In some countries, the cabinet is regarded as constituting a corporate body, the ministers are not held to take part in the conduct of the government each one in an individual capacity, but joint responsibility is the rule. The evil of such a system is... Democracy and the Japanese Government - Page 2by Hiroshi Sato - 1920 - 97 pagesFull view - About this book
| Hirobumi Itō - Constitutional history - 1889 - 312 pages
...be dependent upon the former. In some countries, the Cabinet is regarded as constituting a corporate body, the Ministers are not held to take part in the...will ultimately over-rule the supreme power of the Sovereign. Such a state of things can never be approved of according to our Constitution. But with... | |
| Lancelot Lawton - East Asia - 1912 - 766 pages
...upon the former. He deprecated the Ministry being regarded as a corporate body, on the ground " that the evil of such a system is that the power of party...will ultimately overrule the supreme power of the sovereign." Financial matters are dealt with in eleven articles, most interesting perhaps of which... | |
| Frederic Abernethy Coleman - China - 1918 - 324 pages
...dependent upon the former. In some countries, the Cabinet is regarded as constituting a corporate body, and the Ministers are not held to take part in the conduct...will ultimately overrule the supreme power of the Sovereign. Such a state of things can never be approved of according to our Constitution. The man,... | |
| Dale M. Hellegers - History - 2001 - 440 pages
...jurists, however, because it prepared the way for real parliamentary government. As Ito himself observed, "'[T]he evil of such a system is that the power of...will ultimately over-rule the supreme power of the Sovereign'" [Colegrove, "The Japanese Cabinet," 921]. 87. Colegrove, "The Japanese Emperor (II)," 839-40.... | |
| Bertrand Russell - History - 2007 - 262 pages
...Cabinet is regarded as constituting a corporate body, and the Ministers are not held to take part iu the conduct of the Government; each one in an individual...that the power of party combination will ultimately override the supreme power of the Sovereign. Such a state of things can never be approved of according... | |
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