CRITIC OF COMMONS
“For Regulating’ Trade”
PART OF MERCHANT PRINCES
(Received June 1, 11.50 p.m.)
London, June 1.
Mr. George Riddle, in his presidential address to the Co-operative Movement at Newcastle-on-Tyne, said: “The House of Commons is fast becoming a place for regulating trade. Merchant, princes are not in the lobbies hut in the House itself, waiting, watering and demanding. They are beggars a grand scale. Grants, subsidies, concessions and levies might not be irregular, but they are an unhealthy influence on public life. Trade and commerce, in the next financial year, will receive from the public funds £116,000,000 more than in 1926.”
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Bibliographic details
Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 210, 2 June 1936, Page 9
Word Count
103CRITIC OF COMMONS Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 210, 2 June 1936, Page 9
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