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 Debates, e.g. on the Anglo-German Agreement and the Cession of Heligoland, and on the motion in the House of Commons, March 19, 1918, that, 'in the opinion of this House, a Standing Committee of Foreign Affairs should be appointed, representative of all parties and groups in the House, in order that a regular channel of communication may be established between the Foreign Secretary and the House of Commons which will afford him frequent opportunities of giving information on questions of Foreign policy and which, by allowing Members to acquaint themselves more fully with current international problems, will enable this House to exercise closer supervision over the general conduct of Foreign affairs;' Keith, Responsible Government in the British Dominions; The Oxford Survey of the British Empire; Extracts from Minutes of Proceedings laid before the Imperial War Conference, 1917; The War Cabinet: Report for the Year 1917.

The subject is almost entirely ignored by A. Lawrence Lowell, The Government of England, and by Sydney Low,