RIVAL LABOUR LEADERS.
-. THE SPLIT IN THE CAMP. '/Commenting in a leading article upon the Auckland East by-election the New Zealand Time*,-says that the .main object lesson to be gained '■• is that organised ■ Labour in its present humour can never hope to prevail politically. t There are continual evidences of., jealousy and discord amongst rival "leaders in the camp of; the unionists, and there are indications that so long as these influences predominate, substantial achievement will be impossible..... From the point of view that Labour collectively has as much right to a voice in the counsels of the nation as any other section of -the community, this is to be regretted. _; The need of Labour is some dominant personality to weld the! contending influences by means of some programme eliminating factional parochial;ism. .„. .The r . Taylors, McLarens, and McCulloughs have no credentialsj. They are the blind leaders of the blind. .
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New Zealand Herald, Volume XLVII, Issue 14391, 9 June 1910, Page 6
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149RIVAL LABOUR LEADERS. New Zealand Herald, Volume XLVII, Issue 14391, 9 June 1910, Page 6
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