SOUTH AFRICAN OPINION
PARLIAMENT AND PREFERENCE,
! (SYDNEY SLH CABLE.) I (Received 17th- Jnfiilarv, noon ) 1 CAPETOWN. 16th January. 'file view; of the South African (lov'crninertt is flint Mr. Ma'Cdon-a'd's resolve to leave his followers free to tote as tiioV please on Mr. Baldwin's preference pro"-
posals gets, over an awkward.-difficulty ■ The constitutional practice is that "if Mr. Baldwin is still in power, he is bound to submit the proposals to' Parliament, unless he dissented at the time This is what General Smuts did regarding the Indians in 1921. If there is another Government, it is also bound to give Parliament an opportunity of assenting or otherwise, as the Government initiates proposals involving taxation
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 14, 17 January 1924, Page 7
Word Count
113SOUTH AFRICAN OPINION Evening Post, Volume CVII, Issue 14, 17 January 1924, Page 7
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