliament, and by the law of the land, whose highly-paid clergy are paid, for the most part, out of a fund created by Act of Parliament, and who are, except in name, civil servants of the Crown. It is in these circumstances, and not because we are actuated by hostility to the Church of England, that we oppose and criticise Measures like this. We will not play into the hands of a powerful section of the Church, which seeks persistently to set aside, sometimes the letter, and nearly always the spirit, of the Reformation settlement. It is in these circumstances, and for these reasons, that I now beg leave to move "That this Bill be read a second time this day six months."
In seconding the Motion that the Bill be read a second time this day six months I do not wish to associate myself with all the arguments used by the hon. Gentleman who has just spoken. After the Debates which have taken place in this House, and after the announcement that the Government intended to bring in a Bill, I had hoped that the effect of that Bill would have been to minimise the differences which separate some of us on this side of the House from the promoters of the former Bill, and that it would have thrown oil on the troubled waters. But the Bill falls so far short of the Bill that was before the House last week that I find myself compelled to associate myself with those who desire to vote against the Second Reading. I wish to point out, however, that Members of this House have very little time to study this Bill, and yet the fact that it is brought in at this time of the Session indicates that it must, in the view of the Government, be an important Measure. It is unusual that a Measure, about which no Minister of the Crown has addressed any remarks from a public platform, and concerning which no explanation has been given to the House, should be, at it were, pitchforked among Members on Friday last, and, by a process of rushing, should be submitted to the House for the Second Reading to-day. This, I submit, is a little unusual, and puts those who are unfamiliar with the details of the Bill at an enormous disadvantage in discussing its merits on the Second Reading. Why am I disappointed with the contents of this Bill, as compared with the Bill submitted last Wednesday to the House? One of the complaints made against the Bill of 1896 was that it put undue power into the hands of the bishops, and made them judges of civil facts, with which, by their training and circumstances, they were in no way fitted to deal. In the Bill of last Wednesday there were strong provisions for securing a proper hearing by the bishop, in accordance with the ordinary rules of evidence. In this Bill the whole of these provisions have entirely disappeared. I find that the Bill creates offences as to which one bishop may have one standard and another Bishop another, and proposes to enlarge the existing powers of the bishop to decide upon a number of very vague and ill-defined offences. The Bill also proposes to enlarge the existing powers of the bishops with regard to rejecting presentees, and gives the presentee only right of appeal upon a matter on which he had not hitherto been heard at all. But there is no provision that there is to be a proper judicial inquiry in the first instance. I confess I was not a little amazed to hear observations coming from the other side of the House about infringements of the rights of property. It is true that, in the 1896 Bill, the proposed interference with the rights of patronage were more severe than those in this Bill, but when I raised my voice against what I thought was a serious infringement of the rights of patronage, I did not, if my recollection serves me right, get very much sympathy or support from the other side of the House in the communication of those views. The only argument was that patronage should be abolished without compensation. The law of England, which has, from the first, treated advowsons as private property, has never relied upon the character of the patron for the character of the presentee. There are cases at present, in which owners of racecourses hold advowsons; nevertheless, very excellent incumbents are again and again instituted. It might be said that the stewards of a racecourse ought not to hold advowsons, but, as I ventured to point out, the character of the presentee is in no way concerned with the character of the patron. The bishop is the person who has the right to institute to a living; the patron has only the right of nominating a fit and proper person. I make no complaint at all about some of the restrictions imposed upon patrons under the Bill. It appears to me that they will not very much, if at all, reduce what I would call the marketable value of the property with which it is proposed to deal. I was, and still am, under the impression that the doctrine of lapse will come in, and in the event of that doctrine of lapse coming in, then the right of patronage will go to the bishop under the existing law. One of my objections is that it will largely increase the episcopal rights of patronage under the doctrine of lapse. I will read an extract from an authority well qualified to speak on the subject, Earl Fortescue, who said—
I, for one, should greatly regret any Measure that had a tendency to increase episcopal patronage at the expense of private patronage. Well, then, passing from that to the next compartment of the Bill, which deals with unfit presentees, it goes without saying that there is no person in this House who would desire to pass a law which would not prevent such a state of things; there is the possibility of unfit men being put into livings in the Church of England. We all agree upon that. When we come to consider the provisions of the Bill as regards the testing of the standard of unfitness, I find, to my disappointment, that much larger powers are being put into the hands of the bishops than ought to be; the bishop was to be the sole judge, subject to an appeal. He is the judge of the fact that the presentee is unfit. The standard of unfitness will, of necessity, vary in every diocese. In the abstract, no man would say that a man who is really unfit by reason of mental or physical infirmity, ought to be accepted by the parish. I should like to know who is to be the judge of unfitness under the test of "pecuniary embarrassment"—that vague ill-defined offence which is created under the Bill. That is to be a sufficient bar if the bishop so pleases. Assume a case in which a bishop is out of sympathy with a man; the bishop is a Low Churchman, and the presentee is a High Churchman, and it would not be difficult to prove pecuniary embarrassment, particularly in cases where men, serving in curacies for a number of years with large and increasing families, are presented with a good living. When they see some prospect of getting into easier circumstances, this pecuniary embarrassment will be brought up against them. I do not know whether they will be expected to produce a balance-sheet or a certificate that they are solvent, or how on earth the bishop is going to be a judge of pecuniary embarrassment. Then there is "misconduct." What is the definition of that? Who is to be the judge? In one diocese a bishop will call a certain thing misconduct which another bishop will pass over as a very trifling offence. Yet the bishop is to be constituted the judge. I am told that this may be amended in Committee, and, so far as my criticisms go, that will answer my purpose. So far as the Bill is concerned, there is no machinery for the hearing before the bishop. He has to come to his own conclusions, and, having come to a certain conclusion, he has only to notify to the presentee that he proposes to refuse. I do not think the Bill even contains the grounds of refusal. The Bill even does not go so far as the previous Bills which were before the House. It does not require the bishop to state the grounds on which he has refused to institute; the presentee is left to conjecture as to what crime he has been guilty of, and as to what evidence there is to justify the refusal. He may appeal to a tribunal appointed under the Bill, and then it may be proved that he is not guilty of the offence—for which he has not been tried. That seems to me to be an unjust proposal—a proposal that is novel to English jurisprudence, utterly unknown to our ordinary procedure. I marvel that the Government should be responsible for this Bill. Going from that to the third clause of the Bill, which deals with incumbents, I am not sure whether I understand clearly what is intended by the fourth clause, which extends the powers of the bishops under the Pluralities Act Amendment Act. I do not know whether it is intended to create a new offence. [The FIRST LORD of the TREASURY: "No."] Perhaps it does not. As I understand the Pluralities Act Amendment Act, in the event of a Commission finding certain facts against a person the bishop has certain powers. In that case it is not intended to create a fresh offence. All that is done is, as I understand, to give power of inhibition. Before I sit down I should like to congratulate my noble Friend behind me (Lord Cranborne), on the fact that, after the work he has done for so many years in the direction of reform of this character, the Government has taken up the question, and brought in this Bill. It is much easier to criticise than to construct, and I desire to tender to him my congratulations for the immense amount of hard work and enthusiasm he has thrown into the subject. I have no doubt that the Bill will reach a Second Reading in this House to-night, and if it goes to a Second Reading I hope the Government will profit by the long discussion we had on this subject in 1896. I hope the Government will receive in a friendly spirit the suggestions and amendments from this side of the House, for the purpose of improving the Bill where it is defective, and making it a measure of justice to all."It seems unjust to interfere much with the rights of private patrons, and unreasonable to expect much further benefit from doing so, when the responsibility of refusing to institute unfit clergymen to benefices must rest with the bishop; but it ought to be exercised by him judicially and on publicly justifiable grounds. Episcopal and capitular patronage was, till of late years, largely used for the benefit of relations and personal friends. And if latterly this has been less conspicuously the case, still the largest portion of episcopal patronage has been naturally bestowed upon clergymen who have identified themselves with the same general Church party as the bishop has. I happen to know that one eminent deceased Primate always spoke of private patronage as of great advantage to the Church, and that opinion has been, and is, unquestionably held by many eminent, loyal, and zealous Churchmen, in holy orders, as well as laymen. The variety of authorities in which the patronage of livings has been vested is the great security for the maintenance of that comprehensiveness of the Established Church which has, many of us believe most happily, been one of its characteristics, though the exclusiveness has been threatened from different quarters at different times."
It has struck me in listening to the preceding speeches that the hon. Gentlemen who moved and seconded this Motion hardly agreed between themselves as to the opposition to this Bill. The reasons they gave were singularly diverse. We find ourselves discussing a Bill which, if I remember rightly, is put among the ten in the list promised in the Queen's Speech, in regard to which it is intimated to us that we might hardly have time to consider them. I hardly know whether or not to congratulate the Government on the rapidity with which their business has been transacted or the lack of business they have for the House, but I must express my surprise that we should have to deal with this small Bill on a Monday afternoon so early in the Session. It comes with the authority of the Government to rectify an abuse in one of the religious denominations into which the population of these islands is divided. That particular denomination is peculiarly associated with the State. I am one of those who, ever since I have considered these matters, now a good many years ago, have held that association with the State is wrong and hurtful, and ought to be put an end to. I have never receded from that position. All religious denominations should be placed on one level. But I have always tried to consider a number of these Bills, which have come from the Church of England, on their merits, and I have taken up this attitude—that if the promoters of these Bills assure us that they are to remove abuses which exist in the Church of England, I would not take upon myself the responsibility of opposing them. Therefore, when this present Bill comes before me in the way it does, I am not prepared to take the responsibility of opposing it. The only real opposition to the Bill comes from inside the Communion to which it refers. I have received a paper from the Church Association about a terrible attack upon the rights of property. I think that we cannot bear too much in mind the maxim of Thomas Drummond, that "Property has its duties as well as its rights." I do not think that property has any vested rights in the abuses which are referred to. I am told that the power of bishops is going to be considerably increased. But that bugbear does not alarm me. I think there never was a time when the laity of this country were really less under the power of the clergy. Why, even when the Bishop of Rochester, a man of deservedly great influence, threw out last autumn some proposals as to what should take place in the schools, no sooner were the proposals fully explained, and it was seen by the laity what was intended, than they were opposed by his own people, and fell though. I have no fear of the power of the bishops. The people to-day are religiously minded, but they are not, if I may use the expression, denominationally minded. The laity of these islands are as strong now as ever they were against undue influence on the part of the clerics, whether they belong to the Church of England or a Free Church. I am one of those who stand outside the religious communion affected by the Bill, but I am not prepared to take the responsibility of opposing the Second Reading of this Bill.
In 1896, I, as representing a cathedral constituency, opposed the then Bill, but as I am now resolved to vote in favour of this Bill, I wish the House to give me an opportunity of making some explanation. I was one of those who opposed the then Bill, because it seemed to me to want some one qualified by training and practice to sift the evidence and find the facts, but only upon appeal, because the introduction of the lawyer at any previous stage would be inconsistent with the parental relation between the bishop and his diocese. In the present Bill I am happy to find that this objection is entirely removed. Clause three, section one, as we have all heard, will enact that where a bishop refuses to institute a presentee, either the person presenting or the presentee may require that the matter may be heard by a court consisting of the archbishop and a judge of the Supreme Court; and section two will enact that the judge shall decide all questions of law and fact, and that the archbishop shall give judgment accordingly. Though I do not consider bishops and archbishops are lawyers, yet I am not squeamish like the hon. Member for Swansea about giving them more power as bishops and archbishops, and I am not squeamish as to the effect of the second clause, which gives the archbishop the last word in the argument. Looking at the practical aspect of the question I cannot think that either the person who presents or the presentee will be the sport of ill-luck to such a degree that he first of all falls into the hands of a bishop, perversely wrong in his facts and the inferences drawn from them, and then, when he goes to appeal, seeking to avoid Scylla he falls into Charybdis, and finds the archbishop ignores the judge, defies the facts, and gives a judgment which turns truth and reason upside down. I am not for Establishment, and therefore I do not suppose that those who are, are likely to take any advice of mine. But I do believe I express the opinion of many hon. Members on both sides of the House when I say that we must remember we are dealing with at least a Christian Church, and might do better than to adopt methods worthy of Machiavelli or Mephistopheles to bring about Disestablishment, by indirectly favouring and fostering the scandal of the conduct of those who bear office in its service.
In intervening in this Debate in favour of the Amendment moved by the hon. Member for Swansea, let me say, at the outset, I do not represent nor do I know those to whom the hon. Member has last referred. At the same time I can fully realise some saying in connection with this Bill, "Why do we Free Churchmen not leave this matter entirely to the consideration of the Churchmen in the House, seeing the Bill before us deals entirely with some of the features of the government of that Church?" In reply I would say for myself that I should be only too glad to leave the Churchmen in the House to deal with this matter if the Church were left to manage her own affairs and had not to come to this House to ask to be allowed to make any alterations in its government. That day, however, has not yet come, and, therefore, I feel, with other Members of the House, a responsibility from which I cannot free myself. I cannot forget that, after all, we Free Churchmen are working alongside the Church of England. By recent figures if has been clearly shown that we are doing a large half of the Christian work of the nation. Therefore, if that is the case, when you are doing good you are influencing us for good; but if you are making mistakes you are influencing us for ill. The fact is, if in any parish the work of the Church of England is real and progressive, it is a stimulus and incentive to us; and the reverse is equally true. I speak the feelings of many Free Churchmen when I say we are not jealous of the Church. In seeking its disestablishment we are not seeking to weaken its spiritual work, but we trustfully desire to assist it in doing higher and better service. I know that if the Church were free from State control we should have a great many difficulties to deal with which we have not to-day. Looking at it, therefore, as a Free Churchman, and also a Member of this House, I ask myself: What is the position I ought to take up with regard to this matter of dealing with the government of the Church of England? And the attitude to which my judgment has brought me is, that I ought to support changes which I believe to be in the best interests of the Church, and that I ought to oppose that which I believe will not be to its interest. In 1896, when there was another Benefices Bill before the House, I had the honour of serving on the Grand Committee for the consideration of that Bill, and I think my fellow committeemen will absolve me from any desire to obstruct the Bill in Committee, and I did what little I could to help the Committee to make the Bill as good as possible, but that Bill failed to pass, and the whole subject is now in a perfectly new position. The Government of the day have taken upon themselves the responsibility of introducing a Measure, and it is therefore no longer a Measure brought in by one section of the House, but has the sanction and authority of the Government. To justify this procedure there ought to be first a popular demand for such a measure, and if there are difficulties and evils to be overcome they should be dealt with in such a way as is likely to lead to real improvement. Now, of the popular demand I have received no evidence whatever. I know, on the other hand, from documents which have come to me, that the Church of England is not united in itself as to the remedies it desires to see carried out. Now, it does seem to me that before the Government of the day take up a Measure of this kind, there should be some degree of unity, and there should be a demand made by the rank and file of the people adhering to the Church of England for such legislation; but I feel still more strongly as to my second proposition, that if there are difficulties and evils to be overcome they should be dealt with in a way that is likely to create real improvement. I do not intend to go into the details of the Bill, which seems to divide itself into two portions: first, there is the alteration of the methods of the sale of advowsons, and there is the giving of the bishops more power. I see in the second part no reason to object, but my opposition is aroused to the first part, the sale of advowsons. In the year 1874, when the present Archbishop of Canterbury was Bishop of Exeter, he gave evidence on the question of the sale of advowsons before the Church Patronage Committee of the House of Lords, and in the course of that evidence he put five points very clearly. He said in connection with—
Now, I take it that I cannot, in a matter of this kind, go to higher evidence than the present Archbishop of Canterbury, and if we are confronted with a difficulty of the kind I have named, this Bill does not meet the difficulty, it is a weak and feeble Measure, and does not go to the root of the matter. But it may be said that we cannot do that without going into the question of compensation. If that is the only difficulty, surely, with the great income paid to the Church, the richest of all corporations in this rich county, it ought not to be a difficulty that shall trouble the Government of the day. My contention is that if the Archbishop of Canterbury's evidence is true, and you know far more than I do of that matter, but I take his evidence, and I say if it is true you are not dealing with this matter in the way you should. You ought to get rid of the sale of advowsons for ever. It is because of my difficulty with regard to the sale of advowsons that I heartily support the Amendment."these sales, the worst feature of all was the shock given to the religious feelings of a great number of people. In the second place, there was a very great feeling of demoralisation caused by these sales; in the third place, he thought there was a great public scandal in such sales; in the fourth place, they, to a very great degree, demoralised the patrons; and, lastly, there could be no question at all that it gave very great facilities for abusing these privileges, and he had known instances of very serious abuse."
