HL Deb 11 December 1888 vol 331 c1735
LORD DENMAN

said, it appeared from the evidence taken by the joint Committee on Parliamentary Reporting that only those Peers were reported whom Mr. Leycester, of The Times, thought worthy of being reported. It had often happened that no notice had been taken of what he (Lord Denman) had said, and then allusions to what he had said being made by others and those allusions being reported, the whole proceeding was made to appear nonsensical. He had no idea of self-aggrandizement, especially so as, since the Adjournment on August 13, every speech had been fully reported, and could be referred to as the Local Government Bill, and only wished for fair play, and he therefore asked their Lordships to do him the justice to look to the reports as they appeared in Hansard.