Word: welshman
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Election!" David Lloyd George, nominal Leader of the Liberal Party from which so many Liberals have split off, stormed from his sickbed last week: "This election is the most wanton and unpatriotic into which this country has ever been plunged!" (i. e. Scot MacDonald has broken and ruined the Welshman's party...
...counting the Prime Minister, there were only ten Ministers. It was not only the first Coalition Cabinet since the War but also the smallest, most mobile. A place was held open for Great Britain's last Coalition Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, but that wary Welshman was not so sure. He realized the necessity for the new Government and he sent his right-hand man, Sir Herbert Samuel, to represent him on it. But he realized fully that this was a bankers' Cabinet put into office to get a certain thing done as quickly as possible, that...
...been all that has kept the Laborite Government in office. Recently Liberal oxen have galled under the Lloyd George yoke. Sir John Simon, busy last week in the defense of Lord Kylsant (see p. 17), left the party in disgust, was sped on his way by the hot little Welshman as follows...
...Liberal. Should he desert, Mr. Lloyd George was expected last week to throw in his lot with James Ramsay MacDonald, enter a formal "Lib-Lab Coalition Cabinet." Mr. MacDonald, for obvious reasons, was understood to want Mr. Lloyd George to take the minis try concerned with unemployment. But the Welshman continues to fancy his old job as Chancellor of the Exchequer, and last week Chancellor Snowden was still suffering in bed with cystitis...
...deplored Mr. Lloyd George's feature-writing for William Randolph Hearst. Recently the Times dug back through Hearst files to 1923, dug out a statement by Mr. Lloyd George anent the Anglo-U. S. debt settlement, printed part of it in an effort to show that the Welshman's debt stand eight years ago is inconsistent with his stand today. In his retort (a letter-to-the-Tzwes reprinted and featured by Hearstpapers last week) Mr. Lloyd George accused the Times of "garbling"' his eight-year-old words. Said he: "After I called your attention to these...