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THE SITUATION IN PARIS.

ATTITUDE OF THE SOCIALISTS.

MINISTERIAL CRISIS.

RESIGNATION OF THE GOVERNMENT.

Press Association.—Electric Telegraph.—

' London, January 14. The Times Paris correspondent says there is a mystery surrounding the actions of the Socialists which may only be dispelled by an unforeseen conflagration. Paris, January 14. Owing to the refusal of the Chamber to vote Richards' release, the Socialist deputies have issued a manifesto violently attacking the President and the Ministry. They accuse the Government of obtaining votes unlawfully. M. Roult, a Socialist deputy, was expelled from the Chamber for asserting that honest voting was no longer possible. The resignation of M. Barthon, Minister of Public Works, caused an animated scene in the Chamber of Deputies, and by a majority of 22 the Chamber carried a motion of censure on M. Dupuy, the Premier, and the Minister of the Interior, for not protecting the State against the aggression of the railway companies. The Government has resigned.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH18950116.2.42

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXII, Issue 9720, 16 January 1895, Page 5

Word Count
157

THE SITUATION IN PARIS. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXII, Issue 9720, 16 January 1895, Page 5

THE SITUATION IN PARIS. New Zealand Herald, Volume XXXII, Issue 9720, 16 January 1895, Page 5