Article.

POLITICAL.

Maoriland Worker, Volume 4, Issue 104, 14 March 1913, Page 5

 

POLITICAL.

That this obnfetence rebbtathbrtds in* fbllowitfg outline as indicating the lifibs tlbUg Which a constitution shbuld tb difatn up by tho let i# tb draft ft constitution to be bbhftidered, ate'ended if nebbssary, And adopted "by tho joint congress of uaibna to lie held in Wellington, commencing on tha first Tuesday in 1918. Your baft* mittee also recommends that thb $to* pbsod confereaoe tb be held ift July shall forthwith inaugurate thfe ft«W hbdy aa a going cbnoetfl. NAME. Sbcial-fief&bbr&tifc Party. OfiJficTlVlß. The ibfeialiSfttibn 6f the r3blli»tiv*ly» used Mans bf prbdubtibil, distHbufcibiv, aM eiehangb. COMPOSITION. Thb party shall bo'nsist bf tniibns> JbCSI brafichfes, and individual member* prepared to bndbrSb thb fbrfegoini Md pledge their stoppbrt. This party shall bb distinct from aiy bthor jßfrrty br parties, and its attitude towards any ether ft fifties shall Bb that bf independence. PRINCIPLIB. That the bb iSttfact<sd tb draft a declaration hi PLATFORM. Thb sub-cbniihittbo snail prepare a platform which shall include tho usual ibgislativfe proposals of orgahilM tahbr in this country, ineludini a cbhsldlra* tibtt bf wages Ma hbura, together witfc suefi Matters as laud, industrial, afl& dbaiihoi'elal naohopoliis, thb ihit&tivb and referendum, the tecall and proportional fepretett&tieft. EXISTENT PA&TIES. That thb respective bf th* New Zealand Federation of Labor, thb United Laior Party,- and the Socialist Paßy be invitsd, while not in «»y way abating the# own activitiis, to utilise their esSstiag machinery and ortfan* isefs to push forward the work of Organisation on the lines agreed upon at this conference.

Click here to view this newspaper article

This text was automatically generated by a computer. It has not been manually reviewed or corrected and may include errors. You can view the article in its original format or read the entire page.

About the computer-generated text

Optical Character Recognition (OCR) is a process for automatically extracting text from scanned pages. OCR enables searching of large quantities of full-text data, but it is not 100% accurate. The level of accuracy depends on the print quality of the original newspaper and its condition at the time of microfilming. Newspapers with poor quality paper, small print, mixed fonts, multiple column layouts or damaged pages may have poor OCR accuracy.

The page where this item appears has an estimated OCR accuracy of 98.70%.