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“The British Commonwealth, without a written constitution, has never rested on pure logic. The reason it exists to-day is because the vast majority of its people believe in it profoundly and consider that their association with it is of benefit to themselves and to mankind,” says the London Spectator, in commenting on recent expressions from Canada and South Africa regarding the constitutional status of the Dominions. “The. British Commonwealth will hold together only so long as the majority of its citizens desire it. To those who believe in the complete freedom of the self-governing nations of the British Empire, a status which has been freely recognised by British statesmen in recent years, the knowledge that no Dominion will commit itself in advance to participation in a. future war of Great Britain’s has no terrors. Obviously it would be impossible to make a free democracy like Canada go to war in support of Great Britain, if a majority of her people were against such an undertaking. In the past no written pact has been required to ensure the co-operation of the Empire as a whole in the face of a common danger. The ‘imponderables’ have sufficed as they will in the future. A world State, such as the British Empire, can endure only if complete freedom is enjoyed by the nations which compose it. If an overwhelming majority of the people of Canada, South Africa or any other distant Dominion were to spthey wished to withdraw from Hie British Empire, however much we might regret the fact, we in England would not raise a hand to prevent them. They are masters of their own destiny, and that is one of the chief glories of the British Empire, and it is for that reason it will endure.” This opinion is at least candid. New Zealand, however, is solidly with the Motherland, as was emphasised in Parliament last week.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HOG19260907.2.15

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Hokitika Guardian, 7 September 1926, Page 2

Word count
Tapeke kupu
316

Untitled Hokitika Guardian, 7 September 1926, Page 2

Untitled Hokitika Guardian, 7 September 1926, Page 2

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