NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
POLICY IN BRITAIN MR KUSHAVORTH’S IMPRESSIONS I Per Pres? Association) WELLINGTON, Nov. 23. The National Government’s policy in Britain was regarded with fear by the average Englishman, said Mr H. Rushworth, M.P., who returned to New Zealand to-day, and the English appeared to be resigned to the inevitability of war, although no one seemed to know who was to be fought or why. From his observations in the House ot Commons, Mr Rushworth gained the impression that there was no effective opposition to the Government. The politicians he had talked to were very guarded in all their remarks on policy, but he gained the impression that a federated empire would be of more importance than quotas or embargoes at the next Imperial Conference.
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Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 278, 24 November 1936, Page 6
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125NATIONAL GOVERNMENT Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 79, Issue 278, 24 November 1936, Page 6
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