Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

HAMROCK kSTORjE, CROMWELL. WILLIAM SHANLY, FAMILY GROCER, ! GENERAL STOREKEEPER, is carrying on business at the old-established premises, 'next to the Bank of New South Wales, Melmore-street. • The BEST QUALITY of GOODS only is kept in stock. All orders will meet with prnmptjattention.

New Advertisements. mo THE PEOPLE OF OTAGO. On Wednesday, the 18th inst., the electors will be called upon to exercise one of the most responsible and important trusts which have been conferred upon them—that of deciding who is to be Superintendent of the Province. I believe it is the opinion of a large majority of the electors that the office should be held by me for another term. If so, it will be necesnary that those who desire to give effect to this opinion should, on the polling day, record their votes by drawing the pen through the names of the other candidates. I am aware that you are being dosed with statements to the effect that the present political crisis is the result of an undue grasping after power on my part. As Superintendent of the Province—an officer created by the Constitution, and elected by the people, liable at any time to be removed from office by a majority of the same 1 am charged with attempting to subvert the one and to encroach upon the other. This charge is, upon the face of it, so utterly absurd and improbable, so entirely contrary to the nature of things, that it would be almost an insult to your common sense to attempt to rebut it. As Superintendent of Otago, I have been elected, among other things, for the express purpose of guarding the rights and liberties of the people ; and I will venture to say that no man in the Province has taken a more active share than myself in asserting and vindicating both. I confess that, after well-nigh a quarter, of a century's devotion to promoting the interests of this Province, it does sound strange to be charged with seeking to ride roughshod over the liberties of the people, and to subvert the Constitution, which, with others, I fought so hard to acquire, lamat a loss to conceive what possible object could be gained by such a betrayal of trust, and can only characterise the charge as a piece of the most unmitigated flapdoodle.—"the stuff that fools are fed with," —whjch I hope my fellow-settlers wi'l have sufficient perspicacity to see through. I would most earnestly entreat of you to investigate the whole matter for yourselves, and to take nothing for granted either on my ipse dixit or that of my opponents. The Constitution Act passed by the Imperial Parliament most clearly provides that the powers of the Superintendent are co-equal with those of the Provincial Council : in fact, to a certain extent, they may be said to be superior, inasmuch as the initiation, of money votes is vested in the Superintendent exclusively. The Act also distinctly provides that the practical administration of the Government shall be at the bands of the Superintendent. It provides, moreover, that the Superintendent shall have power to convene and prorogue the Provincial Council—not when the Council shall see fit, but when the ''Superintendent shall see tit." The Executive Council Ordinance passed by the Provincial Legislature provides "That the Superintendent shall act with the advice and consent of an Executive Council, chosen from among the members of the Provincial Council, " who shall be appointed by the Superintendent and hold office at his pleasure." I quote the exact words of the Ordinance. Of course, it will be obvious that unless the Superintendent and the Provincial Council can mutually agree as to who are to be the members of the Executive, it is then in the power of the Council to refuse supplies, and to bring the affairs of the country to a standstill ; or it may petition the Governor for the removal of the Superintendent in terms of the Constitution Act. In either case the only solution of the difficulty is an appeal to the people. Such, then, being the terms of the Executive Council Ordinance, it is clear that 1 had a perfect right to remove Mr Iteid from office as the head of the late Executive. In my opinion, the fact that Mr JReid had accepted an important office in the General Government—an office which involved the whole of his time being devoted thereto, and which involved moreover his residing at Wellington— not only justified but demanded the action taken by me. It was clearly impossible that he could serve two masters : cither he must have thwarted Mr Stafford, his Colonial chieftain, or the Superintendent of Otago ; for they were opposed to each other on points of policy in which the interests of the Province were concerned. As to my refusal to convene the Provincial Council when requested so to do, the annexed copy of my reply to the application, sufficiently explains my action in the matter. Had the Council been called together six months earlier, the business of the country would have been brought to a temporary standstill so much the sooner, and the numerous public works which have been initiated during the past half-year, would have been postponed until the season for prosecuting them had passed. As to my having applied for a dissolution and an appeal to the people, I cannot see by what process of reasoning this can be set down as either despotic or tyrannical. Most assuredly, it is neither pleasant nor profitable to subject oneself to an election contest with all the abuse and vituperation which it involves—and if, consistently with my duty to the Province, I could have seen any way out the difficulty, such a course would not have been urged by'me. The very fact of my appealing to the people is a sufficient refutation of the charge of attempting to exercise arbitary power ; in fact, it is to protect the .people against an attempt at arbitrary dicta-

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CROMARG18730617.2.6.3

Bibliographic details

Cromwell Argus, Volume IV, Issue 188, 17 June 1873, Page 4

Word Count
995

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Cromwell Argus, Volume IV, Issue 188, 17 June 1873, Page 4

Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 Cromwell Argus, Volume IV, Issue 188, 17 June 1873, Page 4

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert