THE FISCAL POLICY.
LORD CURZON'S VIEWS. A CHANGE INEVITABLE. (Received April 10, 10.51) p.m.) London, April 10. Lord Curz'jn, presiding at. a Unionist mass meeting at Basingstoke, remarked it was a decade since he had addressed any political gathering in England. Referring to Mr. Balfour's fiscal platform, he said it was one whereon all sections of the party could well unite, and whereon ultimate, reunion, besides being possible, was certain. He did not envy either the common sense or political foresight of a man declaring that no change in the fiscal policy was required or likely to occur. A change of some sort. Lord Curzon went on, was necessary and inevitable. Possibly, it would not take precisely the shape, the authors of the movement anticipated, and perhaps it would not fulfil all the ambitious desires of the warmest partisans. He disclaimed a sufficient knowledge to enable him to dogmatise.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 13722, 11 April 1908, Page 7
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149THE FISCAL POLICY. New Zealand Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 13722, 11 April 1908, Page 7
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