TO MR BALDWIN
'•lt still remains true that the prospects of the Party would be improved beyond all knowledge by the belief—there have been one or two grounds for it lately—that Mr Baldwin was prepared to take office here after with a team that would be predominantly new and young. He has probably done more than any other Englishman to convince the Labour movement that sincerity, good-will, and a genuine desire to improve the conditions of the people may be found outside its own self-righteous ranks. No doubt Mr Baldwin’s moderation in dealing with Labour has served aho to blunt the edge of Conservative opposition; but England, and especially the industrial North of England (which is where there are seats to be recovered), has never stood for a Conservatism of the type that is labelled ‘die-hard.”— “ London Times.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 7 January 1931, Page 7
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138TO MR BALDWIN Hokitika Guardian, 7 January 1931, Page 7
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