I will not trouble the House with many remarks, but I wish to explain my position, as my name appears upon the other Bill. At the time my name was put there I had no reason to suppose it had anything to do with patronage, and, once on, it could not be taken off. Neither Bill is exactly what I like, but my desire is that this Bill may be read a second time in order that both Bills may be considered in Committee, and I hope we shall then pass the Bill in such a state that it may prove to be beneficial and sound. It seems to me that the hon. Gentlemen who oppose this Measure have based their opposition on the old maxim that the best is the enemy of the good. When anybody is going as far as he can to do good by a Bill, they say something else is better, and, therefore, the Bill is no good. Now, I put to myself this question: Would I rather this Bill became law, with all its imperfections, or is the Bill to be thrown out, and are we to have that same agitation we had so long ago all over again? And I say I would rather that this Bill passed, because there are very great abuses which it is calculated to remove. I cannot have any sympathy with those hon. Members who say that, because they desire that the Church of England should be disestablished and disendowed, therefore, that so long as she is connected with the State they will do nothing to remove the disabilities which have been imposed on her, not by the Church herself, but by the State. [An HON. MEMBER: Who said so?] That is the position taken up by the hon. and learned Member. The union of the Church and State was the action of the State. It was the only Church at the time, and the State has had the control of it ever since. But the Church of England is not the only body which has come to the State for assistance. If I am correctly informed, the Wesleyan Church are coming this very Session to Parliament in order to enable them to make certain alterations in their foundation deed, which they cannot make without an Act of Parliament; and I only hope that if they show proper cause that Bill will be passed. Then we are told that we ought not to pass this Bill because it deals ineffectually with the sale of advowsons. No doubt we all wish that the sale of advowsons could be put an end to. If we could put an end to the sale of advowsons, without at the same time putting an end to purchasers, I should be very glad. I think it would be better for everybody if, when a living is in the hands of a spendthrift, or bankrupt, who cares nothing about the trust he has, the trust could be passed into the hands of good trustees. But, notwithstanding the scandals, the purchase of advowsons has, on the whole, been of immense benefit to the Church; and I support the Measure, believing that it will do something to remove the scandals, as far as possible. The hon. Gentleman who has just sat down spoke about the "rich" Church of England, and declared that, owning, as he represented, an "enormous" revenue, she might use the money to compensate patrons. Is the hon. Member aware that at the present moment the only funds which belong to the Church as a Corporation which could be used for such a purpose are in the hands of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and that the resources at their disposal are so small that unless a parish has 6,000 inhabitants they are not able to make any grant whatever to supply additional ministration? I know parish after parish with populations of 4,000 and 5,000 which have at present only one clergyman, who is worked almost to death, and who cannot get aid from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners because there are more pressing claims. There are two Societies—the Church Pastoral Aid Society and the Additional Curates Society—which are at present rendering aid by providing additional curates in parishes with populations of 10,000, 15,000, or 20,000, by voluntary subscriptions. These Societies are continually refusing pressing applications through lack of funds; and yet we are told that the Church of England is so rich that the hon. Member opposite would be prepared to see some of its moneys taken away and handed over to compensate patrons. I think the scandal of doing that would be infinitely greater than any scandal which this Bill is designed to remove. There is one other point which I wish to touch upon in the Bill. An objection has been raised that the bishop has, in the first instance, to hold a court and conduct a legal inquiry, but no rules as to evidence, etc., are prescribed. Well, the intention and object of this Bill is that he should do nothing of the kind. If the bishop is informed that the presentee whom he is asked to institute is unfit, he will send for the man himself, or for the patron, and say, "I have heard this or that; you know whether it is true." In 99 cases out of 100 a guilty man will throw up the sponge. In one respect Bill No. 1 is better than Bill No. 2, According to Bill No. 1 the bishop is made a party to the appeal, and therefore he renders himself liable to costs if he has on insufficient grounds refused to institute a presentee. That seems to me a valuable provision, because a bishop ought not to recklessly refuse to institute. By this means you give him a sufficient stake in the matter to ensure his exercising the utmost care and consideration, and he will not refuse to institute a presentee unless he is satisfied, after hearing all that the man has to say, that grounds exist which justify his attitude in refusing to institute him. When we come to the Court of Appeal the judge is to find the facts and determine the law, and to say whether the presentee has committed an offence under this Act, and if is for the archbishop then to say whether there are any extenuating circumstances on which he can stretch a point and give the presentee a chance. Subject to this the archbishop is bound to pronounce sentence in accordance with the judge's finding. Therefore, the ecclesiastical judge, being put under the civil judge, has very little more power given to him than to carry out the findings of the civil judge. I hope, Sir, that the House will, without a Division, pass the Second Reading of this Bill.
The hon. Member for Lowestoft has opposed this Bill. It gives me very great pleasure, as a Free Churchman, to cordially and heartily support it. My only regret is that the Government has not seen its way to go farther in the pathway of reforms than it has done. I, Sir, am perfectly unable to understand the position of hostility which so many of my Friends around me are taking over this Bill. The hon. Member for Swansea has complained that too short time had been given by the Government to thoroughly understand the Bill. Sir, I quite agree with him, for it was quite manifest, as far as he was concerned, that time had been largely wasted. I could not recognise the Bill in the description which he gave of the Bill. He spoke as if it were an attack upon Protestantism; as if it were a trampling under foot of the rights of the laity, and the erection of some system of sacerdotal supremacy throughout the land. But, Sir, where did he find it in the Bill? If I believed that Protestantism was in any way threatened, or that my rights as a layman were invaded, or that priestcraft was going to be triumphant throughout the land, because of the passing of the measure introduced by Her Majesty's Government, then, Sir, I should be entirely in opposition to the Bill. But what is the Bill? The Bill proposes, as I understand it, to do two things—to abolish two great evils, evils which are admitted by all. It proposes to do away with the sale of presentations, and if proposes to prevent improper persons from obtaining benefices from the Church of England. Is there anyone who can defend either one of these? Is there any one conscience which is not exercised by the present system? My hon. Friend says that the true remedy is to break the chain which binds Church and State together, and to give the Free Church thus erected the opportunity of abolishing these methods and all the evils incident thereto. Sir, I do not conceal, myself, that I am in accordance with the view of the hon. Member for Swansea, but I should prefer to see the Church having full power to deal in those matters for herself. But we deal with facts as we find them. The Church is established. She is connected with the State, and under the State control. And are we to wait until those of us who believe that it would be a good thing for the Church to sever that connection—are we to wait until we have converted the majority of the people of this country to our view, and in the meantime are these evils and these scandals to continue in the Church of England? That is a question which I have asked myself. As a Free Churchman, I have asked myself the question whether we ought not to give the Church every opportunity to prosecute the great religious work it has undertaken. Now, Sir, I cannot for a moment believe that there is anyone either in this House, and I trust not out of it, who would desire to keep the evils and the scandals which arise from their existence continuing in the Church of England, in order that the anger and the indignation which called those evils into existence should be used, not against the abuses themselves, but against the Church which they have forced themselves into, and continue in. I feel that to use weapons like these in prosecution of what I believe to be a sacred work in itself, in endeavouring to bring about the result I have spoken of, would be absolutely unworthy of any man who desired the true prosperity of the religion of the land. Now, Sir, we all are agreed, as far as I can gather, that the sale of presentations ought to cease. No one has defended it either on that side of the House or on this side. I agree that I wish the Government had been able to go farther. I think the scandal which arises from allowing the right to present any man to a living in the Christian Church, by reason of his acquired wealth, and spending it in financial negotiations through an ecclesiastical broker, must shock everyone. My own feeling is, however, not confined to next presentations, but to the larger question of the sale of advowsons. But because I cannot get that which I desire, because I cannot at present see that the sale of advowsons is all that could be desired, can I refuse my consent to the abolition of, at least, the other evils? As a practical man, and as a man of common sense, I think we ought to prevent the evil on which all are agreed, and then strive to complete the remainder of our work with regard to the second evil also. Well then, Sir, we have a description of the third clause of the Bill, which, I confess, I am amazed at. I was told that this Bill proposed to put a judge in a certain position, but that a bishop is created the judge of the offence, in respect of which the presentee is tried. Has my hon. Friend read the Bill? What does the clause say in regard to the position which the judge of the Supreme Court is to occupy? It says this: "The judge shall decide the question of law and fact." He is to be the supreme judge of the law; he is to be the supreme arbiter as to the facts submitted. All that the bishop has to do, is, after the judge has pronounced the law and found the facts, to be the mouthpiece of the Court to give expression to that which the judge has just decided. I do not know myself why the archbishop is introduced at all. I suppose it is in deference to religious susceptibility, in order that it may not be suggested that this is a pure court of laymen—a secular court and not a spiritual court; but if it satisfies religious susceptibilities that the bishop should only occupy the position of mouthpiece, I, for one, am not going to quarrel with those who insist that the archbishop should be a member of the court. The practical part, from that point of view of the layman, is that the judge is to be the court which decides the facts, and lays down the law. Now, Sir, I have only one other observation to make. I apologise to the House for detaining it so long, but I feel very strongly with many of my friends on the other side with regard to the importance of this Bill. I am most desirous to see this long controversy come to an end. I do not believe that it is helpful to religion, and I am sure it cannot be helpful to the Church, that such controversies should arise continually. I should like to see some more practical definition, if possible, of the offences with which the court will have to deal. It may be that it is impossible to do so, and if it be impossible, why, then, I must accept it as it is. But I should like to see the clause so carefully safeguarded, that, for instance, independence of judgment and free expression of opinion should not, in any case, be ever regarded as an offence which should come before the court, or which might prevent the holder of a particular opinion being presented to a living. With that qualification, I support the Bill. I am quite sure that it will, to some extent, be remodelled in Committee, remodelled so as to meet the objections which have been taken in this House by the friends of the Bill. And then I am convinced of this, that when these scandals are done away with by the abolition of the evils which are dealt with, the Church will be better able to do the great work in which she is engaged in England, so as to bring about the greater good and the higher and more elevated opinion of the people of this country.
I am sure the House on both sides has listened with much interest to the speech which has just been made by the hon. Member opposite. He has done what I think we should all do in these matters. We should not approach these matters in a partisan view, but deal with them as affecting the general advancement of religion throughout the whole country. I need hardly say that I support this Bill, although I agree with the hon. Gentleman who has just spoken that it can only be regarded as a step in the right direction. I had the honour to introduce a somewhat similar Bill a few years ago, but that was introduced as a private Measure. We did our best to abolish all sales of benefices in the Church. But, Sir, this Bill, of course, as has been pointed out, is brought in by a very powerful Government, and I am sorry that they do not go a step farther, and do away with what I think must be done away with before long, and that is the absolute sale altogether of advowsons. Now, Sir, I thoroughly agree with many of the advantages which private patronage has given. I think it has extended the life of the Church, and I think it has improved in many ways the working of the Church, and made it more, so to speak, up-to-date, and in many cases benefited both the clergy and the laity. And, also, there is no doubt that it is impossible at present to think of any better plan by which the Church of England system of patronage may be given. But, Sir, when we come to think that at the end of the 19th century there should be any sort of traffic in the sale of advowsons, it does seem to me a most extraordinary position. The speech, which I remember very well, of the present archbishop on the subject, when he gave evidence before a Committee of the House of Lords, has been referred to over and over again in these Debates. Nobody can gainsay that the very mention of the sale of livings is more scandalous to the Church than any other offence of the present time. Even in affairs of life many of us are connected with institutions where small appointments are given away. Why, Sir, if anybody in these positions—even the Clerk at this Table has a certain amount of patronage in this House—had any notion of selling them, the whole system would practically break down at once; and yet, when we come to talk about the cure of souls, we recognise that it is still allowed that there should be some system of purchasing livings going on. Of course the difficulty is got over by arguing that the spiritual part of the appointment is not sold, but only the temporal part. But that is a fallacy altogether. Anyhow, it is so fine a point that the public do not understand it, and I do say that, as a Churchman myself, I am thoroughly ashamed that there is any possible way left now in a system by which advowsons are sold and that scandal continues throughout the country. I am perfectly well aware that to do away with the sale of advowsons altogether would be a very difficult thing, but there are now many difficult things done, and I say that in a Church in the full health of life advowsons must be treated as a trust, and the appointments must be filled up as a trust. I sincerely think that this Bill, good as it is as far as it goes, is but a step—I fully acknowledge it is an important step—which there is no doubt will undermine sales altogether, and I do trust that it will ultimately lead to their abolition. There is only one other point I should like to refer to in connection with this subject, and that is the form of declaration. Now, Sir, I think we ought to be very careful in applying that form of declaration to the clergy, which touches their consciences, and I cannot see how anybody can sign that declaration under many circumstances. It is quite true that it is so worded that a man can get out of it without much difficulty. It talks about a man, to the best of his belief, that nothing has taken place which is simoniacal, and that has a long legal meaning, which can be got over. It says—
Supposing a father possesses an advowson, and ultimately gives it to his son, I think that son will find it extremely difficult indeed to sign a certificate that that living had been given without any sort of consideration, directly or indirectly, by any person. I agree that I do not think any father ought to buy his son a living. I should be very sorry to do so for my own son, who is a curate, and I do say emphatically that if you allow the law to continue that advowsons are to be sold, you ought not to put in a declaration which will secure that a conscientious man cannot take, and which the man who is not particular what he signs will take. I hope some amendment will be made to that, for I do not think that anybody having a strict conscience should be deprived of any appointment which he might otherwise have. I support this Bill, and I am glad that the Government have introduced it. Perhaps it will do more good than many Bills of greater sounding name, because it has the elements of justice; and the various teachers of religion are working together for the removal of these abuses, which, after all, are for the greater benefit of the country than many other measures which are considered in this House."I have not received the presentation of the said rectory (or vicarage, etc.) from the patron thereof in consideration of any sum of money, reward, gift, profit, or benefit, directly or indirectly, given by me, or by any person, to my knowledge or with my consent, to any person whatsoever."
I have always spoken in this House in favour of the Measures, which from time to time have been introduced by the noble Lord the Member for Rochester, in support of the removal of clerical abuses in connection with the Established Church in this country, and, Mr. Speaker, I see no reason whatever why I should not heartily support on this occasion the Bill which has been produced by Her Majesty's Government. Possibly there may have been a time when Dissenters in this country—I think, if such were the case, they were very wrongly advised in the matter—used to hold the opinion that it was better that the scandals which unquestionably existed then, and exist now, in the Church of England should be encouraged, rather than retarded by legislation, in order that it might hasten the time when the Church would be disestablished and disendowed in this country. That was a foolish policy, and an un-Christian policy; and I do not believe at the present moment there is a single Nonconformist in the House of Commons who would advocate such a policy. Now, Mr. Speaker, if I were a member of the Church of England I should object to certain clauses of this Bill which, to some extent, seem to me to hand over the rural clergy body and soul to the tender mercies of the Episcopacy; but that is a matter mainly for the laity of the Church of England. If they like to accept the Bill in this form, by all means let them do so. But, Sir, it is impossible in some of the rural parishes in this country to see the grave scandals which really exist without feeling that one would be neglecting one's duty as a Member of this House if one did not at once endeavour to remove them. In the division of Lincolnshire which I represent there is a little village where you can see the rector of that village—or the vicar, I do not quite know which—being led round his own rectory garden by the person who is in charge of him, owing to the unfortunate mental affliction of this good man. That sort of thing is a disgrace to the Church of England, and there ought to be some process by which that gentleman can be superseded. In another village there is, I believe, a very good man, who made the great blunder of buying for himself one of those next presentations, raising money on mortgage to do it. No sooner had he got in that living than he was saddled with a heavy charge for dilapidations in the place which he had just left. Owing to a drop in the rent of the glebe lands, the poor man was hopelessly embarrassed, and he has been sequestrated, and he is now making frantic efforts to get back to his old position. The Bill would prevent and also remedy some of these scandals, and it is because I think that it is our duty to place ourselves alongside of the earnest men of the Church of England who wish to reform the Church, and to make her a more effective instrument for spiritual progress, that I shall certainly support the Second Reading of this Bill.
