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Devon House

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Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Devon House
Phone:
+1 876-926-0815

Hours:
Sunday7am - 10pm
Monday7am - 10pm
Tuesday7am - 10pm
Wednesday7am - 10pm
Thursday7am - 10pm
Friday7am - 10pm
Saturday7am - 10pm


Ministerial by-elections to the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster and its predecessor, the Parliament of Great Britain, were held from 1707 to the 1920s when a member of parliament was appointed as a minister in the government. Unlike most Westminster by-elections, ministerial by-elections were often a formality, uncontested by opposition parties. Re-election was required under the Succession to the Crown Act 1707. This was in line with the principle established in 1624 that accepting an office of profit from the Crown would precipitate resignation from the House, with the option of standing for re-election. Typically a minister sought re-election in the same constituency he had just vacated, but occasionally contested another seat which was also vacant. In 1910 The Times newspaper noted that the relevant Act had been passed in the reign of Queen Anne to prevent the Court from swamping the House of Commons with placemen and pensioners, and described the process as anomalous and indefensible in the 20th century. The Re-Election of Ministers Act 1919 ended the necessity to seek re-election within nine months of a general election, and the Re-Election of Ministers Act Amendment Act 1926 ended the practice in all other cases.
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