Sir ROBERT PEEL ' on Mr. GROTE'S motion, says, " that
for his part, be could not understand why the Ballot, if good for the consti- tuent body, should not also be good for the representative body :" i. e. Sir ROBERT PEEL' on Mr. GROTE'S motion, says, " that for his part, be could not understand why the Ballot, if good for the consti- tuent body, should not also be good for the representative body :" i. e. • he can see no difference between the private vote of an individual, with which no one but himself is, or ought to be concerned, and the public vote of the representative, in which each constituent is so directly in- terested. It is like asserting that a man should not be required to give an account of monies intrusted to him for the use of others, because he has a right to spend his own fortune without making it known to others
• in what way he so employs it.