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way prepared by the customary requisition. But the ftict that I should be a candidate, in case Mr. FitzGerald did not desire again to be elected, has been so long and so generally known, that it would-have been affectation in me to have waited for one. I have thought it the less necessary too, because the means by which signatures to such documents are now too often obtained have tended to invest them with almost as much of disrepute as credit. At all events they have deprived them of much of that value in public estimation which such testimonials once possessed. I feel it to be my duty, Gentlemen, to state at the outset of this address some of the considerations which have led me to offer myself to your notice and to ask at your hands the highest civil appointment it is in your. power to bestow. I have been a resident among you almost from the foundation of the settlement, and have ever taken a more or less active part in the public affairs of the province. It is now two years since I had the honour of obtaining a seat in the Provincial 'Council. Since then my time has been wholly engaged in the public service; and there is scarcely an office under the Provincial Government, if I except that of the Solicitor and that of the Provincial Engineer, the duties of which I have not for some period discharged. I mention this not to\ found any present claims on your confidence, for I feel too conscious how great the distance is between the most important of the offices I have held and that to which I now aspire, but to show that I have had considerable experience in the administration of the affairs of the province, and thus, I hope, established the presumption, that I possess some of the qualifications required for the discharge of the administrative duties which attach to the office of Superintendent. You will, Gentlemen, probably expect from those who may present themselves to your notice on this occasion some general exposition of the views they take of the nature of the office for which they are candidates, and the leading principles by which, should they succeed, their conduct of affairs would be guided. To that task, therefore, I now address myself. Had this been the first election of a Superintendent,'this task would have been one of very considerable difficulty. In no part is the Constitution Act more defective than where it defines the duties of the Superintendent. It would almost appear as if the framers of that Act, unable to determine with anything like~ precision the status the Superintendent should occupy in the Government of the country and the functions he should discharge, had confined themselves to simply defining his legislative duties, leaving it to' time and circumstances to develop the amount of executive power ho should exercise. Gentlemen, that which the Constitution Act left so vague and unsettled, time and experience have to a great extent determined. The Superintendent is now recognised not merely as the legislative but also as the executive head of the province, endowed with very ample powers. Within his jurisdiction the Empowering Ordinance has, in some case's definitely, in others provisionally,' invested him with a large proportion of the executive authority of the Governor himself; and the recent legislation of the General Assembly, while it appears to lean towards a restriction of his legislative, shows no disposition to interfere with his executive functions. The necessities which have led to the investiture of the Superintendent with these important powers have also suggested the means by which he should be guided in their exercise. Thus, in this Province as in others, an Executive Government Ordinance has been .passed by which the Superintendent is bound to have an Executive . Council, by whose advice he is to be guided in carrying on the Government of the province. I do not consider it necessary in this place to discuss at length the advantages or otherwise of this order of things. I simply lay before you the nature of the office as I find it, and the circumstances that have led to its present form of development. i Nevertheless, I will not shrink from avowing ■ my opinion, that not only theoretically is the existing arrangement to be approved and defended, but that, in practice also, it supplies, under the present physical peculiarities of New , Zealand, the scantiness of its population, and the difficulties of inter-communication, the best and most efficient means by which-the affairs of the vaiious provinces can be at present administered, ' In it too the great principle of self government is fully recognised. The power

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT18570408.2.14.2

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Lyttelton Times, Volume VII, Issue 462, 8 April 1857, Page 8

Word count
Tapeke kupu
784

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Lyttelton Times, Volume VII, Issue 462, 8 April 1857, Page 8

Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Lyttelton Times, Volume VII, Issue 462, 8 April 1857, Page 8

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