I think the Government and the House, and all who are interested in the question of Church reform, may congratulate themselves on the whole with the reception which the Second Reading of this Bill has had to-night. The excellent speech of the hon. Gentleman the Member for Perth, and the hon. Gentleman who has just sat down, show that even those who do not belong themselves to the communion of the Church of England—who, indeed, take very strong views upon Disestablishment and other questions in which Churchmen are deeply interested—are perfectly ready to join hands with Churchmen in dealing with the abuses of the Church, as far as the powers of Parliament—and the powers of Parliament alone, are fitted to cope with them. Sir, it augurs very well for the future of this Bill, and of any other Bill dealing with the Church of England, that such a spirit should be manifested amongst Gentlemen on the other side of the House. I do not really think that more than a very few words are required from me to-night. The general objections to this Bill, such as they are, seem to me, I confess, to be of a very fantastic description. The hon. Gentleman the Member for the Swansea Division, who moved the rejection of the Bill, objected to it as far as I can discover, because he though its objects—or if not its objects, at all events its effect—would be to destroy or imperil the Protestant religion, and to augment to a perilous point the power wielded by the bishops, and to carry the Church of England, and all those who are connected with it, some long distance in a Romeward direction. Sir, all these fears appear to me to belong not to the real world in which we live, but to some fantastic creation of the hon. Gentleman's own brain. He dragged in, I know not how or wherefore, apparently in connection with his attack upon the Episcopacy, a special attack upon the Bishop of St. Asaph, and read out a long protest of the clergy of that diocese against some action—I do not know exactly what it was—in which that bishop had been concerned. Sir, I believe that if the theory be—I am not acquainted exactly with the details—that this Bill is to diminish the legitimate power of the laity, and increase the illegitimate power of the Episcopacy, there could not be a worse example chosen than that which the right hon. Gentleman has selected, because I believe the laity, to a man, support that prelate. I mean Churchmen only, of course; they support the Bishop of St. Asaph and regard him as being what he is, a most able and devoted servant of the Church. Two hon. Members while supporting, and zealously supporting, this Bill complain that it is inadequate, and that they would like to see the whole system of the sale of advowsons absolutely prohibited by law. I am not going to occupy the time of the House in defending what everybody must admit to be a very peculiar and anomalous system, a system to which grave objections undoubtedly may be taken, and which it is impossible to defend in all its aspects; but I would remind those hon. Gentlemen and any others who may agree with them, that a Bill simply abolishing the sale of advowsons is not a Measure which it would be possible to recommend to the House. It could not be presented simpliciter to the House, because by abolishing the sale of presentations you would practically leave for ever the presentation of advowsons in the hands which now exercise it, and the careless, indifferent people who are now quite ready to part with it would then have no motive at all to part with it unless some consideration can be obtained for the advowson for which they have no further interest in keeping themselves. You must accompany a Bill prohibiting the sale of advowsons with a Measure entirely altering the present system of distributing the patronage of the Church. What the new system would be, whether it would be similar to the system which works so successfully at present in Scotland, in which the whole responsibility is in the Church itself, or, whether some other alternative can be designed, it is not for me to suggest. But it is obviously a matter of enormous complexity and difficulty, and, even if public opinion were ripe, which I do not think it is at present, for such a sweeping provision as that of absolutely prohibiting the sale of advowsons, a very heavy task would lie before any Government, or any body of gentlemen who set themselves to carry out the work of reconstructing and determining what shall be the form in which the future patronage of livings shall be vested. Therefore, I think every practical man in this House—and I am sure my hon. Friend does not defend it from that view—everybody must admit that this Bill goes in that respect as far as it is wise for practical statesmen dealing with practical necessities to go, and I am glad to think that, though there are many Members in this House who would like to see a Measure brought forward of a more drastic character, and framed on larger lines, still, even those who take that view are ready to give us their hearty support in a Measure which is less complete, but which, I venture to think, under existing circumstances, is far more practical. I do not know that any more general criticisms were passed on the Bill; the remainder of them were addressed to particular clauses and to particular provisions in it. Some of those, I think, were purely Committee points—points which may be raised and dealt with, with advantage upstairs, but about which it is not necessary, I think, for me to say anything at present. My hon. Friend the Member for the Lowestoft Division was very much exercised, lest the indirect effect of this Bill should be to increase episcopal patronage. [Mr. H. S. FOSTER: At the expense of lay patronage.] Well, of course, it must be in that way. If it is increased at all, it can only be increased at the expense of lay patronage. I am quite ready to examine with my hon. Friend, whether the indirect effect of the Bill will be as he supposes. I can assure him that that is not the object of the framers of the Bill, and, without balancing the respective merits of episcopal patronage on the one side or lay patronage on the other side, I can assure both the House and my hon. Friend that it was not intended by a side wind or by indirect methods to alter that balance either in one direction or in the other. My hon. Friend the Member for the Lowestoft Division also thought it very anomalous that there should be a period for the sale of the advowson as a whole during which the person who should deliver the advowson was the seller or the original owner. Sir, there may be an anomaly in that, but it is an anomaly for which there is precedent in the actual condition of the law. As my hon. Friend knows, if the advowson is sold while the living is vacant, the person who is to present it is not the person who sells it, and it is merely an existing condition of things which we have introduced into our Measure. The only remaining point, I think, which was a subject of any attack from any quarter of the House, had reference to Clause 3 of the Bill, in which the reasons are given why the bishop may refuse to present, and, with respect to which, it was complained, I think, by my hon. Friend the Member for Lowestoft, and some others, that there were certain safeguards in the shape of a public hearing, which were omitted, and which ought to be introduced. As regards the first of these points, I am quite ready, if discussion should show it to be necessary and desirable, to make it as clear as possible on the face of the Bill what are the kind of offences, what are the kind of shortcomings, for which the bishop is to be justified in refusing presentation. But I must remind the House that I do not think Clause 2 really adds much to the reasons which already exist under the common law. It makes the reasons much more precise; but let it be observed that under the common law such an objection as illiteracy is of necessity met. My hon. Friend complains that it is not so precise, so obvious, so well defined, that judgments regarding it must be the same by every bishop in every diocese. I do not think that absolute precision and uniformity can be obtained, and certainly is not obtained by the law as it stands. The bishops are to refuse a man because he is illiterate. Undoubtedly it is possible that there are certain marginal cases with respect to which one bishop would say: "This is a degree of illiteracy which mates the clergyman quite unfit to exercise his duties;" another bishop might say "This is a doubtful case, but, on the whole, I do not feel justified in refusing presentation." That condition of things must always exist; but I am firmly convinced that those who are afraid that the bishops will use their power harshly, and that in a doubtful case they will give a hostile rather than a favourable judgment, entirely mistake the conduct which usually commends itself to the bishops, and certainly are erecting those gentlemen into a species of imaginary tyrants, for which there is no warrant, so far as I know, in historical fact. Then there comes the more vexed question as to whether we should, or should not, have imitated and followed the Bill of my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Warwick and Leamington, which provided either directly in form, or indirectly by rule, that the hearing before the bishop should be in the nature of a judicial operation, publicly held, and in which the gentleman whoso case is in question and those who think him unfit should have, as it were, a locus standi before an open court, when the whole question may be threshed out. I quite admit that our Bill does not aim at that object. I quite admit that we do not desire to assimilate the administrative responsibility of the bishop to the action of a court of law, my hon. Friend says, "How novel!" My hon. Friend is wrong. Our process is a process which has been in operation in the Church of England from time immemorial, and it is not we who have introduced a novelty, but my hon. and learned Friend the Member for Warwick and Leamington, who, in his Bill, did pro- pose, rightly or wrongly an entirely new departure. Now, let me say at once, in regard to that matter, that I am conscious there is a considerable weight of authority against the view which the Government have taken. I am quite aware that two Commissions at least have rather suggested that a different course should be adopted, but I believe that, in the interests of the presentee himself, the plan which we have selected is the one which is most likely to do most justice, to work most smoothly, most effectually, and most successfully to avoid unnecessary scandals. If you try to turn the bishop into a judge, sitting in a public court, observe what anomalies necessarily follow. In the first place, the bishop would to expected to make some preliminary inquiry into the case himself—not, I think, a very desirable preliminary on the part of a judge sitting as the judge upon a case. You expect the bishop, in other words, to both prepare the case and sit in judgment upon it. Further, it is contemplated, as I understand, that a public sitting should not absolutely exclude a private conference with the presentee—a conference which the bishop and the presentee might hope would smooth away all difficulties, and lead to a settlement of the question without any further public proceeding. But surely there will arise great inconvenience in asking the bishop not only to make inquiries into the truth or untruth of rumours which may have come to his ears, but also to expect him to ask the accused, if that is the word which may be employed, to come and talk the matter over with him; and then, after all these steps have been gone through, to deliver judgment with regard to the case. And as if those were not a sufficient number of anomalies, I think there is this further anomaly in the alternative plan—the plan we have not adopted—that the man who has first made private inquiry into the case, who has then seen the accused, and who has then sat in judgment upon the accused, has an appeal against him, the result of which appeal might be that he, the judge of the Court of first instance, might be cast in damages. That is an accumulation of anomalies which I should see with reluctance introduced into this Measure. I think our plan of taking the practice as we find it, leaving the bishop to exercise what I may call an administrative responsibility like that which a great official has to exercise when he endorses or rejects some appointment made by a person lower in authority, is the right course. Put every safeguard in your Bill which may prevent the harsh exercise of the responsibility; give a cheap and effective appeal from his decision, as we have done in this Bill, but do not attempt to turn the bishop into a judge in the court of first instance, especially as you throw upon him all these other and inconsistent duties which I have ventured to enumerate to the House. These are very shortly, but not completely, the reasons which have made the Government prefer the form of Bill which we have brought forward, to that Bill which was read without a Division a second time on Wednesday. But let me say that, in our view, this is not an essential part of the Bill. It will be threshed out upstairs, and, if the decision of the Grand Committee is clearly against us, we should be quite ready to adopt the alternative proposal, and, in any case, we should not regard it as vital to the Bill. We have brought the Measure forward in the form which recommends itself to us, but we are perfectly ready to adopt suggestions both in the important matter on which I have addressed the House and also in regard to subordinate questions that may arise. Under these circumstances, I do not only venture to hope that we may now shorten our Debate, and, without a Division, read the Bill a second time, but that its path through the Grand Committee and through its subsequent stages in this House may be as smooth as the Debate this evening gives us every reason to hope and expect it will be.
I hope I may be pardoned for saying a few words upon this Measure, because it is one which is of very great interest, I think I may say, in almost every parish in England, and especially in the country districts, one of which I have the honour to represent. It has been said on the other side in the course of this Debate that much interest is not felt in this Bill, and that it has been for that reason unduly hurried on, and without adequate notice. I am inclined to think it would be rather difficult to find adequate grounds for any such contention, because, after all, this subject is a part of Church reform; it has been inquired into, if I am not much mistaken, by more than one Commission and by Committees of this House; and Bills partly founded upon the reports of those Commissions have been from time to time debated in this House and sent to Committees upstairs. That being so, the argument that not sufficient interest is taken in the Bill to justify its introduction is one which I am inclined to think falls to the ground. I go further, and venture to say that the uncertainty that prevails upon the future of the law is one which ought to be terminated as soon as possible, both in the interests of the clergy of the Church of England, of the patrons of livings, and of any possible future presentees. The evils of the unreformed condition of the Church in these matters are patent and notorious to those who live in country districts. My only regret is that this Bill does not go further, but I am unable to see that that can be deemed an adequate ground for refusing to support a Bill which may not go far enough, but which, in any case, is a Measure of Reform. The only question which I think we on this side of the House ought to consider is this: Is this Bill a reform, or is it not? We may be of opinion that the Disestablishment and Disendowment of the Church of England would be a good thing. I myself in former days have recorded a vote in favour of that Measure, but it does not occur to me that my individual opinion, or that of any Member of this House, upon that question in the least affects the arguments which relate to this Bill. It is, after all, looking into a very dim future to say that we are not to support a moderate Measure of reform of Church Government, because we hope and believe that at some day religious equality will prevail. Then there is the more forcible and practical argument, that this Bill is a weak Bill, because it only deals with next presentations and does not touch the question of advowsons. I entirely agree with that argument. It is a weak Bill; but why should we, because we think, or at any rate some of us may think, that advowsons ought not to be sold, resist a great step in that direction; because, after all, when you once admit the arguments against the sale of next presentations, you have gone, not only halfway, but three-quarters of the way, towards admitting the arguments against the sale of advowsons themselves. I am ready to admit that that is an argument with which the right hon. Gentleman opposite does not entirely agree, but, if you examine the matter, after all that is the true and logical basis of the argument against the sale of next presentations? You will find it to be this—that any dealing in this matter, by sale, with a matter which is the subject of a trust rather than a property, in the ordinary sense of the word, is objectionable, and if it is objectionable in the case of next presentations, it is equally so—still more so—in the case of advowsons. But whether that argument is admitted or not, I entirely agree with those on the opposite side of the House who claim that, so far as this Measure goes, it is a good and useful Measure of reform, and for that reason I venture to plead for it with those upon this side of the House. Again, I must acknowledge that I listened with silent astonishment to the arguments that were based upon some supposed danger to the Protestant religion. I have yet to learn that it is an integral portion of the Protestant religion that lay patronage should exist. I am quite aware that lay patronage is mixed up with the history of the Protestant religion in a certain way, but is it a page of the history of the Protestant religion, is it a page of the history of the Reformation which we can all read with admiration? I always imagine myself that the essential notion of Protestantism, in regard to Church government, was the notion of democratic Church government by the parishioners, or members of the congregation. As a matter of fact, at the time of the Reformation, in a period, I might almost say, of reform and rapine combined, we know that the opinions of the extreme Protestants were pushed aside. They desired to reorganise the Church upon a democratic basis, just as, by others, it was attempted to reorganise it upon an episcopalian basis. After- wards a third party came in, neither the bishop nor the congregation—namely, the patron of the living, who, at the present day, has practically ousted both the congregation and the bishop. There are two essential notions of Church government. You may have an episcopal Church, or a real democratic Church; but the Church of England is an episcopal Church, and we, must take that Church as we find it. It is not for us, who hold, perhaps, rather extreme Protestant and democratic views upon these questions, by a side-wind to try to push our opinions into an organisation which has been based, for a long time, and will continue to be based for a long time, upon episcopacy. It may be possible, and I hope it is so, that we may do something to recognise the rights of the oppressed parishioner. The hon. Member for Warwick and Leamington had a most useful clause in his Bill, which took only a moderate step in the direction of recognising the rights of the parishioner. We are not debarred, in voting for this Bill, from taking advantage of that clause, because, if I understand the right hon. Gentleman correctly, both these Bills will go to the Standing Committee on Law, and it will be possible to take clauses from one Bill and insert them in the other; or, rather, to take the two Bills together, and out of those two Bills to make a combined Measure. I hope that something of that kind may be done. There was one matter which was dealt with in the Bill of the hon. Member for Warwick and Leamington, which, I think, is not dealt with in this Bill. It is a matter which, I believe, the great majority of this House would desire to see dealt with—namely, that there should be some means of expropriating an unsatisfactory clergyman after he has been inducted into a living. I had these questions very forcibly brought before my mind some time ago by circumstances in my own county. A gentleman was put into a living, who proved to be a very unsatisfactory person, and finally he was indicted at the quarter sessions for organising a prizefight. Fortunately for him, the ways of grand juries being mysterious, the charge was thrown out, probably on the ground that a clergyman who organised a prizefight must be a good fellow. Afterwards the same clergyman was found to have turned the lower-room of his vicarage into something which might be described as a butcher's shop. A short time afterwards he was induced to resign the living, But can hon. Members imagine, in a great Church organisation, a more absurd state of things than this, in which a gentleman of this kind, who acknowledged his own unfitness to perform the duties of his living, should have been able to defy his parishioners and the bishop until he was removed only by a certain amount of friendly good nature on his own part? I look upon this Bill as a useful Measure of Church reform as far as it goes, and must protest against the arguments used against hon. Members on this side of the House, that they desire to keep up the abuses of the Church in order to strengthen the case against it. Sir, I do not think anything was said by any hon. Member on this side of the House to justify that charge being made.
I am quite alive to the scandals caused by the system of preferment in the Church of England, but these are comparatively not numerous; they are sporadic, and they do not influence the whole system of the Church of England in the way in which this Bill is likely to do. The Bill is framed upon the idea that greater powers should be given to the bishops, that they should be in the position of the officers of an army, from whom the clergy should take their marching orders. Sir, we know that a wave of sacerdotalism is sweeping over the Church at the present moment. Sacerdotalism is a fashionable doctrine, and there is scarcely a bishop on the bench who does not represent that point of view. That being so, any addition to the powers of the bishops must give rise to a suspicion that that form of doctrine will be unduly favoured at the expense of what is generally called Evangelicalism. That, I think, is a serious and a real fear, and does not deserve the gibes levelled at it by the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury. It is of the greatest importance that persons subject to any jurisdiction should have confidence in the impartiality of that tribunal. There are bishops and bishops. There are many bishops on the Bench in whose judgment and impartiality and Christian feeling both clergy and laity have the greatest confidence; but, unfortunately, you cannot always guarantee that you will have your beneficent despot. It is said that despotism is the best form of government if you can always ensure the beneficent despot. But it is conceivable that there may be men of hasty temper and keen partisans who would be anything but beneficent despots to any clergyman who was unfortunate enough to come under their displeasure. Reference has been made to the case of the diocese of St. Asaph, and I venture to contradict the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury when he said that the whole of the laity unanimously supported the bishop. There are two conspicuous Churchmen, his own supporters, who did not—the hon. Member for Denbigh and the hon. Member for the Montgomery Boroughs. Sir, I disclaim the charge that we on this side of the House wish to continue the present scandals of the Church with a view to bringing about Disestablishment and Disendowment. I believe Disestablishment and Disendowment would be the best thing for the Church, but I wish to bring it about only by fair arguments. If any suggestion is made that in opposing this Bill I desire to continue clerical scandals with a view to providing myself with arguments against the Establishment, I must utter my protest.
