D1.8.9: The Graham's Town Parliament

D1.8.9: The Graham's Town Parliament

Metadata

Title

D1.8.9: The Graham's Town Parliament

Collection

Newspaper Clippings

Summary

Bleek reflects on the newness of parliamentary institutions in British colonies and how their unclear legislative powers make them liable to encroach upon other remits. The Cape electorate overestimates the fidelity and powers of their representatives, selected from a small pool of unideal candidates. These representatives are not given power of attorney over the public, who retain their agency along with means of redress should legislators craft legislation that is unconstitutional or repugnant to them. In that vein, Bleek cites the Customs Blunders Act, the Deeds Registry Bill, the Judicial Bill, and George Wood's partially ratified bill as divisive incompatibilities symptomatic of the rivalry between Cape Town and Graham's Town, threatening to split the colony in two as Eastern members grow bolder and embittered. 'Easterners' advocate parliament's removal to Graham's Town as a remedy for Capetonian hegemony. Bleek ends with Frederick Watermeyer's suitability for the vacant law lectureship at the South African College.

Medium

Printed newsprint glued on paper

Date

16 June 1864

Description

One cut-out column of printed newsprint mounted on foolscap folio (warped).

Keyword

Governor, Mr Frederick Watermeyer (his candidacy for the law lectureship), South African College (subsidised by Government)

Notes

Pressed clippings of Victorian current affairs opinion pieces by Wilhelm Bleek. Published in Het Volksblad on Thursday, June 16th, 1864.

Publisher

Van de Sandt de Villiers & Co.

Contributions

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