Mr Bonar Law
1858 - October 30, 1923Summary information for Mr Bonar Law
Contributions
1910
5 speeches — GOVERNMENT BILLS (PRECEDENCE). Commons February 12, 1910
2 speeches — BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE (PROCEDURE). Commons February 12, 1910
PEACE CONFERENCE (BRITISH POLICY). Commons February 12, 1910
3 speeches — DEBATE ON THE ADDRESS. Commons February 23, 1910
7 speeches — DEBATE ON THE ADDRESS. Commons February 24, 1910
2 speeches — SCHEDULE. Commons March 3, 1910
LABOTJE EXCHANGES. Commons March 18, 1910
9 speeches — FINANCE BUSINESS (PROCEDURE). Commons March 21, 1910
2 speeches — " Dreadnought" Building (Thames Contract). Commons March 22, 1910
4 speeches — DURATION OF PARLIAMENT. Commons April 4, 1910
Iron and Steel Manufactures (United Kingdom and Germany). Written Answers April 10, 1910
"Dreadnought" Building (Thames Contract). Commons April 12, 1910
German Imports and Exports of Cotton. Written Answers April 19, 1910
FINANCE BILL, 1909–10. Commons April 25, 1910
9 speeches — FINANCE BILL, 1909–10. Commons April 27, 1910
Cotton Manufactures Exported. Written Answers May 11, 1910
ELEMNTARY SCHOOL HOLIDAYS. Commons May 21, 1910
REPARATION. Commons May 21, 1910
BLOCKADE (INTERNATIONAL LAW). Commons May 21, 1910
MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT (TRAVELLING PRIVILEGES). Commons May 21, 1910
2 speeches — PORT OF LONDON (PORT RATE ON GOODS) PROVISIONAL ORDER, BILL. Commons June 20, 1910
3 speeches — NEWPORT DOCK DISPUTE. Commons June 22, 1910
19 speeches — BUDGET RESOLUTIONS (INCOME TAX AXD SUPER-TAX).— [Progress, 6th July.] Commons July 8, 1910
Salvation Army (Meat Supply). Written Answers July 14, 1910
SCHEDULE—PARAGRAPH 4.—(Power to Levy Port Rates.) Commons July 18, 1910
2 speeches — Brazilian Tariffs on British Goods (Preference to United States). Commons July 21, 1910
COLONIAL PREFERENCE. Commons July 21, 1910
3 speeches — PORT OF LONDON (PORT RATES ON GOODS) PROVISIONAL ORDER BILL. Commons July 21, 1910
7 speeches — CUSTOMS DUTY ON TEA. Commons July 25, 1910
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.