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MR LEE’S POSITION

VIEWS OF LEFT WING COLLEAGUE REFERENCE TO STRAINED RELATIONS. MR SAVAGE AND CAUCUS. (By Telegraph—Press Association.) TIMARU, December 22. Interviewed today Mr Clyde Carr, M.P. for Timaru, a prominent member of the so-called Left wing of the Parliamentary Labour Party, said it was general knowledge that relations between Mr Lee, M.P. for Grey Lynn, and Mr Nash had been somewhat strained. Mr Lee's position as Undersecretary to Mr Nash had been purely nominal since Mr Armstrong assumed the portfolio of State Advances and Housing. Apparently Mr Lee’s recent article in “Tomorrow” brought matters to a head. In the opinion of Mr Carr the article was well written but precipitate. It was always dangerous to indulge in over-generalisation. Mr Carr said that Mr Lee, himself and others connected with them agreed that the Labour Government, including Mr Nash, had done a great deal to implement the Labour Party’s pledges, but in certain respects they were not satisfied, particularly regarding financial matters, banking legislation and administration generally. These to a large extent represented the different attitudes of mind inevitable in any intelligent group. Though he deprecated and detested hero worship, he realised that changes of leadership must never be considered without a due sense of their gravity. Agreements within the party vastly outnumbered the differences just as their differences with the Opposition vastly outnumbered agreements with them. The obvious implication of Mr Lee’s article was that the present Prime Minister was allowing his sense of duty to outweigh a due regard for his own health. At least that was how he (Mr Carr) would have expressed it. To Mr Lee it would appear rather that it was a mistaken sense of duty and that Mr. Savage’s condition of health should occasion him even more ’concern from a national than from n personal point of view. Mr Savage's disposition to overrule the will of caucus might be due to other causes, and was a problem to be considered without passion or conflict of irrelevant matters such as what his health might or might not be. It should be dealt-with promptly and effectively. however.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19391223.2.48

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 December 1939, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
353

MR LEE’S POSITION Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 December 1939, Page 5

MR LEE’S POSITION Wairarapa Times-Age, 23 December 1939, Page 5

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