MILDEST AND BEST.
Democrat Senator's View of U.S.
Court Reform.
SOME RADIO CRITICS.
(Received 9.30 a.m.) WASHINGTON, February 21. | Speaking in the Senate, Mr. H. F. Ashurst (Democrat, Arizona) defended President Roosevelt's judiciary reform programme as the mildest and best that could be presented in the circumstances. He made light of his own speech of January 29 in which he had condemned any alteration in the Court by asserting that a man who attempts to be consistent in the public service can never accomplish anything else.
Mr. J. T. Robinson (Democrat, Arkansas) strongly attacked organised force, which he said was seeking to control every publicity agency in the nation in order to cry' down the judiciary plan.
In radio broadcasts, Mr. B. K. Wheeler (Democrat, Montana) and two members of the House of Representatives, Messrs. E. E. Cox (Democrat, Georgia), and U. S. Guyer (Republican, Kansas), criticised the programme.
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXVIII, Issue 44, 22 February 1937, Page 7
Word Count
149MILDEST AND BEST. Auckland Star, Volume LXVIII, Issue 44, 22 February 1937, Page 7
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