506 PARLIAMENTS OF THE DOMINIONS [PART ITI
province had the power to alter its constitution, if it saw
fit to do so, a resort to Imperial legislation would be in-
expedient except in circumstances of urgent necessity.
The Legislative Council continues to exist, with functions
co-ordinate with those of the Assembly except as respects
Bills of revenue, expenditure, and taxation, which it cannot
initiate or amend, though it might reject them, and did so up
to 1891. It cannot be swamped, and therefore it cannot, for
the present at least, be abolished. It has, indeed, been
suggested that the Lieutenant-Governor could use the power
to remove legislative councillors on the ground that they
hold during pleasure ; thus he could either alter its com-
position so as to secure the passing of a measure for its
abolition, or he could de facto abolish the Council by dis-
missing all the members. The latter theory must be certainly
held to be ultra vires and illegal—the Lieutenant-Governor
has the power to remove councillors but not to abolish
the Council. It is more difficult to say that the former
theory is, strictly speaking, illegal. It is the view of Bourinot
that the power of the Lieutenant-Governor to remove
councillors is confined to those cases laid down in the dispatch
of 1845, but that view cannot be accepted as being legally,
though it is no doubt constitutionally, correct. The Crown
in 1845 eventually felt that it would be unwise to grant
formally a life tenure subject only to vacating the post on
certain definite conditions. The Imperial Government then
left the matter at a tenure during pleasure, with instruc-
tions which in effect said that the members were to be
allowed to hold office during life unless certain circumstances
arose. But it is clear that with the disappearance of
the power of the Crown as exercised directly through the
! See also House of Assembly Journals, 1894, App. No. 17. The Govern-
ment in 1890, after an attempt to abolish the Upper House failed—the
Upper House having offended by rejecting certain money votes—only
appointed members on pledges that they would consent to abolition. But
these gentlemen, while accepting all other Government measures, refused to
keep their pledges on this point. In New Brunswick the abolition of the
Upper House was effected by the councillors keeping similar pledges ; see
Hannay, ii, 345 seq.