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WHERE REFORM STANDS

Fusion Suggestion MR. COATES SUMS UP United Dependence on Labour IMPORTANT POLICY POINTS By Telegraph—Press Association. Auckland, November 24. A suggestion that there should be a fusion of the Reform and United Parties was tlie subject of a statement made tonight by the Right Hon. J. G. Coates, Leader of the Reform Party. “There is a good deal of talk in certain circles about the alleged desirability of effecting a fusion of the Reform and United Parties,” said Mr. Coates. It is to be noted, however, that there has never been the slightest suggestion m this direction emanating from any member of the present Government or any prominent member of the United Party. “I would recall that when the United Party first took office I made a frank and public offer on behalf of the Reform Party to give the new Government our support on every question on which it adopted a policy consistent with our principles,” said Mr. Coates. “That offer was brushed aside and the United Government turned to the Socialist-Labour Party for the support it needed in order to maintain itself in office. Since that time the Government has consistently followed a course which has made it impossible for Reformers to support it, while on the other hand the Government’s policy has evidently been framed to satisfy the Labour Party, on whose votes it has relied. “If there is even now, as some people outside politics suggest, a desire on the part of the Government to free itself from dependence on the Socialist-Labour Party, then surely it would be for the Government to indicate the fact. Reformers Solid. “So far as the Reform Party is concerned,” said Mr. Coates, “we have as a party nothing to gain by fusion. Our own party is absolutely solid. It has definite principles and a clear cut policy, and we face the next general election with confidence; but the Reform Party has never put party interests first. We are not prepared to compromise with anybody on matters of principle, and there are certain important points of policy which we regard as absolutely essential in the national interests. If the United Party or any other party chooses to change its policy and adopt measures which we of the Reform Party believe to be right, then those who advocate fusion may be able to justify their position, but it is futile to suggest that we of the Reform Party should abandon our principles or cease to fight against a policy which we consider wrong. Important Policy Points. “There are seven items of policy upon which we insist,” Mr. Coates concluded. “They are: — “(1) That there must be a return to the late Reform Government’s policy of tapering off public borrowing. “(2) That costs of production must be brought down to enable our producers to meet the new level of world prices. “(3) That a policy of derating must be adopted to ease the burden of reading costs on the farmer. “(4) That the railways must be removed from political control. “(5) That expenditure of borrowed money on railway construction must cease in all cases where it cannot be shown that a new line wheu completed will be economically sound. “(6) That the rate of wages paid for single men for purely relief work must be lower than the standard rate. “(7) That although night parades should be eliminated, the system of national defence must still be based upon the principle of national service.”

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19301125.2.102

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 24, Issue 52, 25 November 1930, Page 10

Word Count
583

WHERE REFORM STANDS Dominion, Volume 24, Issue 52, 25 November 1930, Page 10

WHERE REFORM STANDS Dominion, Volume 24, Issue 52, 25 November 1930, Page 10