There are two Bills before the House on the subject of Benefices, and it seems to me that the Government Measure does not altogether embody the views of the Church of England as a whole. There is a section of the Church of England in whose view the present Bill is objectionable; first, because it is a Measure for giving increased power to the bishops—and the bishops, in certain directions, have too much power already—and secondly, because there is no provision in the Bill for the ecclesiastical supremacy of the Crown as the head of the Church in this country. I shall endeavour to point out the reason why these two points appear to be objectionable. Clergymen who have been condemned by a bishop are given the right of appeal to the archbishop, instead of to the Crown, as would be done under the Clergy Discipline Act of 1892. That Act has already been most beneficial in getting rid of objectionable men, whom it was advisable to eliminate from the Church; but why should not the machinery of that Act have been placed in the Measure now before the House, instead of creating an entirely new Court, consisting practically of the archbishop? Another matter, which seems to me to be of very great importance in this Bill, I would venture to point out for the consideration of the House. One of the reasons why a bishop may object to institute a clergyman is for his misconduct. What is misconduct? Is it anything the bishop chooses to define as misconduct? And is the bishop's definition of misconduct in 1898 to be the same in 1900? Sir, this Bill places powers almost of life and death in the hands of the bishop. He is to be the judge, and is to define the offence under
AYES.
| ||
| Allen, Wm. (Newc.-under-L.) | Carson, Rt. Hon. Edward | Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Edw. |
| Allhusen, Augustus Hy. Eden | Cavendish, R. F. (N. Lancs.) | Fergusson, Rt. Hn. Sir J. (Mncr.) |
| Allison, Robert Andrew | Cawley, Frederick | Finlay, Sir Robert Bannatyne |
| Ascroft, Robert | Cayzer, Sir Chas. William | Firbank, Joseph Thomas |
| Asher, Alexander | Cecil, Lord Hugh | Fisher, William Hayes |
| Asquith, Rt. Hn. Herbert Henry | Chaloner, Captain R. G. W. | Fison, Frederick William |
| Atkinson, Rt. Hon. John | Chamberlain, Rt. Hn. J. (Birm.) | FitzGerald, Sir R. U. Penrose |
| Baden-Powell, Sir Geo. Smyth | Chamberlain, J. Austin (Worc'r) | Fitzmaurice, Lord Edmond |
| Bagot, Capt. J. FitzRoy | Charrington, Spencer | Flannery, Fortescue |
| Bailey, James (Walworth) | Clare, Octavius Leigh | Fletcher, Sir Henry |
| Baillie, Jas. E. B. (Inverness) | Cochrane, Hn. Thos. H. A. E. | Forster, Henry William |
| Baird, John Geo. Alexander | Coghill, Douglas Harry | Galloway, Wm. Johnson |
| Balcarres, Lord | Collings, Rt. Hon. Jesse | Garfit, William |
| Baldwin, Alfred | Colomb, Sir Jno. Chas. Ready | Gedge, Sydney |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. A. J. (Manch'r.) | Colston, Chas. Edw. H. Athole | Gibbs, Hn. A. G. H. (C. of Lond.) |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. Grld W. (Leeds) | Compton, Lord Alwyne | Gibbs, Hn. Vicary (St. Albans) |
| Banbury, Frederick George | Cook, Fred Lucas (Lambeth) | Giles, Charles Tyrrell |
| Barnes, Frederic Gorell | Cooke, C. W. Radcliffe (Heref'd.) | Gold, Charles |
| Barry, Francis Tress (Windsor) | Cox, Robert | Gordon, Hon. John Edward |
| Bartley, George C. T. | Cozens-Hardy, Herbt. Hardy | Gorst, Rt. Hon. Sir John Eldon |
| Barton, Dunbar Plunket | Cranborne, Viscount | Goschen, George J. (Sussex) |
| Bathurst, Hon. Allen Benj. | Cripps, Charles Alfred | Goulding, Edward Alfred |
| Beach, Rt. Hn. Sir M. H. (Bristl.) | Cubitt, Hon. Henry | Graham, Henry Robert |
| Begg, Ferdinand Faithful | Curzon, Rt. Hn. G. N. (Lanc. S. W.) | Gray, Ernest (West Ham) |
| Bemrose, Sir Henry Howe | Curzon, Viscount (Bucks.) | Green, Walford D. (Wednesbry.) |
| Bigwood, James | Dalbiac, Col. Philip Hugh | Greene, W. Raymond (Cambs.) |
| Bill, Charles | Dalrymple, Sir Charles | Greville, Captain |
| Billson, Alfred | Dickson-Poynder, Sir John P. | Gull, Sir Cameron |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Dixon-Hartland, Sir F. Dixon | Gunter, Colonel |
| Boscawen, Arthur Griffith- | Dorington, Sir John Edward | Hall, Sir Charles |
| Bowles, Capt. H. F. (Midsx.) | Douglas, Rt. Hon A. Akers- | Halsey, Thomas Frederick |
| Brodrick, Rt. Hon. St. John | Drage, Geoffrey | Hamilton, Rt. Hon. Lord George |
| Brookfield, A. Montagu | Duckworth, James | Hanbury, Rt. Hn. Rbt. Wm. |
| Brown, Alexander H. | Duncombe, Hon. Hubert V. | Hanson, Sir Reginald |
| Bryce, Rt. Hon. James | Edwards, Gen. Sir Jas. Bevan | Hardy, Laurence |
| Bucknill, Thos. Townsend | Ellis, John Edward (Notts.) | Hare, Thomas Leigh |
| Carmichael, Sir T. D. Gibson- | Fardell, Sir T. George | Harwood, George |
which his unfortunate subordinate clergy are to suffer. Parliament is asked to create penalties for offences which the bishop is to define from time to time, and to confer upon him the powers of enforcing them. This is a serious objection to the present Bill. I do not know how far the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury is prepared to proceed in this matter, but I think the two points I have mentioned should receive attention in any comprehensive Measure laid before the House intended to protect the clergy of the Church of England from the power of the bishops being exercised too harshly against them, and from which they have not power to protect themselves.
Question put—
"That the Bill be now read a second time."
The House divided:—Ayes 243; Noes 57.
| Hermon-Hodge, Rbt. Trotter | M'Ewan, William | Sidebottom, Wm. (Derbysh.) |
| Hill, Rt. Hn. Lord Arth. (Down) | Malcolm, Ian | Simeon, Sir Barrington |
| Hoare, Edw. Brodie (Hampstd.) | Maple, Sir John Blundell | Sinclair, Capt. John (Forfarsh.) |
| Hoare, Samuel (Norwich) | Mappin, Sir Fredk. Thorpe | Skewes-Cox, Thomas |
| Houston, R. P. | Massey-Mainwaring, Hn. W. F. | Smith, Abel (Herts) |
| Howard, Joseph | Mellor, Col. (Lancashire) | Smith, Abel H. (Christchurch) |
| Howell, William Tudor | Melville, Beresford Valentine | Smith, Jas. Parker (Lanarks.) |
| Hozier, Hon. James Henry Cecil | Milward, Colonel Victor | Smith, Hon. W. F. D. (Strand) |
| Hubbard, Hon. Evelyn | Monckton, Edward Philip | Stanley, Henry M. (Lambeth) |
| Hudson, George Bickersteth | Montagu, Hon. J. Scott (Hants.) | Stevenson, Francis S. |
| Hutton, John (Yorks. N. R.) | Moon, Edward Robert Pacey | Stone, Sir Benjamin |
| Jeffreys, Arthur Frederick | More, Robert Jasper | Strauss, Arthur |
| Jessel, Capt. Herbt. Merton | Morrell, George Herbert | Sturt, Hon. Humphry Napier |
| Johnston, William (Belfast) | Morton, Arthur H. A. (Deptf'd.) | Talbot, Lord E. (Chichester) |
| Johnstone, John H. (Sussex) | Mount, William George | Talbot, Rt. Hn J. G. (Oxf'd Univ.) |
| Kay-Shuttleworth, Rt. Hn. Sir U. | Muntz, Philip A. | Tennant, Harold John |
| Kearley, Hudson E. | Murray, Rt. Hn. A. Grhm (Bute | Thornton, Percy M. |
| Kenyon, James | Murray, Chas. J. (Coventry) | Tomlinson, Wm. Edw. Murray |
| Kimber, Henry | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath) | Tritton, Charles Ernest |
| King, Sir Henry Seymour | Nicol, Donald Ninian | Valentia, Viscount |
| Kitson, Sir James | Northcote, Hon. Sir H. Stafford | Verney, Hon. Richard Greville |
| Knowles, Lees | Nussey, Thomas Willans | Vincent, Col. Sir C. E. Howard |
| Lafone, Alfred | Perks, Robert William | Wallace, Robt. (Edinburgh) |
| Laurie, Lieut.-General | Platt-Higgins, Frederick | Wallace, Robert (Perth) |
| Lawrence, Sir Edw. (Cornwall) | Pollock, Harry Frederick | Walton, Jno. Lawson (Leeds, S.) |
| Lawrence, Wm. F. (Liverpool) | Priestley, Sir W. Over'nd (Edin.) | Wanklyn, James Leslie |
| Leigh-Bennett, Henry Currie | Pryce-Jones, Edward | Wayman, Thomas |
| Leighton, Stanley | Purvis, Robert | Webster, Sir R. E. (I. of W.) |
| Llewelyn, Sir Dillwyn-(Swnsea) | Rasch, Major Frederic Carne | Welby, Lieut.-Col. A. C. E. |
| Lockwood, Lieut.-Col. A. R. | Reid, Sir Robert T. | Wharton, Rt. Hn. Jno. Lloyd |
| Loder, Gerald Walter Erskine | Rickett, J. Compton | Whiteley, George (Stockport) |
| Long, Col. Chas. W. (Evesham) | Ridley, Rt. Hn. Sir Matthew W. | Whiteley, H. (Ashton-under-L.) |
| Long, Rt. Hon. Walter (Lpl.) | Robertson, Herbert (Hackney) | Whitmore, Charles Algernon |
| Lopes, Hy. Yarde Buller | Robson, Wm. Snowdon | Williams, Jos. Powell- (Birm.) |
| Lowe, Francis William | Roche, Hon. Jas. (East Kerry) | Willox, Sir John Archibald |
| Lowles, John | Rothschild, Baron F. Jas. de | Wills, Sir William Henry |
| Loyd, Archie Kirkman | Round, James | Wilson, John (Govan) |
| Lucas-Shadwell, William | Royds, Clement Molyneux | Wodehouse, Edmd. R. (Bath) |
| Luttrell, Hugh Fownes | Russell, Gen. F. S. (Cheltenham) | Woodhouse, Sir J. T. (Hudrsfld) |
| Lyttelton, Hon. Alfred | Savory, Sir Joseph | Wortley, Rt. Hon. C. B. Stuart- |
| Macartney, W. G. Ellison | Schwann, Charles E. | Younger, William |
| Macdona, John Cumming | Seely, Charles Hilton | |
| Maclean, James Mackenzie | Seton-Karr, Henry | TELLERS FOR THE AYES—
|
| MacNeill, John Gordon Swift | Sharpe, William Edward T. | Sir William Walrond and |
| M'Arthur, Charles (Liverpool) | Shaw-Stewart, M. H. (Renfrew) | Mr. Anstruther. |
NOES.
| ||
| Allan, William (Gateshead) | Gourley, Sir Edw. Temperley | Priestley, Brigg (Yorks.) |
| Austin, Sir John (Yorkshire) | Holburn, J. G. | Roberts, John Bryn (Eifion) |
| Bainbridge, Emerson | Humphreys-Owen, Arthur C. | Samuel, J. (Stockton-on-Tees) |
| Baker, Sir John | Jones, Wm. (Carnarvonshire) | Sandys, Lieut.-Col. Thos. Myles |
| Barlow, John Emmott | Leuty, Thomas Richmond | Shaw, Chas. Edw. (Stafford) |
| Bayley, Thos. (Derbyshire) | Lewis, John Herbert | Sullivan, Donal (Westmeath) |
| Bolton, Thomas Dolling | Lough, Thomas | Sullivan, T. D. (Donegal, W.) |
| Brigg, John | Lyell, Sir Leonard | Thomas, Abel (Carmarthen, E.) |
| Broadhurst, Henry | MacAleese, Daniel | Thomas, Alf. (Glamorgan, E.) |
| Burt, Thomas | M'Kenna, Reginald | Warner, Thos. Courtenay T. |
| Caldwell, James | M'Laren, Chas. Benjamin | Wedderburn, Sir William |
| Clark, Dr. G. B. (Caithness-shre) | M'Leod, John | Whittaker, Thomas Palmer |
| Clough, Walter Owen | Maddison, Fred. | Wilson, Jos. H. (Middl'sbrough) |
| Doogan, P. C. | ||
| Dunn, Sir William | Morton, Edw. J. C. (Dvnpt.) | Woodall, William |
| Ellis, Thos. Ed. (Merionethsh.) | Norton, Capt. Cecil William | Woods, Samuel |
| Evans, Samuel T. (Glamorg'n) | Oldroyd, Mark | Yoxall, James Henry |
| Fenwick, Charles | Pease, Joseph A. (Northumb.) | |
| Ferguson, R. C. Munro (Leith) | Pickersgill, Edward Hare | TELLERS FOR THE NOES—
|
| Foster, Sir Walter (Derby Co.) | Pinkerton, John | Mr. Brynmor Jones and Mr. Spicer. |
| Goddard, Daniel Ford | Price, Robert John | |
Bill read a Second time, and, on the motion of the First Lord of the Treasury, referred to the Grand Committee of Law.
Supply
Considered in Committee.
(In the Committee.)
[The CHAIRMAN of WAYS and MEANS, Mr. J. W. LOWTHER, in the Chair.]
Civil Services And Revenue Department (Sypplementary), Estimates, 1897–8
Motion made and Question proposed—
"That a Supplementary sum, not exceeding £2810, be granted to Her Majesty, to defray the Charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March, 1898, for Expenditure in connection with certain Public Works, and for improved Communications, and other purposes, within the Highlands and Islands of Scotland, including a Grant in Aid."
Before we can adopt this Vote I think we should be supplied with some information. I understand a new policy is to be begun, and that Parliament has had no information, as to this Vote. Before we vote this money we must know something about the body that is going to have the control over the money. There are two items—(a) Steamer Communication, £1,325; (e) Congested Districts (Scotland) Board, Grant-in-aid, £1,485. With reference to (a) I want to know for what special service you want this money; whether it will end in March. With reference to (e), I want to know, first, whether it will end in March, or whether you have reconsidered the question since the change was made last year, when the Vote was about £36,000. It was reduced last year £25,500, and this was one of the reductions. I suppose the new Body which is going to control this money has reconsidered the matter, and that they are carrying on for the rest of the financial year. I may say, Sir, I know what the service is, because, to a large extent, this money is used for supporting a monopoly, which is very bad for the Highlands. With regard to the second portion of the Vote—Congested Districts (Scotland) Board, Grant-in-aid—I take it, Mr. Lowther, that this is a sum devoted now to the Congested Districts of Scotland Board, because the Highlands and Islands Vote is not again to appear upon the Estimate. The body that has had the control of this and the other improvements is to cease to exist, and the new Congested Districts of Scotland Board are to take over the liability of the old Board. Now, I object to that. I will tell you why. Parliament has given sanction to the Grant, and for several years this Board—the old Highland Board—has been carrying out these improvements, and I am not at all sure that this £1,485 will complete this matter. Therefore I object to this Congested Districts Board taking over the liabilities of the old Board, and the reason why I object to it is this, because this Congested Districts Board is a Board for a special purpose, and when you vote this money, £15,000 of the money, at any rate, has to come from Scotland's own money, Scotland's share of the equivalent Grant. Now, I object to your transferring any further liability from the Imperial Exchequer to Scotland's share of the equivalent Grant, especially when you are now proposing to give £730,000 to Ireland. I object to any portion of the Scotch Estimates paid by the Imperial Exchequer being transferred, or any liability being transferred to this Congested Districts Board, because it has to get the larger portion of its money out of Scotland's own share. I want to know from the Lord Advocate—before anything further is done—I want to get some information with reference to the new policy, and, secondly, what has to be done—whether the new Congested Districts Board are going to take over all the old liabilities of the West Highlands Committee, and whether, out of this £35,000 (£20,000 voted by Parliament, £15,000 taken from our share of the Grant), that is to be paid for out of the Imperial source, is now to be paid for out of the middle source. Last year it was £25,500 plus this Supplementary Estimate, but last year it is £36,000, so that while you are giving us on the one hand and claiming to be very generous to the West Highlands of Scotland, you are writing off what was £26,700 this year and £37,000 last year. That is the way you treat Scotland generally; while you pretend to give her something on the one hand you are taking it back with the other hand. Now this Vote means that the liability of the old Highlands and Islands Commission is now to be turned over to the Congested Districts (Scotland) Board. I want to know from the Lord Advocate, before we vote this money, whether all the old liabilities and all the debts performed by the Highlands and Islands Commission are now to be transferred to this Congested Districts Board?
I certainly shall be glad to answer any question put to me upon this Vote, but it must be recollected that there is no question of general policy raised on this Supplementary Estimate. As far as the steamer communication is concerned, what happened was this: There was a steamer expenditure. There had been a reduction made of £10,800. In consequence of that reduction a promise was obtained from the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Accordingly, there was another Departmental Committee appointed. In the meantime, in order that there should be no lack of the steamer service, it was considered better to go on with the old service. The whole question will be taken up upon the Report of the Committee. Then, as regards the other item, this again, so far as I can discover, has nothing to do with general policy. As to the Carloway Road, a sum of £15,000 was, as the hon. Gentleman knows, fixed by Act of Parliament to be spent out of moneys provided by Parliament, that was to say, year by year, sums were voted to be expended on this road. But, as the hon. Member also knows, there was an unfortunate miscalculation, and there were troubles with the contractor. I am glad to say that these troubles have now been, to a very large extent, met, and that the contractor has been settled with. This sum of £1,485 represents the unexpended portion of the amount voted for the Carloway Road; and, accordingly, as road-making has very much to do with the work of the Congested Districts Board, it has been thought convenient that the item should be transferred to that body. The note in the Estimates really explains the whole matter. The money is to be paid over as a grant-in-aid to the Congested Districts Board, who will undertake to spend the whole amount on the construction of the road. As to the question of policy—whether the Board will do more than spend that particular money—I will say nothing, but, at all events, this particular money will not be diverted from the special purpose to which Parliament intended that it should be applied.
With regard to the money that is to be handed over to the Congested Districts Board, I agree that there is a question of policy involved, because the money is derived actually from a sum voted for a specific purpose by this House. We were told that the £20,000 which was given last year to the Congested Districts Board was given for the special purpose of endeavouring to meet cases of distress, but now it turns out that we are to give £20,000 with one hand, and that, on the other hand, there is to be deducted a sum to close the account for the Highlands and Islands, which this year amounted to £28,000.
I never said that.
But there is a certain amount which Parliament undertook to pay on the Carloway Road, and this is the balance of unexpended money which the Act of Parliament allocated for the purpose of finishing that road. There can be no question as to that.
The hon. Gentleman will pardon me for again interrupting him. He will see in the Act that Parliament promised to give £15,000 towards the Carloway Road, but he will look in vain in the Act for any obligation on the part of the Government to finish that road.
We know that that is all the money the expenditure of which was actually authorised, but surely the experience of the right hon. Gentleman with regard to public money is that the first sum named for a work like this is never sufficient, and that we always have to come back for more money to finish it. The right hon. Gentleman himself even gave us his reasons why the road would cost more than the original Estimate, for he told us that troubles had been met with after the starting of the road—troubles with the contractors, for instance—which rendered the undertaking a much more laborious one than had at the outset been contemplated. The right hon Gentleman has provided us with the very reason why the £15,000 first provided was not sufficient, and would not be nearly sufficient to complete the road; and, that being so, what is proposed? You propose to hand over to the Congested Districts Board the unexpended sum of some £1,500—and for what? In order that that Board may finish the road. But what is the use of laying out £1,500 to complete the road if it is not in a proper state to work? It is obvious that if the road is to be of use it must be finished, and finished in a proper manner. Now, what do you propose to do? The Secretary to the Treasury knows very well that this Highlands and Islands account is to be closed, and you propose to hand over your obligations, with the little balance you have in hand, to the Congested Districts Board. I venture to say that the people of Scotland would be very foolish if they were to accept money on these terms, yet these are the terms stated in that Estimate, which says we are going to close the Highlands and Islands account, and are going to hand over this remaining obligation. I should like to know from the Lord Advocate—and he ought to be able to tell us—what is the estimated cost of finishing the road; because if the road is to cost, as I believe it will cost, several thousands to make it of any use whatever, then what earthly good is if for you to hand over this small balance to the Congested Districts Board, and to lay upon that body the obligation of finishing the road? I say that the Government, having undertaken by Act of Parliament the laying out and finishing of the road, ought to lay it out and finish it; and I object altogether to their action in shifting the obligation to another body which was established for a different purpose altogether. We say, "Keep the balance in the hands of the Imperial Treasury, and go on and finish the road;" and I confess I do not think it any answer whatever for the Lord Advocate to say that by Act of Parliament the Government only agreed to give £15,000. I repeat that, as every per- son of experience in this House knows, works of this sort are never finished for the sum first fixed. Did you finish Peterhead Harbour, for instance—or any of your other works, for that matter—for the amount originally estimated? This money was meant for the special purpose of relieving distress in the Highlands and Islands, and yet you are attempting here to hand it over to the Congested Districts Board to do what it was never meant to do. It was meant for a different purpose altogether, and I say that out of Imperial funds you ought to go on and finish the road as you began it, and leave the Congested Districts Board alone to carry on their own work. I shall certainly vote against the transfer of this money to the Congested Districts Board.
I do not feel competent to enter into the merits of the road, or to say whether it ought to be finished, but I have a very much more serious objection to bring against item E in the Vote, which in effect raises the question whether this House has complete control over the public expenditure of the United Kingdom. If the members of the Committee will read the vote they will see that the £15,000 voted, year by year, under this head, will have been expended before the 31st March, 1898, with the exception of £1,485. It is proposed to re-vote this unexpended balance as a grant to the Congested Districts (Scotland) Board. The paragraph is frank, though, indeed, it is almost brutal in its frankness. It really means, of course, that expenditure for next year may be put upon this year, the reason being, as we may surmise, that this year there is a very large surplus, while next year there may be none at all. That, anyway, is the naked statement, that this £1,485 which we are now asked to vote will not be expended in the same financial year, that it will not, in fact, be surrendered—which is entirely contrary to the law—but that it will be handed over to next year for the diminution of the Estimates of next year. I have no objection whatever to this Vote if it had been brought forward, as it should have been, in the Estimate for next year; but I again protest against the Vote as it stands at present, and I trust I shall get a better answer from the Lord Advocate than I had the other night, upon a similar but less serious instance of this kind, from the Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. Let me lay down to the House—I am sure it will not be disputed—what is the financial practice of the House and the law of the land: That sums voted in one year must be either expended in that one year, or must, at the end of the year, be surrendered and applied in reduction of the National Debt. It is perfectly true that a grant-in-aid may be made in such general terms, that the purpose for which it is granted may be satisfied by the largest possible Vote to the Comptroller and Auditor General, when he asks whether the money has been directed to its special object, for it is an essential condition of every grant in this House that it shall be made for a particular purpose; and it is an essential point of the duty of the Comptroller and Auditor General to pursue the grant, and see that it has been expended for the purpose specified, and no other purpose whatever. The purpose specified is, of course, only to be gathered from the Estimates, and the terms used by them; and those are the terms which the Comptroller and Auditor General usually follows when he pursues an item. It may be that a grant-in-aid may be voted in terms of an Estimate in very general terms, but, on the other hand, a grant-in-aid may be so specific—so limited to particular purposes—that it is impossible that it should be applied to any other purpose than that for which it was intended, and in that case it is provided that if any balance remains over at the end of the financial year, that balance should be—and must be, under the Act—surrendered, and applied to the reduction of the National Debt. The Vote under discussion is for a specific purpose—it is for the making of a particular road—and I repeat that it is the duty of the Comptroller and Auditor General, when he comes to deal with this £1,485, to ask whether it has been expended upon that particular road in this particular year—that is to say, in the year ending 31st March next—and if not, it is his duty to see that any unexpended balance is surrendered to go towards the reduction of the National Debt. I am aware that the Treasury affect to take—for I cannot suppose that they really hold it—the view that there is some magic in the words "grant-in-aid," which differentiates such a Vote from any other. There is no more magic in the words, "grant-in-aid" than in the word "Consolidation." [Mr. HANBURY: "Hear, hear!"] I am glad to hear my right hon. Friend the Secretary to the Treasury signify his agreement with that statement by his cheer, and therefore I need not deal with that point further. A grant-in-aid, therefore, is subject to the ordinary rules, which are that a grant for a specific object must be followed by the Comptroller and Auditor General, and must be spent on a specific object in a specific year. Otherwise it is not appropriated by the Appropriation Act, and no one has any authority to spend money which is so unappropriated. It is, indeed, provided by Act of Parliament, that by the end of the year the Comptroller and Auditor General shall make out an account of the unexpended balances which have then to be surrendered, and must go in alleviation of the National Debt. The question, then, is whether you can carry over to one year an unexpended balance from the previous year. If there is any authority to do that under any Act of Parliament, I should like to know of that authority, but I believe that there is no such authority to carry over to next year a grant which Parliament has sanctioned for this year only for a specific object; and I go further. I say that if this practice is to obtain of asking for grants-in-aid, and of claiming the right not to expend them during the year for the purposes for which Parliament has allotted them, but to carry them over, and thus relieve next year of its proper expenditure at a cost of the present year, the control of Parliament over the expenditure of the country will be directly interfered with, and the full opportunity of control over the expenditure will be tremendously affected. I have stated the case, as I said at the outset, not on the merits of the Vote, but on the merits of the manner in which the money is asked for. I hold that if this £1,485 is not expended on 31st March, 1898, there is no legal power to keep it in hand beyond that date, but that it must be surrendered and go in diminution of the National Debt. If the right hon. Gentleman, having taken, as I hope he has taken, the advice of the Treasury on this matter, will give us the Treasury views, I shall be very glad.
I do not agree that the expenditure upon the Carloway Road is not a new departure in policy. It represents, at any rate, a partial resurrection of policy, because I understand that the Carloway Road was to be regarded as an abandoned undertaking. This sum of money will, after all, only add a very small portion to the existing road without carrying the whole work to a conclusion. But the road is, as the right hon. Gentleman knows, a matter of very great interest in the part of the world where it is situated, and we should very much like to know whether this grant to the Congested Districts Board is to be taken as an indication that the work will be continued.
said he could not answer the question as to whether the Carloway Road was or was not to be completed. The matter would have to be dealt with by the Congested Districts Board. What they were doing now was to hand over the last portion of the £15,000 which was promised by the Treasury. As to the point raised by the Member for King's Lynn, he had to say that the practice to which he referred was, as he understood from those who had been much longer in the House than he had been, entirely in accordance with the ordinary practice of the Treasury.
said he believed that the Lord Advocate was mistaken in that view. The item, instead of coming into this year's Estimates, really belonged to next year's expenditure. It was an improper proceeding, and it was not consistent with the financial control the House should exercise to take the expenditure of one year out of another. He felt so strongly on the point that he should move the reduction of the Vote by the amount of the item, £1,485.
said that what he understood had taken place was this: that under ordinary circumstances the sum would have appeared as a re-vote in the Estimate of next year, under the Western Highlands Vote; it was proposed to do away with that Vote altogether; the Scottish Office had converted this Vote into a grant-in-aid. This was not in conformity with the decision of the Public Accounts Committee, and was a new departure in financial policy. He would like to have an expression of opinion from the Secretary to the Treasury as to that policy. Had it the approval of the Treasury?
said he thought the proceeding was indefensible. The analogy of the National Gallery grants did not, in his opinion, apply; the money paid to the National Gallery used to be expended year by year, and any that was unexpended was repaid into the Treasury.
said that in regard to the National Gallery grants, the Treasury admitted responsibility for what was a comparatively recent introduction. Formerly, a grant being made to the Trustees of the Gallery, the money had to be expended in the current year or returned, and in the result it was found that sometimes pictures were bought that never should have been bought for the Gallery. Then it was thought that if the money were allowed to accumulate there would be funds for the purchase of really good pictures when they came into the market.
Under what Act was this authorised?
replied that it was under the authority of Parliament in passing Votes for grants-in-aid. As to this particular grant-in-aid, it arose from the fact that there would be no further Highlands and Islands Vote, and it was the proper thing to hand over the balance to the Congested Districts Board, the successor to the present authority. The requirements of the Act would be carried out, and the expenditure would still be under the supervision of the Comptroller and Auditor General.
I do not think it is desirable to have two Divisions in this matter; we can support the hon. Member on other grounds than those he has raised, and also upon the merits of the case. I do not myself desire to move a reduction of the Vote, and, therefore, I shall support the Motion of my hon. Friend. I wish to do so partly on two grounds, but principally on the merits, of the question. It is perfectly clear now, from the answer made by the Secretary to the Treasury, that the reason why this is put in is for the purpose of preventing Parliament from discussing and considering the new departure taken by the Government. All through this Parliament you have the Class 7, Vote 3; all last Parliament you had Class 7, Vote 3; and in the Parliament before that you had another Class 7, Vote 3. Only two of the works performed, I see, are here mentioned. One is steamboat communication. I do not know who is going to take charge of the steamer; it will not appear in future in Class 7, but it may appear in the Post Office Vote, or it may appear somewhere else.
It will appear in the Post Office Vote.
Well, now, we have got here the only opportunity we shall have of considering the proposals of the Government, because the Government in this fashion are now proposing to get rid of the liability and to hand it over to another body. Now, how do matters stand? I say you have in this Parliament, the last Parliament, and in the Parliament before carried out for various reasons a series of improvements in certain districts of Scotland. You have voted during the present year, if this Vote is carried, £28,000. Last year there was about £37,500, and there have been various sums in various years, and there have been various Departments and various grants. Why, Sir, there was one very notorious grant of £4,000 from my own constituency, in respect of which I proposed an Amendment to throw it out; and it was thrown out, and I think it was the only grant that was ever proposed to my constituency. That was some seven or eight years ago. I thought it was a job, and as it was going to my constituency I opposed it, and it was thrown out. I may say that for political purposes my opponent who fought me in 1892 went to the Treasury, and though Parliament had refused the Vote, the Treasury gave the Vote afterwards. Well, what is the position of affairs now? This has been for several years a burden on the Imperial Treasury. During the present Parliament a Bill has been passed for the purpose of relieving the land—the Agricultural Rates Bill—and Scotland required half as an equivalent for educational purposes, and also when you passed your Bill financing County Councils from the Imperial Exchequer. But in each of those cases, beginning from 10 years ago, when the County Councils were assisted, the equivalent of the grant given to Scotland was used by Scotland for entirely different purposes. It seems to me that this last grant from the present Parliament of £15,000 is not to be used for the purpose of reducing rates, but of creating a Congested Board in Scotland, for the purpose of buying land and placing property on it, and doing various works of that kind. There was this proposal of £100,000 which is to run for five years, and the result will be that the Imperial Exchequer will gain by it, and Scotland will lose by it. You help us to do our work in Scotland, but you help us to do it at our own expense. There is actually a proposal to give £750,000 to Ireland for another purpose. Well, of course, it will be passed, because it will be used for the benefit of the landlords.
The hon. Member is departing a very long way from the Carloway road.
Yes, Sir, I am taking a wide view; but to return to the Carloway Road. Apart from all this, it is an unknown and unexpected change which no Scotch Member, as far as I am aware, knew anything about until he got the Estimates yesterday. Now we know what the Government proposals are, and now we have heard stated in the usual blunt English fashion by the Secretary to the Treasury what is the position in which we are placed. You have got this Estimate without a word from the Lord Advocate. This road was brought up by Parliament seven years ago, and it has been ever since more or less a subject of discussion in the House. This Carloway Road is one of the many Measures proposed, not by this Government or by the late Government, but the Government before that, seven years ago. The original Estimate was to be £15,000. I do not know what the experience of the right hon. Gentleman is in reference to original Estimates, but if he looks at all of the original Estimates that we have had from the Treasury during that period, he will
AYES.
| ||
| Abraham, Wm. (Cork, N. E.) | Duckworth, James | Price, Robert John |
| Allan, William (Gateshead) | Ellis, Thos. Ed. (Merionethsh.) | Provand, Andrew Dryburgh |
| Austin, Sir John (Yorkshire) | Evans, Samuel T. (Glamorg'n) | Rickett, J. Compton |
| Baker, Sir John | Fenwick, Charles | Roberts, John Bryn (Eifion) |
| Barlow, John Emmott | Fitzmaurice, Lord Edmond | Roche, Hon. Jas. (Kerry, E.) |
| Bowles, Capt H. F. (Middlesex) | Goddard, Daniel Ford | Samuel, J. (Stockton-on-Tees) |
| Brigg, John | Holburn, J. G. | Shaw, Chas. Edw. (Stafford) |
| Broadhurst, Henry | Jones, David Brynmor (Swnsea) | Shaw, Thomas, (Hawick B.) |
| Bryce, Rt. Hon James | Kilbride, Denis | Sinclair, Capt. Jno. (Forfarsh.) |
| Burns, John | Lewis, John Herbert | Stevenson, Francis S. |
| Caldwell, James | MacAleese, Daniel | Sullivan, Donal (Westmeath) |
| Cameron, Robert (Durham) | MacNeill, Jno. Gordon Swift | Sullivan, T. D. (Donegal, W.) |
| Carvill, Patrick Geo. Hamilton | M'Dermott, Patrick | Tanner, Charles Kearns |
| Clark, Dr. G. B. (Caithness-sh.) | M'Kenna, Reginald | Warner, Thos. Courtenay T. |
| Condon, Thomas Joseph | M'Laren, Chas. Benjamin | Wedderburn, Sir William |
| Crilly, Daniel | M'Leod, John | Williams, Jno. Carvell (Notts.) |
| Curran, Thos (Sligo, S.) | Morton, Edw. J. C. (Dvnpt) | Wilson, Fredk. W. (Norfolk) |
| Dalziel, James Henry | O'Connor, Arthur (Donegal) | Woodall, William |
| Davitt, Michael | Oldroyd, Mark | |
| Dilke, Rt. Hon. Sir Charles | O'Malley, William | TELLERS FOR THE AYES—
|
| Donelan, Captain A. | Perks, Robert William | Mr. Gibson Bowles and Mr. Hedderwick. |
| Doogan, P. C. | Pinkerton, John | |
NOES.
| ||
| Allhusen, Augustus Hy. Eden | Bond, Edward | Colston, Chas. Edw. H. Athole |
| Atkinson, Rt. Hon. John | Boscawen, Arthur Griffith- | Compton, Lord Alwyne |
| Baden-Powell, Sir Geo. Smyth | Brodrick, Rt. Hon. St. John | Cook, Fred Lucas (Lambeth) |
| Bailey, James (Walworth) | Brookfield, A. Montagu | Cooke, C. W. Radcliffe (Heref'd) |
| Baillie, Jas. E. B. (Inverness) | Carlile, William Walter | Corbett, A. Cameron (Glasgow) |
| Balcarres, Lord | Cecil, Lord Hugh | Cotton-Jodrell, Col Edw. T. D. |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. A. J. (Manch'r.) | Chaloner, Captain R. G. W. | Cubitt, Hon. Henry |
| Balfour, Rt. Hn. Grld W. (Leeds) | Chamberlain Rt. Hn. J. (Birm) | Curzon, Rt. Hn. G. N. (Lanc. S. W.) |
| Barnes, Frederic Gorell | Chamberlain, J. Austen (Worc'r) | Curzon, Viscount (Bucks) |
| Bartley, George C. T. | Charrington, Spencer | Dalbiac, Col. Philip Hugh |
| Barton, Dunbar Plunket | Clare, Octavius Leigh | Dalrymple, Sir Charles |
| Bathurst, Hon. Allen Benj | Cochrane, Hn. Thos. H. A. E. | Dorington, Sir John Edward |
| Beach, Rt. Hn. Sir M. H. (Bristl.) | Coghill, Douglas Harry | Douglas, Rt. Hon A. Akers- |
| Bemrose, Sir Henry Howe | Collings, Rt. Hon. Jesse | Duncombe, Hon. Hubert V. |
| Blundell, Colonel Henry | Colomb, Sir Jno. Chas. Ready | Dyke, Rt. Hon. Sir Wm. Hart |
find that in many cases they have been largely exceeded. The Estimate for Dover Harbour, for instance, was £1,900,000, but it jumped up to £3,600,000 in a year. I do not mean to go into details, but it seems to me to be very unfair to place a burden of this kind upon a new Board. It is perfectly clear £15,000 will not meet the case; £25,000 ought to have been voted. For these reasons I support the Amendment.
Question put—
"That Item E (Congested Districts (Scotland) Board, Grants in Aid) be omitted from the proposed Votes."
