BRITISH CABINET
CONSERVATIVES AND LLOYO GEORGE.
THE POSITION EXPLAINED,
Press Association —By Telegraph—Copyright.
LONDON, March 24.
Tho ‘Daily Chronicle’s’ spccial_ correspondent, writing from Criccieth, gives an interesting resume of the political situation, evidently as the result of a consultation with Mr Lloyd George. The correspondent denies that there has been a crisis between the Liberals and the Conservatives in tho Cabinet. The crisis has been amongst the Conservatives. The article admits that Mr Lloyd George resigned, and. then withdrew his resignation, but his reason was the adoption of tho Genoa Conference as the policy of the Coalition, which amounts to the reaffirmation of Conservative loyalty to Coalition. Mr Lloyd George regards the Genoa Conference as the key to the future, and he understands that the Conservatives make their attachment to this principle their main reason for asking Mr Llold George to continue the Premiership.
In a letter to Mr Chamberlain withdrawing his resignation, Mr Lloyd George made three conditions 1. The Irish settlement must be carried through. 2. No reactionary policy must be pursued. 5. The foreign policy must aim at a peace and the disarmament of Europe. This last is what Mr Lloyd George means by the Genoa policy.—A. and N.Z. Cable.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 17928, 25 March 1922, Page 3
Word Count
203BRITISH CABINET Evening Star, Issue 17928, 25 March 1922, Page 3
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