CHANCELLOR’S SPEECH
WIDESPREAD ATTENTION.
PRAISE AND CRITICISM
ARMAMENT POLICY
(United Press Association —By Electric Telegraph—Copyright.) . (British Official Wireless.) Received October 5, 11.30 a.m. RUGBY, Oct. 3.
Editorial comment in the morning papers is principally directed to the speech, which the Chancellor of the Exchequer (Mr Neville Chamberlain) delivered at the Conservative Party Conference.
The conference was delighted with the assurance that the Prime Minister himself had “every expectation that by the time Parliament reassembled he would be fully able to cope with the heavy tasks which would then lie before him.” Mr Chamberlain said: “When 1 consider the disturbed conditions of the world, and all the restrictions which still hamper international trade, 1 cannot but be astonished at the progress of our industry. Every month since January, there lias been an increase in employment at an average rate of nearly 90,000 a month. This improvement is not confined to particular areas; it covers almost every part of the pountry, and nearly all the important industries and even the depressed areas—the most obstinate and difficult part of the unemployment problem—are beginning to feel the effects of the revival.” He stated that the wage increases recorded in 1936 represented another £18,000,000 a year in the pockets of the wage-earners. Comment shows that the papers attach the greatest importance to the passages in the Chancellor’s speech relating to rearmament. The Chancellor told his audience the reasons, as the Minister responsible for the national finances, with which he had reached his conviction. “The state of the world has rendered it essential to embark on the largest programme- of expenditure on defence our country has ever undertaken in time of peace. When the programme is completed we shall once more have a Navy adequate to protect our vital lines of communication, we shall have an Army trifling in numbers beside the vast conscript armies of the Continent, but equipped with the most modern weapons and mechanical devices that science can give us; we shall have an Air Force which, in speed, range, and power of machines, and in the quality of its personnel, will be second to none. I regard our Air Force, when fully developed, as the most formidable deterrent to war that could be devised. I support the establishment with greater conviction and enthusiasm because every one knows it will never be used to make an unprovoked attack on any other country,” Mr Chamberlain declared. The Daily Telegraph comments on Mr Chamberlain’s concluding appeal for greater attention to physical education, in which it is examined by it and by. the Daily Mail, which considers this one of the most anxious problems of our time. The Chancellor’s speech is not without its critics in the Press. The Daily Express finds “Mr Chamberlain’s drum somewhat muffled and his rearmament plans too distant.” Mr Chamberlain said it was futile and dangerous to attempt to distinguish between armaments necessary to Britain’s own defence and what were required ior the fulfilment of her international obligations. The Manchester Guardian finds in this statement reason for despair and is forced to believe that this Government still cannot understand even what is meant by the wisdom of collective security. “They talk of defence and collective security as though they were two different things.” . Tho Daily Herald, from a similar angle, says: “Once again we find private confidence in national competitive armaments as in some way a guarantee of peace and security. One would think it was impossible that such a belief could survive August, 1914, hut here it is again—as vigorous and dominant as ever with nothing changed except where then it was the Navy, which was to secure peace, it is now au Air Force of terrific striking power.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MS19361005.2.119
Bibliographic details
Manawatu Standard, Volume LVI, Issue 263, 5 October 1936, Page 7
Word Count
619CHANCELLOR’S SPEECH Manawatu Standard, Volume LVI, Issue 263, 5 October 1936, Page 7
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