The Committee divided.—Ayes, 62; Noes, 135.
| Fardell, Sir T. George | Kenyon, James | Murray, Col. Wyndham (Bath) |
| Fellowes, Hon. Ailwyn Edw. | King, Sir Henry Seymour | Platt-Higgins, Frederick |
| Finlay, Sir Robert Bannatyne | Knowles, Lees | Pryce-Jones, Edward |
| Firbank, Joseph Thomas | Lafone, Alfred | Purvis, Robert |
| Fisher, William Hayes | Laurie, Lieut.-General | Robertson, Herbert (Hackney) |
| Fison, Frederick William | Leigh-Bennett, Henry Currie | Rutherford, John |
| Flannery, Fortescue | Llewelyn, Sir Dillwyn- (Swnsea) | Seely, Charles Hilton |
| Forster, Henry William | Long, Col. Chas. W. (Evesham) | Seton-Karr, Henry |
| Galloway, Wm. Johnson | Long, Rt. Hon. Walter (Liverpl.) | Sharpe, William Edward T. |
| Gibbs, Hn. A. G. H. (C. of Lond.) | Lopes, Hy. Yarde Buller | Sidebottom, Wm. (Derbysh.) |
| Giles, Charles Tyrrell | Lowe, Francis William | Skewes-Cox, Thomas |
| Gilliat, John Saunders | Lowles, John | Smith, Abel H. (Christchurch) |
| Gordon, Hon. John Edward | Loyd, Archie Kirkman | Smith, Hon. W. F. D. (Strand) |
| Gorst, Rt. Hon. Sir John Eldon | Lucas-Shadwell, William | Stanley, Lord (Lancs.) |
| Goulding, Edward Alfred | Macartney, W. G. Ellison | Stone, Sir Benjamin |
| Graham, Henry Robert | Macdona, John Cumming | Thornton, Percy M. |
| Gray, Ernest (West Ham) | Maclean, James Mackenzie | Tomlinson, Wm. Edw. Murray |
| Greene, W. Raymond- (Cambs.) | M'Arthur, Charles (Liverpool) | Valentia, Viscount |
| Gull, Sir Cameron | M'Calmont, H. L. B. (Cambs.) | Verney, Hon. Richard Greville |
| Hamilton, Rt. Hon. Lord George | Malcolm, Ian | Vincent, Col. Sir C. E. Howard |
| Hanbury, Rt. Hn. Rbt. Wm. | Marks, Henry H. | Warkworth, Lord |
| Hanson, Sir Reginald | Massey-Mainwaring, Hn. W. F. | Warr, Augustus Frederick |
| Hardy, Laurence | Meysey-Thompson, Sir H. M. | Webster, Sir R. E. (I. of W.) |
| Hermon-Hodge, Rbt. Trotter | Milward, Colonel Victor | Wharton, Rt. Hn. Jno. Lloyd |
| Hill, Rt. Hn. Lord Arth. (Down) | Monckton, Edward Philip | Whiteley, George (Stockport) |
| Hill, Sir Edw. Stock (Brist'l) | ||
| Hoare, Edw. Brodie (Hampstd.) | More, Robert Jasper | Whiteley, H. (Ashton-under-L.) |
| Howard, Joseph | Morrell, George Herbert | Williams, Jos. Powell- (Birm.) |
| Hudson, George Bickersteth | Morton, Arthur H. A. (Deptf'd.) | |
| Hutton, John (Yorks., N. R.) | Muntz, Philip A. | TELLERS FOR THE NOES—
|
| Johnston, William (Belfast) | Murray, Rt. Hn. A. Grhm. (Bute) | Sir William Walrond and Mr. Anstruther. |
| Kemp, George | Murray, Chas. J. (Coventry) |
Original Question put and agreed to.
On the Vote of £44,789, repayment to the Local Loans Fund,
With regard to this Vote, I should like to have some information with regard to Item 6. I see only £237 refers to Scotland. It is some time since these loans were made, and year after year we are writing off so much. The point I want to know is, what is the full extent at the present moment of the outstanding loans, and what assets have to come in in respect of them? Taking this Vote as a whole, we have an extraordinary state of affairs. We have a great many loans granted by the State which are now to be written off to the extent of £44,789. If it were merely a matter of writing off this year or in a series of years, one might pass the matter over without saying very much. But year after year we find we have to write off enormous sums. So far as Scotland is concerned, we find the amount is only £237; then there is an item of £3,600 for Aberbrothwick Harbour, which brings it to this, that upwards of £40,000 of what is to be written off relates to Ireland. Now, I think that is a very serious matter, because we find that local loans are granted by the State, and then the people who receive them are led to believe that if they do not pay, the whole amount will be written off by the State. Here we have to write off a sum of £40,000 for certain loans granted for the extension of public works in Ireland and improvements under the Land Acts. Now you can hardly expect people to pay up their loans when they find their neighbours, who are probably just as well able to pay as they are, do not do so. It is not the loss of the money. That is not very much to a nation which has £100,000,000 a year, and I do not think that any one would have a word to say on the matter if the money had been used to relieve people who were earnestly endeavouring to improve their position on their holdings, because no better application of money could be made; but unfortunately we find that is not so. We find that these sums are given to people who neglect their holdings and get into debt, and who could not in any possible way hope to benefit from the loans. I should like to know how it happens, that in the case of those persons who have holdings, these sums are written off in this manner, because these people have holdings which could be sold. In the case of the fishermen, I do not object to your writing off the loans but in these cases—
I would remind the hon. Member that last Session an Act of Parliament was passed giving power to write off these debts. The only question which arises now is whether the debts are accurately stated.
To an extent that is so. But I submit that when you come to the voting of the money it is quite competent to us, even now, at the last stage, to interpose our verdict. I submit that no Act of Parliament could compel this Committee this Session to vote the money if they were not disposed to do so, and I would ask that explanation from the Secretary to the Treasury.
I did not expect that I should be called upon to go into the particulars of this Vote, because as has been pointed out this is a matter which has been decided by Parliament itself. My hon. Friend is under some misapprehension when he assumes that the mere fact that those loans are written off, the Local Loan Fund causes them to be remitted so far as the persons from whom they are due are concerned. The liability of the persons who ought to re-pay these moneys is in no way affected by this Vote. We do not forego our rights against them in any way, and all steps that can be taken to recover this money we shall take, whether this money is written off or not.
We are quite accustomed to that explanation. We get it every time the matter comes up. But will the right hon. Gentleman tell me how much of the former loans have been actually recovered, because we never hear of any? I rather suspect that once an amount is written off it is writen off for ever. I would like to know if the debt is still kept open again the debtor, exactly how much has been received on former loans. I think that is hardly the explanation to give us when we are resisting a Vote of this character.
There is an item here with regard to the extension and promotion of the Birr and Portrunna Railway. I find it covers an item of £20,000 in respect of the railway which runs through a very poor district of King's County. I wish to suggest to the right hon. Gentleman that if Parliament is willing to forego the repayment in respect of that railway the Treasury also should forego a claim of some £281,000 in connection with the same work for which they hold the guarantee of Baragbreer, which is not in a position to pay, owing entirely to the poverty of the district. Over the head of Baragbreer you are holding a charge which you could not possibly realise, which I think you might forego.
Vote agreed to.
On the Vote of £45,000, Highland Railway Company,
This is a very important Vote which is moved for the first time in the Estimates, and it arises in consequence of the policy which the Government is pursuing in connection with the Highlands. So far as the policy of providing extra communications with the Highlands is concerned, I have always been a supporter of it. I believe it is a good policy for the Highlands that they should be opened up by extra railway communication, and I always find there is distress in the Highlands where there is no railway communication, and, therefore, this policy is one I actively support and approve, the more particularly because the movement in connection with these railway communications with the Highlands practically originated with myself. I was just remarking when the Chancellor of the Exchequer entered the House that there were two islands of Scotland said to be congested, the island of Lewis and the island of Skye; and any money spent in opening up a line of railway in a district not approached or served by a railway is a policy of which I cordially approve. But the Mallaig line had for its objective point the island of Skye, and it is a most important line serving the Island in a very important manner, that has been promoted under subsidies from the Imperial Government, and Lewis is better approached by a new line altogether. Those two lines open up new territories altogether. What is the position of this line. It is a branch of the Highland Railway line and is under the control of the Highland Railway Company, and I think there never was a greater waste of money than to give this £45,000 to the Highland Railway Company, because they would, in their own interest, have promoted and paid for it. I know perfectly well they were prepared to do so, owing to the competition they saw going on. They were prepared in self-defence to make a line from Strome Ferry, down to Kyle of Lochalsh, and for the Government to give them £45,000 to do that which they would have done themselves is an extravagant waste of money. The Government gives a subsidy of £50,000 to the Mallaig line, which is going through a new and very poor territory, and what is this £45,000 to do; to enable the Highland Railway Company to compete with a line which you subsidise. It is for that that you give them £45,000 to continue the line 10 miles further to the coast. At the place where Strome Ferry comes up, there is a very dangerous piece of coast where steamers and other vessels incur great risks, and it is to improve the line of service and extend it to Kyle of Lochalsh that you give this money. Why do you give £45,000 to a company which is paying a 6 per cent. dividend to carry its own line 10 miles further, and for the purpose of building a pier? I cannot conceive a greater waste of public money. So far as the Mallaig line is concerned, that opened up a new district altogether, and could not be made without assistance; nobody else could have made it, and that was a legitimate expenditure of public money; but this company were prepared, in their own interests and self-defence, to make this line, and I would never have given them a copper to extend their own line. What I would have done would have been to have said that, as compensation as regards the Mallaig Railway, I have no objection to your entering to a new line with an entirely new objective point, and if you do that we will give you a subsidy, as we did in the case of the Mallaig line. I think to grant money to enable them to carry their main line down to the coast, and build a harbour in order that they may compete with a new line that you are subsidising, is absurd. I do not think the Chancellor of the Exchequer would have done such a thing, and possibly it will be said that it was done by this side of the House. It might be. I do not recognise that all the virtues are on this side of the House, and all the vices are on that. I can vote with any Government if I think they are right; and if I think they are wrong I can oppose them. I do not like this bandying backwards and forwards. I do not care which Government did it, and if the Liberal Government had been in power when this money was granted I would have protested as strongly then as I do now. This is the only opportunity we have of expressing our opinion in these matters, and I do not think it is right for the Government to say they must follow their predecessors in this matter. They did not follow them in the case of Chitral. Another point I should like to be informed upon is with regard to this subsidy to build a pier at Kyleakin. Will the Chancellor of the Exchequer tell us whether, in his arrangements with the railway company, he has made any provision with regard to that pier; whether, in the case of the harbour, the fishermen can use it for a nominal charge, or whether the railway company, having got this enormous subsidy, can practically charge anything they like? Has any arrangement been made for the use of the pier for such of the general public as may wish to use it? I think it should suggest itself to us that if we are to give such an enormous subsidy as this, we ought to have some little recompense.
The hon. Member has told us rather a long story, but about five years too late. This scheme for the branch of the Highland Railway from Strome Ferry was sanctioned by my predecessor in 1892. At that time several schemes for railway extension in the Highlands had been under the consideration of a Committee and a Commission appointed for that purpose, and subsequently of two Governments, and this was one of the schemes which most commended itself to everybody. Anyone who has been to Strome Ferry will know that it is a very awkward place for the terminus of a railway, and extremely dangerous for fishing vessels and steamers coming in. The right hon. Gentleman the Member for West Monmouthshire made a definite promise to the Highland Railway Company in 1892, on the recommendation of those who had enquired into the matter, that if they would extend their line he would ask Parliament to grant them £45,000 out of a total estimated expense of £180,000. That promise was publicly known to be made, and if the hon. Gentleman opposite desired to take exception to the line he ought to have called attention to the matter long ago. What has happened since? The railway company have constructed that line, and now the hon. Member, in spite of that promise, desires to refuse the £45,000. I confess if I did believe, which I do not, that my predecessor was not justified in making this promise, I do not now think we ought to refuse to grant the money. I quite agree that it is no use grieving over spilt milk. Of course, the money might have been better employed. I think the First Lord of the Treasury, who appointed the Commission, had practically given a pledge in this regard to the Government. This has been before the House three or four times. It had all been previously arranged, and the right hon. Gentleman had to carry out what had been settled. Really the person, I think, who is responsible is the right hon. Gentleman the First herd of the Admiralty, who made all the arrangements and who appointed the Commission to carry out the matter. It is a very difficult question, indeed, to discuss, and I therefore think that this Vote is going to end, and that we may permit it to pass without a Division. The money has been spent, and it seems that though the present Government are ready to do things for the Highlands, yet I think they do not spend the money wisely and well. It was not £100,000, but nearly a quarter of a million, the interest of which we guaranteed for a certain number of years, and looking at the matter from a commercial stand point we have been foolish enough to spend a quarter of a million, and then put our hands in our pockets and give £41,000 to our opponents. Of course, it is undoubtedly a great boon to the Highland Railway. Undoubtedly a certain district got the benefit of that railway, because by it the distance to Glasgow was reduced by nearly 120 miles; instead of having to go by way of Inverness. I quite admit that the money has been spent, but I say that the Commissioners who were sent down heard only one side of the case; they made a report, and the Government then in power put down the items without knowing anything about the real facts. I may point out that before these rash promises were made we, who know the circumstances, might have shown the Government a better method of spending their money. We are told that this Vote shall disappear, and that there shall be no more grants under it, that is that Vote 3 of Class 7 shall not appear again. A Vote was proposed of £5,000 to provide the Company's piers, while two miles from it there was a Public Trust wanting money to finish its work of public improvement. But the Commission fell into the hands of certain parties, and £5,000 was given to the Company to add to their dividend, and so the Public Trust has lost the benefit of the money. I do not think the right hon. Gentleman is to blame, but his predecessor, the Chancellor of the Exchequer for the late Liberal Government, who carried it out. The work is done, and now we have to pay the piper. The money has not, perhaps, been wisely spent, but, as it will do some good, I for one think we ought not to divide against the Vote, because the present Government are not to blame in the matter.
I do not say we ought not to divide against the Vote. Of course, I recognise that, the railway having been finished, the money ought to be paid. At the same time I do think that too much is made with regard to one Government coming in and taking up the work of their predecessors. We are told that this matter was agreed to in 1892. While it is evident that the matter was arranged in 1892, there can be no doubt that on the change of Government the new Government would have been influenced by the officials who would have communicated the position of the matter to them. So that they were in that matter influenced a grea deal by the report of those who were appointed by their predecessors. I think it is hardly fair that we should not pass the Vote. I have no objection to giving money to benefit Scotland, but I hope it will open up an entirely new district. At the same time I say that, if we give money for a purpose which is not required, it stands in the way of our getting money for a more profitable purpose.
Vote agreed to.
