WELLINGTON TOPICS.
FRIDAY'S DIVISION. .- ITS SIGNIFICANCE. (Special Correspondent.) Wellington, Sept. 20. 'The significance of the division in the House on Friday afternoon did not lie in the fact that the Government was saved from defeat only by tlie easting vote of the Chairman of Committee, but in the evidence it provided of some sort of > rappr.uachment .between the Liberals, ,and ,the: 'Official' Labour, tarty. During .the .election campaign, and the early • days • of. -the /session Mr. - -Holland and his friends seemed.>to stand eveil further apart from the Liberals than they did frbm the Reformers; indeed .they.; made''no ■secret of- their' belief that, theft own way to the Treasury. Benches lay'across, the dead and buried, .'body of Liberalism.' But since Mr. fr,. M, Wilfonl assumed the leadership of., the Liberal-Party, the Social Democrats, asMr. Holland and his friends still like to /bo. "called, have appeared distinctly leas keen in the pursuit of their disintegrating tactics.
POSSIBILITIES IN THE FUTURE. This is not to say that the Social Democrats are showing the slightest inclination to surrender their party identity or that Mr. Wilford is coquetting with the extremists for their support. But the new members of the Official Labour Party have conceived a much broader idea of their representative duties than any Mr. Holland has yet inculcated. They do not habitually talk of having been, sent to Parliament by one section of the worker? to protect them from the greed and arrogance of the rest of the community. 'The new leader of the Liberal Party, on the other hand, isi frankly sympathetic with the cause of Labour and recognises the justice of the workers' claims, and very likely, as some of his critics are jeering, their growing strength in the'constituencies. Of course no combination is going to displace the Government during the' life of the present Parliament, but there appears to be a possibility of many interesting developments before the next general election. ELECTIVE ¥PPER HOUSE. The very large majority that supported the Hon. J. B. Gow's motion urging the Government to save, the members of the Legislative Council from the ordeal of a popular election advanced no new argument for undoing the legislation of six yeafs ago. Simply what was said in 1914 ,was said again with such emphasis as could be obtained from the conditions created by the war. One curious thing abo'ut the. division was that three-fourths of the councillors who voted with Mr. Gow were members of the party which a little.jvhile.ago deemed the adoption of the elective system as the one thing necessary for the salvation of the Upper House. It is to the credit of Sir Francis Bell, the leader of the Council, however, that he stands firm to his principles and will tolerate no tampering with the existing Act so long as he. remains in office.
WHAT NEXT. , What will happen next in regard to the Legislative Council Act it is difficult to say. The Prime Minister has made no pronouncement on the subject, but it may he presumed the Government will remain loyal to its representative in the Upper House, if only to avoid the catastrophe of losing If is services at the Cahinet table. But there are several amendments which ought to he made in the Act before it comes into operation and which would meet with the approval of both Chambers if they were approached' with a desire to improve the measure and not with a determination to destroy it. These amendments would deal with the representation of the Government in the Council, the system of counting the voteß at an election and soma minor matters, and none of them need impair the underlying principle of the measure. The Government's difficulty will be to confine the improvement of the Bit! to this scope.
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Taranaki Daily News, 23 September 1920, Page 2
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631WELLINGTON TOPICS. Taranaki Daily News, 23 September 1920, Page 2
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