Untitled (Saul Solomon's Voluntary Principle) (Glanville's motion for more bureaucratic personnel)
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Untitled (Saul Solomon's Voluntary Principle) (Glanville's motion for more bureaucratic personnel)
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Bleek remarks that although parliament is now fully constituted and in session, it is too early to know the state of political parties and their policy agendas after an influx of new members post-census. The colony's dire situation may also encourage unexpected alliances. He hopes the emergence of real political parties that champion Responsible Government will overpower parliament's old guard subscribed to the clique system. Mr Glanville's (Thomas Burt Glanville?) motion proposes that more government officers are needed and reminds Bleek of one brought forward by William Porter seven years earlier. Even Porter, who opposed Saul Solomon's Voluntary Principle and advocated for the state grants system, agreed that it was unjust to uniformly impose a church tax or worship tax that extended to non-beneficiaries in a pluralistic society. Glanville's motion, like Porter's, may atrophy yet in some way succeed in shaping thoughts. Parliamentary novices are too preoccupied with fiscal concerns to ponder untimely sovereignty matters like Responsible Government. Meaningful economic reform will be slow and deliberative, but the state will suffer if other problems get ignored. Unlike the private sector workforce, public servants are specialised in niche aspects of state affairs and possess less conventional transferable skills. For the bureaucracy, the state is the only game in town. Retrenching a competent bureaucracy is a cosmetic stopgap that will eventually harm the economy.
Printed newsprint glued on paper
04/10/1886
Two cut out columns of newsprint text, positioned vertically parallel, pasted onto a plus-sized A4 unlined sheet with visible warping. No title was subsequently handwritten onto the mount/paper backing.
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