On the question of a Vote of £23,938 for the Relief of Distress (Ireland) Estimate of the amount required in the year ending 31st March, 1898, for certain expenditure, including sundry grants-in-aid in connection with the Relief of Distress in Ireland,
Before the Committee votes this money I should like to have some information with reference to the plan by which it was expected to meet this distress on the west coast of Ireland, by means of such a paltry sum of money. I contend, Sir, that the smallness of the relief offered to the unions by the Chief Secretary was more a mockery of distress than an earnest desire to grapple with the seriousness of the evil which prevailed during last winter. I would also like to have from the right hon. Gentleman some explanation as to why such a large percentage of this sum of £23,000 was expended in salaries of inspectors, etc. I venture, respectfully, to suggest to the Committee that £5,000 by way of expenses is altogether disproportionate to the £15,000 extended to the unions by the Government of Ireland as a means of arresting destitution in these districts. I trust that English Members will not listen with impatience during the next half-hour if we bring this matter of distress under the attention of the Committee. I feel sure they will agree with me that Irish Members have some cause of complaint when they find, in the face of the emergency in this district, public money—which is Irish money as well as British money—doled out with miserly reluctance; while on the other hand, with regard to British interests, we find both British and Irish money shovelled in millions for the reorganisation of the Army, the completing of new battleships, and expeditions, dispatches, no one knows where. Our contention is that if the right hon. Gentleman had in the early months of the winter, when he knew from the reports of the inspectors, that severe distress was anticipated, if from the information in his possession he had expended a larger sum of public money, I think distress would have been arrested in its intensity, and it would not now occupy the alarming amount of public attention which has to be given to it in Ireland. Sir, I contend that that is not the view of the Irish Members alone. Englishmen and Englishwomen, to their credit be it said, are trying to do by appeals to the public in this country on behalf of the starving people in Ireland, what the right hon. Gentleman and his Administration have failed to do during the past few months with reference to this distress. There are, I believe, at this time about ten committees in various cities and towns in England, as well as several committees in Ireland, endeavouring to perform for these poor people the duty which I respectfully contend the Chief Secretary, as responsible for the Irish Government, has failed to perform during the winter months. Now, Sir, I do not intend upon this occasion to raise the general question of distress in Ireland, and were it not that we on these benches feel that the distress is growing in intensity and spreading in area every day, we would not occupy much of the time of the Committee on this matter. But, Sir, the reports that are appearing from day to day from various districts on the western coasts of Ireland, will bear out what I say that in consequence of the neglect of the Administration in Ireland to take proper steps to apply an adequate sum of money, we are face to face with a crisis which we would not otherwise have had to confront. I believe I am right in my belief that the right hon. Gentleman will be able to say, when he replies, that successful efforts have been made by his officials in Ireland to take relief to Tory Island. With reference to Belmullet, the Chief Secretary will, I hope, attempt in the course of this short Debate to give some information to the Committee with reference to a letter which was addressed to Canon Doran in the name of the Chief Secretary. I do not myself put the interpretation upon that letter that others have placed upon it; I allude to it only to support my argument. If a larger sum of money had been devoted to this purpose, and the right hon. Gentleman had had a free hand given him in the matter, we should not now be troubling the Committee. Again I call his attention to the great increase of distress in the poorest of all these congested districts in the west of Ireland, and the great increase of outdoor relief that has taken place there. You should apply the proper remedies at the proper time. The Clerk has stated that, whereas there were only 519 cases of outdoor relief last year, there are now no less than 1,200 persons compelled to seek assistance in that way from the Government. Well, Sir, I am glad to know, from reports in the public Press, that the Guardians of that Union have accepted the terms of the right hon. Gentleman, and that to carry out those terms for that locality the Guardians are now applying the labour test, and giving employment to those people, who, I respectfully contend, should have been put to similar work earlier in the winter mouths. Well, Sir, on this subject I would call the Chief Secretary's attention, if he has not already seen the letter, to a letter which was addressed to the Swinford Union by the Mother General of the Foxford Convent, in which she stated that, by means of £300 or £400 sent to her by the Manchester Relief Committee, she was enabled to give employment to two or three hundred poor people in that district. Without desiring to say anything harsh about the Chief Secretary, I think he ought to feel a little self-reproach, as being responsible for the government of Ireland, when reading that letter, for here we have the charitable people of Manchester sending money out to the west of Ireland to the poor people who do not want to be pauperised, but who are suffering from distress. We find these cottiers and others getting employment and relief, not from what is extended to them by the Government of Ireland, but on account of the donations of his fellow-countrymen here in England. With reference to the distress in the portion of the constituency which I have the honour to represent, I believe I am right in saying, that none of that £15,000 has gone to the Ballinrobe Union. Of course, I do not say that that is altogether the fault of the Chief Secretary. I believe he would have extended a dole towards the relief of distress there, if the Guardians at Ballinrobe had only taken similar action to the Guardians elsewhere, and applied for the labour test; but I believe the Guardians of the Ballinrobe Union have followed the example set them by the Chief Secretary, and have been exceedingly reluctant to increase the rates, even to the extent of twopence or threepence in the pound for relieving these poor people. Well, what I would like to know from the Chief Secretary—when he comes to reply to this—is whether he intends, in consequence of the inaction of the Ballinrobe Guardians, to continue to refuse to send any assistance to the poor people whom I represent? I hope he will bring pressure to bear on the Guardians to apply the labour test, and thus follow the example of the Swinford Guardians in that respect. Now, Sir, I do not intend to delay the Committee beyond a few more minutes with what I have got to say, but the Chief Secretary will, perhaps, allow me to mention the fact that I received a letter this morning from another district in South Mayo, warning me that unless some local relief works which were necessary in the locality were started at once one-third or one-half of the total population of 4,000 in the Kilvine district will be compelled to seek outdoor relief before the 1st of May. I believe, in years gone by, upon occasions similar to this, public works were started, and have been left incomplete, and I would be satisfied if the Chief Secretary would direct one of his inspectors to go to this district of Kilvine, on the borders of Roscommon and South Mayo, and I am sure that if he will do so what is said by my correspondent will be fully borne out by investigation. There are one or two other places along the west coast of Ireland, where, I am informed, intense distress prevails in connection with which distress nothing has yet been said in this House. For instance, there is Loop Head, a district running out from South West Clare, into the Atlantic, an exceedingly poor locality in the best of times, which has a population of about 5,000. I am informed that the village valuation in that locality is under £2. The condition of the people there now, is, I believe, as bad as in any part of Mayo, and I hope, if the Chief Secretary has not already directed an investigation into the condition of the people there, he will take steps to do so before the winter. I am informed that the potato crop was a greater failure there last season than even in any part of Mayo, and I have read a statement made by the Rev. Father Maze, which I will not trouble the Committee with, but which certainly reveals a deplorable condition of things amongst the poor people. Now, I would also ask his attention to statements that have appeared in the public Press, with regard to certain places in the county of Kerry. These places were overlooked in the Debate which took place upon the Address, not through any desire on the part of those who were present to overlook the claims of those poor people, but simply because we were anxious not to prolong the Debate on that occasion. Now, I have nothing further to say, Mr. Lowther, but to impress upon the right hon. Gentleman the necessity of at once investigating these public statements with reference to the districts to which I have referred. And, again, I must be permitted to protest against the inadequacy of the provision which the Chief Secretary has made during the winter to meet this condition of things along the Western seaboard of Ireland, and I trust he will not continue his niggardly policy in this matter; that he will bear in mind that he is using Irish money as well as British money; and that the necessities of the case need extended relief.
I do not in any way wish to oppose the proposition before the House, or to delay the proceedings, but I desire to suggest to the Chief Secretary that, in dealing with matters of this kind he might make a more liberal estimate of the requirements of the people than he has done in the present Vote. I consider that the sum he proposes to allocate for the relief of distress in Ireland is very inadequate to the purpose in view. It seems to me that the Government, when any report of distress in certain parts of Ireland comes before them, look upon these statements with a certain amount of suspicion. They are inclined to think that they are exaggerated, and, after some delay, they send some of their officials to inquire into the truth of the reports that have been made to them. I am inclined to think, Mr. Chairman, that the tendency of these officials is, and perhaps not unnaturally, to minimise the facts, and in no way or in no degree to exaggerate them. So far as my knowledge extends—I can speak positively for one constituency, and I believe it is the case with regard to the others that are from time to time afflicted in this way—there is no desire amongst the people, local and Parliamentary, to exaggerate the state of distress prevailing in these parts, or to cry out for relief before the occasion and the necessity arise for so doing. Now, Sir, there can be no doubt that at the present time there is a state of grievous distress and destitution in a great many of the extensive districts along the western seaboard of Ireland. I went, before the opening of the present Session of Parliament, amongst my own constituents in one of the poorest districts on the western coast of Ireland—I refer to Western Donegal—I went amongst the people, and inquired of the priests how matters stood in this respect, in order that I might be able to make a full and true statement of the facts, if occasion should require it, in the House of Commons. I inquired, as I have said, of men who know the facts of the case, and I found amongst them, one and all, priests and people, no desire whatever to put a bad aspect, or a worse aspect than was absolutely necessary, upon the facts of the case. There was distress amongst these poor people, there was poverty amongst them, but they did not see occasion to make any public outcry for the present, at all events, in reference to these matters. Of course, as time goes on, if matters should grow worse, it would be their bounden duty to make the facts known, and claim such relief and assistance as this Government and this Parliament is in duty as well as in honour bound to afford them. But in one part of that constituency I was informed that dire destitution and possible starvation did exist. That part is the Island of Tory, on the coast of Donegal. I asked a question in this House, founded upon information that I received as to the perilous condition of the poor people in that island. I make no complaint of the action that the Chief Secretary took, subsequent to my asking him that question. On the contrary, I think the Chief Secretary acted promptly in the matter, and did the best he could. He directed that an inspector should go to this island and look into the facts of the case. The inspector did go to the island as promptly as he could get there—for it is not easy to get into Tory Island, and when people do get there they often find it difficult to get back again—and he looked into the facts, and found them quite as bad as they had been represented to be. He, I believe, had to remain there for a very much longer time than he had intended, for tempestuous and stormy weather prevented him from getting back again for some time. But the peril was even then growing, the destitution was increasing, and he telegraphed to the mainland asking that a supply of provisions should be sent to the relief of the poor people in the island. However, it was one thing to telegraph for this relief and another thing to get it, for the weather was so stormy that the vessel conveying it was weather-bound for several days and could not get near the island; and, meanwhile, the destitution was becoming still more severe. The vessel did ultimately arrive, and relief was afforded—some meal and flour, I suppose, and other food of that kind was distributed. Yes, but that will not last long, and what I wish to know now is whether the Chief Secretary has directed that any steps shall be taken for the opening of relief works for giving employment to these poor people upon this remote island, so difficult to reach and so difficult to get away from. These provisions, as I have said, will be used up in a few days. What is to carry the people on for the weeks and weeks to come? Money they have none; food there is none in the island except the small quantity brought by this steamer; and the local traders can be but very few, for it is a small place, the whole population numbering only about 320 souls. I again ask the Chief Secretary what is to be done for these people. Will he not open up some sort of relief work?—for work and wages are what they want, not doles, gifts, or charity, either from at home or abroad. We are not, I think, making a very extravagant demand on the Chief Secretary, or upon the British Parliament is asking that when perils of this sort arise in our country they should be met promptly, and in a generous spirit by this Imperial Parliament. I used the word "generous," but after all, it is only returning to us—if we get it—a little share of our own money, and therefore I ought not to call it British generosity. We only want a liberal administration of our own funds to save our own people from the misery, suffering's, and starvation to which they have been brought by the long course of maladministration imposed upon them by this country and this Parliament. Every three months £500,000 is taken from our country in excess of our proper proportion of taxation. The amount that is taken from us in six months would very largely, and amply indeed, meet the requirements even of exceptional seasons and exceptional distress such as the present. I have in my hand, though I shall not detain the Committee by reading it, as probably the Chief Secretary has seen it, a letter which appeared in this morning's Dublin newspapers from the Catholic priest who resides in Tory Island. I shall say but very little upon it, because I think what I have already stated brings the general facts sufficiently before the mind of the right hon. Gentleman, but I wish to impress upon him these few points taken from the letter of the Rev. Mr. McGroarty, the curate residing in Tory Island. He says that he believes about £400 would carry the people through the period of distress that they are under-going, and that is still before them. Their industries have failed them. They are not an idle people; they are hardworking, brave, and industrious fishermen, all their lives toiling and moiling in order to make as much money as will enable them to pay their way, and to live on a very moderate scale of comfort indeed. Their fishing-boats, however, are small, and in stormy weather they are unable to face the perils of the deep. Why, one of Her Majesty's gunboats—the Wasp, I think—was wrecked on this same island not many years ago; and in bad weather what chance have little frail fishing boats, such as are used upon that coast, of braving the stormy deep and procuring for their owners the means of subsistence? The kelp industry, which they also carry on, has proved a failure, the market, for reasons which I do not understand, having fallen away enormously, causing a tremendous loss to these poor though hardy and industrious people. Under all those circumstances, I think the Chief Secretary might have dealt more liberally with this Vote; but, at all events, I want to know what share of it he means to go to the relief of these poor people. I tell him once again, and I tell the Committee, that they do not want gifts or doles. They want work and wages. Money can be beneficially expended in the island; and it is a hard thing, if in this House, where we Irish Members sit and listen night after night to the voting of millions and millions, a few hundred pounds cannot be devoted to the relief of these poor subjects of Her Majesty on the coast of Ireland. It strikes us that a country which can with so lavish a hand spend money in the remotest corners of the earth, might well deal a little more fairly, conscientiously, and liberally with these poor people in the distressed districts of Ireland.
I only wish to add a very few words to what has been said by my colleague in the representation of Mayo and my Friend the Member for West Donegal. I do not desire to import any temper into this discussion, because I know, as the right hon. Gentleman himself knows, that this is only a vote of indemnity. I know that last year several of the Irish Members pressed the right hon. Gentleman very strongly as to the situation in Belmullet, and he took upon himself, as he will remember, the duty of expanding the sum asked for to bring relief to the people of North Mayo, especially in the Belmullet Union. As a consequence of the promise he made last year, we now find in the Supplementary Estimates a grant in aid of the rates of the Belmullet Union—a grant of £3,038. Now, I do not want to attack the right hon. Gentleman, for I do not think he deserves to be attacked, and in anything which I say, I say to him not as Chief Secretary for Ireland but as President of the Irish Local Government Board. What I have to say is this—that this coming to the House to ask for this £3,038 is only another proof of the utter breakdown of the officialdom of Dublin Castle. The right hon. Gentleman sits here as Chief Secretary for Ireland, but he also sits here as Chairman of the Local Government Board of Ireland. Now, as Chairman of the Local Government Board, he promised me last year that in relieving the distress in North Mayo he would do certain things. What were the two things he promised to do towards relieving the distress in North Mayo? One was to establish a line of steamers between Belmullet and Achill Island. The pressure was so great at that time that he himself—and I admit that no one feels more sympathetically in matters of this kind than the right hon. Gentleman—realised that these poor people must be relieved from the suffering they were experiencing; but what has been the consequence? A month after he had given the promise, and a little time after this House had risen, that line of steamers between Belmullet and Achill Island ceased to run. Are those steamers running now? They are not. I only put this forward as an illustration of the fact that when once this House of Commons ceases to sit, and once the Departments at Dublin Castle get control over Ireland, then the poor people in the west and north-west of Ireland may suffer as they like. The right hon. Gentleman himself, as he knows, fills many offices in Ireland. He is the Chairman of the Local Government Board, he is the Chairman of the Congested Districts Board, and he is the Chief Secretary. I do not say that he is not able to fill these offices, but I do say that he is not able to administer affairs in Ireland as we desire that they should be administered. The hon. Member for Donegal has instanced the case of Tory Island. I can instance the case of the Island of Inniskea, if I may be allowed. I have known times when the Island of Inniskea could not be approached. I am a very good sailor myself, but I have known times when it has been utterly impossible to get a boat into Inniskea. I remember that, on the occasion of the recent outbreak of fever there I wished to see what had been happening, and I found that it was utterly impossible to go there. The right hon. Gentleman, as Chairman of the Irish Local Government Board, is responsible, in a large extent, for that, simply because in details of that kind they have not developed the country as they might have done. I have no desire to go through the details. I do not want to give any pathetic, isolated case. I arraign the right hon. Gentleman on the whole broad question. I say it is impossible for him to be, not in Ireland, but in this country, to administer the large amount of the social and personal life of Ireland that is covered by the operations of the Irish Local Government Board. Let me point out to the right hon. Gentleman that it is now nearly nine months since I asked him some questions about the situation in North Mayo. What is the consequence of the right hon. Gentleman's administration? Although I here, as the Member for North Mayo, have been asking him questions time after time in this House, pointing out to him time after time by questions and otherwise that this distress has been existing in North Mayo, the people in North Mayo have got the same complaint to make to you here in this House to-day. The same state of things still exists in North Mayo to-day that existed 12 months ago. I am not going to give any long quotation, but, as Member for the division covering the Belmullet Union, I feel that I am entitled to call attention to this fact, that, although 12 months ago I called attention to the state of affairs existing in Belmullet, nothing has been done, if we can accept the testimony of the people of Belmullet themselves. Our people anywhere in Ireland are not bankrupts. We do not ask for your money for pure charity's sake. We attack your administration. In England Scotland, and Wales the people are able to develop their own resources, but although 12 months ago I put questions to the right hon. Gentleman, what do we find to-day? A meeting was held last Friday, nearly 12 mouths to a day from the day on which I called the right hon. Gentleman's attention to the distress that existed. At this meeting Monsignor Hewson, the parish priest of Belmullet, said—
That is represented by the parish priest as being a quotation from a telegram received by him from the right hon. Gentleman. I can scarcely conceive that the right hon. Gentleman sent such a telegram. I can only say that if he did it is it pitiable exhibition of callousness and want of foresight. I blame the officials of the Irish Local Government Board for their neglect to cope with this distress. I appeal to the right hon. Gentleman, and not merely to him, but to every man of humanity in this House, not on the score of charity, but on the ground of manhood, to establish some system by which these people in the west of Ireland may be placed on an equality with the people of this country."Recently he had to report that there was on meal or flour or bread in the locality, and received from the Chief Secretary the humane reply, 'Let the traders lay in greater stores in future.'"
The hon. Gentleman has complained that since he called attention 12 months ago to the distress in North Mayo nothing has been done. I may say that, whereas 12 months ago the Union of Belmullet was deeply involved, its debt has now been cleared off by the kindness of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. The hon. Member is labouring under one very curious misconception. He says that last year I promised a steamer service between Belmullet and Tory Island, but that the only effect of it was that the steamer service ceased a month, after Parliament was up.
I was in Belmullet in October; the House rose in August.
I think the hon. Member himself will see that he has made a mistake. What I said last year was that the Government hoped to establish a, steamer service between Belmullet and Tory Island, but that difficulties had arisen with the Midland Railway Company, and that if those difficulties proved insuperable, the Government would endeavour to establish a service between Sligo and Belmullet. The steamer service is not subsidised by the Government, but by the Congested Districts Board. The difficulties which I foresaw actually did arise, and instead of establishing a service between Belmullet and Tory Island it is our intention to establish a service between Sligo and Belmullet. The Company who are running the occasional services asked at the beginning of this year whether the Congested Districts Board was prepared to give them a subsidy, and the Board did not feel that they could do so. The hon. Member will see that so far as regards any promise made by the Government last year, the Government are perfectly ready to carry out their promise, but this particular steamboat service between Tory Island and Belmullet could not be established. The hon. Member also referred to the difficulty of reaching the Island of Inniskea. Hon. Gentlemen opposite appear to hold the Irish Government responsible for everything that occurs on the west coast of Ireland, including the weather. The hon. Member has told the House that he is an excellent sailor, but, notwithstanding that, he found it absolutely impossible to reach the Island of Inniskea. Sir, others besides the hon. Member have found it impossible, but I do not know whether he suggests that we should provide a steamboat service between Belmullet and Inniskea, Island. I now come to the speech of the hon. Member for South Mayo. In the Debate on the Address. I explained very fully what the policy of the Government was in connection with the distress which unfortunately has visited the west of Ireland during the past year. The policy of the Government was on that occasion sanctioned and approved by the House, and I do not understand that the hon. Member for South Mayo disapproves of that policy. What he complains of is that the amount that we have given is too small. Now, I cannot help thinking that the hon. Member must have been under the impression that the amount in this Vote is the total amount voted for the relief of distress during the whole course of the present season. That is not so. The amount of £15,000 which appears on this Vote is a grant-in-aid of the Relief Works executed by Boards of Guardians in distressed unions, and it is an amount intended to cover any expenditure up to the 31st of March. The sum of £5,000 for salaries and expenses of Inspectors and others employed under the Local Government Board appears a large sum in proportion to that, but the reason is that it includes practically the whole of the expenses in connection with the organisation necessary for meeting the distress. The hon. Member complains that charity is endeavouring to do the work which the Government has neglected. I entirely and absolutely traverse the position. I maintain that the Government had done, and is doing, its duty, but it may well be that there is also room for the exercise of private charity. At the present time at Belmullet the Board of Works is carrying out operations in connection with the establishment of this steamer service between Sligo and Belmullet, but would it be fair to say that on that ground the Board of Works is doing work which the Government ought to have done out of this money? If that cannot be maintained, how much more true is it to say that because private charity has stepped in for the relief of distress that proves that the Government has neglected its duty? Now I come to the case of the scarcity of provisions at Tory Island and Belmullet, and here again I cannot help thinking that there is some strange confusion in the observations of the hon. Member for South Mayo and the hon. Member for Donegal. The scarcity of provisions of Tory Island and the scarcity of provisions of Belmullet might have arisen in the most prosperous years. It has simply arisen from the fact that, in consequence of a long spell of bad weather, these places have been practically unapproachable from the sea, and therefore the provisions have run out. The hon. Member has referred to the letter written by me to Monsignor Hew-son, the parish priest of Belmullet, and that same letter has been referred to by the hon. Member for North Mayo.
