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THE PRIME MINISTER.

HIS NORTHERN TOUR. Special Correspondent.) WELLINGTON, Nov. 13. Mr Massey return to town yesterday from his flying tour through various parts of the North Island well pleased with his reception everywhere and confident of succcsg at the approaching polls. His main plea to the audiences he addressed was for a stable Government. “ I ask you in your own interests,” he said at a score of places, “ to give th,o Government- a working majority. I am not asking that for myself. I have had ten most strenuous yeai-g at the head of the affairs of this country, and I have had all the honours that the country can give- me. That does not mean that I am looking forward to retirement. lam not going to retire. I expect to die in harness. But I am telling you in your own interests you should see that a competent, stable, and experienced Government is in office during the next year or two.” Mr Massey did not indicate exactly at any of his meetings what numerical superiority he would regard as a working majority, but as ho has managed to get along very well in the expiring Parliament with an advantage of fourteen or fifteen votes it is being assumed a similar margin would satisfy him again. HEALTH AND POLITICS. Mr Massey’s allusion to the expectation to die in harness has set the gossips busy again with the discussion of his health. Of course they prefer the assumption ' that the Prime Minister is taxing his marvellous constitution to the breaking point and that he is in danger of collapse at any moment. But as a matter of fact ho is in better health than he was a month or two ago, and though he persists In putting a tremendous strain on his reserve strength, he has suffered litle from whirl of travelling and speaking. He realises—-though he would be the last to admit the fact —that the c.ection must be won by his own unaided efforts, and that anything he leaves undone to secure success will remain undone. His political opponents, as sincerely as his personal friends, will hope that his expectation to die in harness does not apply to the Parliament about to be elected or to the next or to the one after that, but so long as the consummation is indefinitely deferred the ambition is quite a natural and laudable one. ELECTORAL REFORM. Mr Massey continues to deny the need for electoral reform and to denounce the operation of proportional representation. The Reform Party could win when there was a direct contest. between a Reform candidate and one other candidate, lie said in several of his touring speeches. But when votes were scattered over three or more candidates, no party could be sure of getting an absolute majority. Mr Wilford and Mr Holland were both minority representatives. He had left fifteen electorates uncontested in 1019. but he had no lack of candidates this year. They were fallingover one another. Some electorates had surplus Reform candidates in the field, but he believed that the number of these extra candidates would be reduced before election day. This question of electoral reform is one of the few subjects on which Mr Massey flounders badly. Pie still denies that the Government represents a minority of the electors, but aoes not atempt to explain how it came to nave, a huge majority of the votes cast against it at the last general election.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MT19221114.2.45

Bibliographic details

Manawatu Times, Volume XLVI, Issue 2500, 14 November 1922, Page 5

Word Count
580

THE PRIME MINISTER. Manawatu Times, Volume XLVI, Issue 2500, 14 November 1922, Page 5

THE PRIME MINISTER. Manawatu Times, Volume XLVI, Issue 2500, 14 November 1922, Page 5

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