I quoted from the Freeman's Journal of Saturday.
As a matter of fact, the message which was sent by my direction to Father Hewson was sent by telegram. It was in reply to a telegram which was sent me by Father Hewson from Belmullet, which, was in these terms: "No meal or flour, no bread, no railway." The House will see that the style cultivated by Monsignor Hewson is of a somewhat rhetorical and emotional character, but, of course, I quite understand the practical point that Monsignor Hewson aimed at. What he desired to obtain was a railway to Belmullet, a work which would cost probably some £200,000 or more of public money. I did not like to leave Monsignor Hewson's telegram entirely unanswered, and I did think it desirable to suggest that the scarcity might be provided against by the shopkeepers laying in larger supplies of provisions. Father Hewson, writing to the Freeman's Journal, comments upon that as "a heartless, callous, cruel production." Well, Sir, those seem to me to be rather strong epithets to apply to what I confess appears to me to have been a very innocent production. I quite admit that, in comparison with the rhetorical effusion of Father Hewson, my letter is rather jejune and prosaic, but I do maintain that it is business-like, and I do maintain that that is the proper cure for such inconveniences as have been suffered. I have only, in conclusion, to say one or two words in reference to the speech of the hon. Member for South Mayo. He complained of the fact that the Ballinrobe Union had had none of this grant of £15,000. I understand that the Board have done what they could to persuade the Guardians to adopt the labour test, and that the Board are prepared to pay a considerable proportion of heavy expenditure incurred by that union. I repudiate altogether the insinuation that the Board are niggardly in their policy, and I can only assure the House that every effort is being made by the Board to grapple with the position.
The right hon. Gentleman has made very merry over the comments of Father Hewson upon his telegram. I do not think it is possible that the right hon. Gentleman realises the position. If he had been only two days in one of the distressed districts of Ireland, the telegram he sent, and the speech that we have just listened to would have been entirely impossible. The right hon. Gentleman says, "Can you blame the English Government for the failure of the potato crop?" No; but we say you have reduced these people to their present unhappy condition by your deliberate misgovernment. You English people are accustomed to praise yourselves, and to say that all you think of is doing good to mankind, without any regard to money at all; but look how you behave towards Ireland. If you would allow us to manage our own affairs, we should be able to rectify the consequences of your mismanagement. Under an Irish Parliament you would not find the poorest districts of Ireland the most densely populated, and the most flourishing districts given up to the few and favoured. That is the result of your government. You say—and you say with justice—how can you improve the position of the people on these miserable patches of ground, where no profitable crops can be got? Again I say it is you who have put them there. You have taken the government into your own hands, and you are responsible for these people. When you destroyed these people's trade as you did, when you deprived them of education as you did, you were sowing the seed which has; brought this crop of destitution and misery in Ireland. You talk of your kindness and generosity; why, your own experts have told you that you have been robbing the Irish people. I can prove that from documents of your own. The right hon. Gentleman has referred to the charitable contributions which have come from America to the assistance of the Irish people. I charge the Irish Government with deliberately trying last, September to paralyse the kindly hands who were giving those subscriptions. Yes, I say that they endeavoured to keep back these contributions. A gentleman who has described himself as the very head of the Irish Government, sent this telegram in reply to a telegram from the correspondent of an American newspaper, the New York Journal, asking him whether there was any distress. This is the telegram—
The whole object of that telegram was to destroy charitable contributions from America."In reply to your telegram, the Lord Lieutenant desires me to say that the reports which you characterise as most alarming, and predictions of famine in Ireland which yon mention, are, in his Excellency's opinion, unjustifiable."
Nothing of the kind. The hon. Member knows it was simply in order to check exaggerations, and rightly so.
The telegram was dated the 7th September. When that telegram was sent the Government had reports from their own Local Government Board inspectors as to the imminent distress in Ireland, and I say again that that telegram was sent in order to paralyse the arm of generosity in America, in order to leave the people in distress, and to leave them at the mercy of the English Government. I know it is a shocking and a horrible imputation to make, but, Sir, it is true. It is only part of your system. I could find, if I went into the library, ample proof that in Sir Robert Peel's time you deliberately destroyed the crops of the Irish people, in order to bring about a famine. However, Sir, I will keep to this Vote, and I want to show what has been the course of conduct of the present Government in connection with the distress in Ireland, with which I am specially interested. I do not wish to say anything personally unkind of the right hon. Gentleman. If he would come and spend three or four days among these people, and go into their hovels, look at their little children, with their poor little faces pale and flabby for want of animal food—if he would see for himself the absolute misery and despair in which these unhappy people live, he would, I am sure, not be slow in dealing with the distress. However, Sir, I think I have said sufficient upon this matter. I hope that we shall hear some explanation from the right hon. Gentleman as to this telegram sent out from Dublin Castle, in order to check the contributions of benevolence.
The hon. Gentleman has asked for a reply. I must respectfully decline to make any reply whatever to his speech. Sir, that speech answers itself. The speech of any hon. Member who deliberately gets up in this House and says that it is the object of the English Government to bring about distress in the west of Ireland, in order to bring the people under our power, requires no further notice to be taken of it.
I desire to point out to the right hon. Gentleman and to the House that it is not alone on the West Coast that distress prevails. In portions of Eastern and North-Eastern Galway, and in the county of Roscommon, the people are reduced to a very distressed condition indeed. I would ask the right hon. Gentleman, when he is considering the general question of distress in Ireland, to pay particular attention to the condition of the occupiers in the Barony of Iveagh, in county Kerry. In this connection I would press upon the right hon. Gentleman the importance of extending the Great Southern and Western Railway to Waterville; that would be a work which would give a great deal of much-needed employment, and I feel sure that, if the Government intimated to the railway company their willingness to assist in the work, the company would be quite prepared to undertake it.
I would take the liberty of suggesting to the right hon. Gentleman, that he himself should go to this district of Ireland that we are referring to, and see for himself the condition of the people there.
I have been there.
The right hon. Gentleman may have been there, but if he would only go at this time, and see the condition of things that actually prevails, I am sure he would take a different view of the responsibility of his Government in dealing with this distress. Of course, we do not blame the Government for the failure of crops, or for troubles caused by exceptionally bad weather on the coasts, but we say it is a disgrace that along the west coast of Ireland the original inhabitants should be driven into reservations like the aborigines of America. The right hon. Gentleman, in the telegram that the has been referred to, suggested that the distress in Belmullet might be met by the shopkeepers taking in a larger supply of provisions. He should not forget that these shopkeepers have to give credit and probably get their own supplies largely on credit. Sir, I do not wish to prolong the discussion, but I cannot refrain from saying that, much as the right hon. Gentleman thinks of the generous policy of the Government as exhibited by these grants, it is not by temporary doles that the distress now prevailing can be relieved; it is only by extending the powers of the Congested Districts Board, so that the people may be removed out of these congested districts and restored to the fertile lands from which they have been driven.
While I do not impute to the right hon. Gentleman that he would knowingly take any steps which would tend to stop the flow of charity in relief of the distress in the west of Ireland, I must protest against his ignoring all responsibility in the present position of things. So far the people of Ireland have had no power over their own affairs; you are about to introduce a Bill in the present Session to give them local self-government, but up to now the responsibility has remained in the right hon. Gentleman and his Department. I want to state, once and for all, my very distinct opinion that all these grants in aid, that have been repeated over and over again, will be fruitless and ineffective until the Government adopt measures which will enable the people to support themselves, instead of being pauperised by periodical doles. The people of Ireland and the people of this country will hold the Government responsible until the Irish people are placed in a position to maintain themselves without the intervention of charity at all. Without the aid of the Government the people living in the west of Ireland will never lift themselves out of the condition of chronic distress that they are in. One bad season suffices to leave them absolutely helpless, except for private charity or Parliamentary grants. I should be sorry indeed to believe that the Chief Secretary, or any other Government official, wilfully ignored the duty that is imposed upon him to endeavour by every means in his power to improve the condition of these people. The poverty, the misery existing in Ireland is a disgrace to any State, and it is a positive danger to society. Oppression and starvation led the people of France to a revolution which had a terrible effect not only upon society in France, but among all the peoples of Europe; and I warn the Government to consider what must be the outcome of a continuation of the present state of things in Ireland, where the standard of living is the lowest in Europe. Yes; that was stated in 1817, and it is as true to-day as it was then, from my own knowledge. I hope the Chief Secretary and the Irish Government will see that, however beneficial and generous these grants may be, it is not temporary doles that the Irish people require; they want to be placed, and it is the duty of the Irish Govern- ment to place them, in such a position that they can maintain themselves independently of any charity whatsoever.
I rise to ask a question of my right hon. Friend the Chief Secretary with regard to two of these items. Two of them are called "Grants-in-Aid"; the third is not specifically called a grant in aid; it is "Salaries and Expenses of Inspectors and others specially employed under the Local Government Board." At the bottom of page 18 there is this note—
Now, I want to ask whether my right hon. Friend has considered what a vicious system of finance is this. It is exactly analogous to the case cited by the Comptroller and Auditor General of the Grant-in-Aid for Bechuanaland. He says—"The expenditure out of the above Grants in Aid will not be accounted for in detail to the Comptroller and Auditor General, nor will any unexpended balances be surrendered."
This case, I submit, is exactly on all fours with that. I wish to draw the attention of the right hon. Gentleman, the Secretary to the Treasury to the grave responsibility the Government are taking, as against their own officer, the Comptroller and Auditor General, in adopting this vicious system, by which a Grant-in-Aid is to be handed over, and, if not expended, is not to be returned. The Comptroller and Auditor General, in the case I have referred to, points out that—"In my report upon the Giant in Aid under this sub-head for last year (paragraph 9), I drew attention to a payment of £30,000 which had been made to the Crown Agents for the Colonies on the last day of the financial year 1895–96, which payment was admittedly made with the object of avoiding its surrender, and of enabling it to be applied in reduction of the amount to be submitted for vote by Parliament for the ensuing year."
This, as I say, is an exactly similar case, and I think it right to call the attention of the Treasury to the matter now. When the Estimates are before us, I shall not fail to take the opinion of the House as to the desirability of sanctioning a system which, as I have shown, is condemned by the Comptroller and Auditor General, and which I regard as an altogether pernicious system."the payment to the Protectorate in the year 1886–97 of the full amount of the Grant in Aid (£30,000) was clearly not necessary, and, in my opinion, was not justified. I am accordingly unable to report, under the provisions of sections 27 and 32 of the Exchequer and Audit Departments Act, 1866, that the amount so charged against the Grant 'has been applied to the purpose for which such Grant was intended to provide.'"
When I read the note that has been referred to by the hon. Member for Lynn Regis, I naturally asked myself whether there was any duty on the part of the Treasury to account for these Votes in detail, and I found, or at all events. I gathered, that there is a statutory duty imposed on the Treasury. I understand the Treasury to take the view that in the case of Grants-in-Aid there is no such duty; but, if that be so, why is this note put on the Estimate? There is no mystery about a "Grant-in-Aid," and I think if the Committee will refer to the Statute they will find that every item has to be accounted for in detail, and that any balance unexpended must be surrendered at the end of the financial year. If the right hon. Gentleman does not take that view, I would ask him why he wastes stationery, printing ink, time, and labour, by putting this useless note at the foot of the Estimate?
I am rather afraid the Committee will think that this discussion has gone on long enough, but I should like to ask the indulgence of the Committee to make one or two observations on the speech we have listened to from the Chief Secretary for Ireland. I exceedingly regret the absence of sympathy, and the general hardness of tone which characterised that speech. I will take one instance to show how the right hon. Gentleman utterly fails to grapple with the real facts of the situation. He is asked about the scarcity of provisions in Belmullet, and his reply is—"Let the shopkeepers lay in a larger supply of provisions." Well, shopkeepers, of course, do not lay in stock at the bidding of a Cabinet Minister; they only lay in provisions as they are able to buy them. In a famine-stricken district the shopkeepers are poor, and it is preposterous that the right hon. Gentleman should shirk out of his responsibility by saying that they should keep larger stores. Then, the right hon. Gentleman said that the idea of hon. Members on this side (he included all of us) seemed to be that the Government should be held responsible for anything and everything on the west coast of Ireland, "even the weather." Sir, I contend that the Government are undoubtedly responsible for the vital conditions which govern the lives of these unhappy people. A great deal has been said to-night about generosity, but I regard this Vote of a miserable £15,000 as a mere condonation of the fault of this House and this country in establishing a condition of things under which these people cannot live. Last year the largest amount ever collected in taxes was raised from these people. An endeavour has been made to trace this distress to the failure of the potato-crop. I do not think it can be traced to that at all. The cause of the famine is this: that the people are reduced to such a low state of subsistence by the heavy burden which this House lays on them that they cannot bear that temporary lapse from the normal produce of a crop which an ordinary agricultural community can bear. Now, Sir, this subject is a very grave one. This is the first Vote that has been before the House this Session dealing with the famine in the west of Ireland, and I say that the fact that this state of distress in that portion of the kingdom should exist reflects infinite shame on the Government, and on this House. A book was published in the year 1896 by Mr. O'Brien, one of the Inspectors of the Irish Local Government Board, in the third chapter of which there is a list of the famines which have occurred in Ireland throughout the century. During the eighteenth century there was only one outbreak of famine—in the year 1789—and this was tided over without the Irish Parliament making any grant or taking any special measures. But during the nineteenth century we have had altogether 13 famines. The first serious visitation occurred in 1821, and it was succeeded by five others before the great famine of 1846–7. Then there was an interval of 30 years, but in 1879–80 we had an outbreak worse than any previous except the Great Famine, and the abnormal distress which we are considering to-night makes the sixth famine Government has had to relieve since that period. Every three years a grave situation of this kind arises. All the conditions tend to show that we are drifting again towards a terrible calamity such as occurred about 50 years ago. The situation is much more serious than it was at that period. During the early famine, there was no Poor Law, but now we have a Poor Law system in the country established to deal with eight and a-half millions of people, and we find it incapable of meeting the demands of four and a-half millions. We have established a Congested Districts Board, built labourers' houses and light railways, but all these resources do not enable us to grapple with the distress, and I believe that no cure for it will be found except by abolishing those heavy taxes which we now extract from every one of these famine-stricken homes. I am so out of harmony with the spirit in which this Vote has been submitted that I am almost disposed to move a reduction, in order that we might take the feeling of the Committee; but I am unwilling to take that extreme course. But, Sir, I say that this state of affairs in Ireland is a disgrace to our Government—I do not say to our present Government in particular, for I believe that this Government is, in some respects, better than the Government which preceded it; but this state of affairs is, irrespective of Party, a disgrace and a slur upon the people of this country.
Question put, and agreed to.
Resolutions to be reported.
Motion made, and Question proposed,
"That a sum not exceeding £20,000 be granted to Her Majesty to defray the charge which will come in course of payment during the year ending on the 31st day of March. 1898, for a Grant in Aid of the Expenses of the Royal Commission for the British Section at the Paris International Exhibition, 1900."
Whereupon Motion made, and Question,
"That the Chairman do report Progress, and ask leave to sit again."—(Mr. Strachey.)
Question put, and agreed to.
Resolutions to be reported upon Wednesday; Committee also report progress; to sit again upon Wednesday.
Registration (Ireland) Bill
Clause 1
Amendment proposed.
"In page 1, line 21, to leave out the words after the word 'Act,' to the end of sub-section (3), and insert the words, 'and may include the division of a townland which is situate partly within and partly without an urban sanitary district or town.'"—(Mr. Gerald Balfour.)
Instead thereof, Question proposed,
"That the words proposed to be left out stand part of the clause."
And, it being after Midnight, and objection being taken to further proceeding, the Debate stood adjourned.
Debate to be resumed upon Wednesday.
Business Of The House
Pharmacy Acts Amendment Bill
Order for Second Reading read.
Motion made, and Question proposed,
"That the Bill be now read a second time."
I object.
I would ask my hon. Friend, as a personal favour, not, to object to this Bill, which, I assure him, is one of those small Measures which cover a much-needed reform.
I also would appeal to my hon. Friend not to stand in the way of this Bill. Although it does not affect Irish pharmacists, I believe the Bill will do justice all round, and I may say that I remained in the House till this hour tonight merely to help, to the best of my ability, the progress of this Measure.
After that appeal I feel that I cannot persist in my objection.
Question put, and agreed to.
Read a second time, and committed for Thursday, 17th March.
Local Government (Ireland) Bill
For the convenience of hon. Members from Ireland, who want to make their arrangements, I would like to ask the right hon. Gentleman the First Lord of the Treasury whether he can tell us when he proposes to take the Second Reading of the Irish Local Government Bill?
We should like to consult the convenience of hon and right hon. Gentlemen on those Benches. Perhaps the hon. Member would allow me to give a definite answer to-morrow afternoon.
House adjourned at 12.10.