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  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 22 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 22 December 1924

    22 DECEMBER 1924

    David Lloyd George, at a Liberal demonstration in Edinburgh, stated the case for the maintenance of the Liberal party in the political life of the country, as coming between a party who supported private monopoly and vested interest, and the Socialist party, who sought to confiscate everything for the benefit of a State monopoly. On the problem of the slums, he contended that no solution would be found unless they dealt with land monopoly.

    Voting takes place to-day at Dundee in the by-election caused by the death of the late Socialist member, Mr Morel.

    At a political demonstration in the City Hall, Glasgow, Mr John Wheatley said that, if any attempt was made by the Government of Great Britain to launch us into war with Russia, he for one was prepared to spend, not merely his time, but his life, in appealing to the working class of this country, not merely to refuse to join in the attack, but to utilise the opportunity of the war with Russia in attacking British capitalism.

    Benito Mussolini has thrown a bombshell into the Italian political camp in the shape of an Electoral Reform Bill providing for single-member representation and adoption of the British system whereby a majority vote secures a direct seat. His action involves an appeal to the country during the spring.

    Édouard Herriot, the French Premier, received at his bedside a number of Parisian journalists, to whom he made a reassuring statement regarding Communists’ activities in France. He deprecated panic-mongering, the effect of which was to injure the credit of France. La Liberté is to be prosecuted for an alleged infringement of the Press Law.

    Much angry comment appears in the German Press with regard to the British Government’s decision to postpone the evacuation of Cologne, which is held to be a breach of the Versailles Treaty. The German Government still awaits reports from its London and Paris Embassies, which are to be a breach of the Versailles Treaty.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 21 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 21 December 1924

    21 DECEMBER 1924

    Benito Mussolini announced a surprise bill in Italy for voting reform, based the new electoral system more on the UK model.

    The death of British diplomat George Buchanan (1854-1924) was announced.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 20 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 20 December 1924

    20 DECEMBER 1924

    The House of Commons, before rising until February 10, discussed generally the question of unemployment and relief of trade depression. Mr William Graham, suggesting an ex- tended application of the export credits scheme, said that while at the Treasury he was amazed to find that even among business men there was an almost complete absence of knowledge of the scheme. On the same point, Mr A. M. Samuel said the Overseas Trade Department wished that the scheme were better known and used more than it is at present by people in the North.

    A profound impression has been created in Berlin by Lord Curzon’s announcement that the Cologne zone will not be evacuated on January 10 and the reasons given for the postponement.

    Viscount Kato, the Japanese Prime Minister, in a speech at Tokio, said that the British authorities had given assurances that the Singapore base was purely a national affair, and was not intended to influence international relations.

    The Albanian Premier has appealed to the League of Nations to intervene at Belgrade with a view to putting an end to the present disturbances, which, he declares, have been organised in Jugo-Slav territory.

    An Oil Conservation Board has been created by the President of the United States. It consists of the Secretaries of War, the Navy, Interior, and Commerce.

    Flag appointments announced by the Admiralty include that of Sir Roger Keyes to the command of the Mediterranean station.

    David Lloyd George, who is to address a Liberal demonstration in Edinburgh to-day, travelled to Scotland, arriving at Waverley Station last night.

    Captain Elliot, Under Secretary for Health for Scotland, speaking at a Building Trade Association dinner in Edinburgh, said that considerable leeway needed to be made up in Scottish housing. He pointed out that unless Scotland completed 11 houses, as compared with every 80 houses built in England, she would be paying a subsidy towards housing in England.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 19 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 19 December 1924

    19 DECEMBER 1924

    It was confirmed that smallpox had returned to Derbyshire.

    British manufacturers said that they predicted a big absorption of the unemployed when the Prime Minister’s plan for safeguarding industries and developing Empire trade was put into operation.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 18 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 18 December 1924

    18 DECEMBER 1924

    The Earl of Onslow stated in the House of Lords that inquiries would be made as to the truth of the allegations contained in an article in a monthly magazine entitled “Nigeria’s Curse – The Native Administration.”

    A speech dealing with the Government’s fiscal plans was delivered by the Prime Minister in the House of Commons on the Liberal amendment to the Address. The amendment, which was moved by Captain Wedgwood Benn and seconded by Sir Archibald Sinclair, was rejected by 339 votes to 151.

    Mr Ramsay MacDonald, in a message to the Socialist candidate in Dundee, said the Government had already proclaimed to the world that the nation had returned to the old ruts of militarism and Tory ascendancy. The Labour party stood as the champion of progress against reaction.

    Addressing a Liberal rally at Llandilo, Sir Alfred Mond said that if the Government meant to reintroduce the Preference resolutions of the last Imperial Conference, which involved a number of new taxes and which the country decisively rejected at the election of 1923, they were committing a most serious breach of an honourable pledge.

    Herr Stresemann has declined the task of forming a German Government on account of opposition by the Centre party.

    Further evidence was heard by the Royal Commission on Food Prices. Bread, it was stated, was dearer in New York than in this country. Speculation in wheat in America was very great, but there were no corners.

    On account of the “distinct difference of treatment between England and Scotland” in the matter of representation, the Scottish branch of the National Farmers’ Union has declined to participate in the agricultural conference.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 17 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 17 December 1924

    17 DECEMBER 1924

    In the House of Lords, Marquis Curzon, replying to Lord Newton as to the number of Russians connected with Soviet Missions admitted to this country since the Anglo-Russian Trade Agreement was concluded, said that since then 310 visas had been granted, and this 340 included members who came over in the course of last year to discuss the terms of what some of them regarded as the unfortunate treaty with His Majesty’s Government.

    In the housing debate in the Commons, the Minister of Health stated that, by arrangement with Lord Weir, experimental steel houses would be produced for Local Authorities, who would be asked not to let them, but to erect them on accessible sites where they could be readily visited and inspected, and so enable people to judge of their suitability. In this way, among others, he hoped to produce the number of houses contemplated by the Wheatley Act.

    Winston Churchill, speaking in London, said that out of the whole finance of Britain it was dangerous to take a decision in regard to any one part until they were quite sure what were the consequential reactions on the other parts. His work at first was to acquire a thorough understanding of his task.

    Both the candidates in the Dundee by-election turned up at a dinner-time shipyard meeting, and there was a pleasant exchange of courtesies. A coin was tossed to decide who should speak first.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 16 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 16 December 1924

    16 DECEMBER 1924

    Mr Austen Chamberlain’s speech in the debate on the Address in the House of Commons was largely taken up with the Egyptian question. He emphasised the British trusteeship in the Sudan, the desire of the Government that the Egyptian Government should work with and not against Britain, and urged that there was no case to take to the League. Egyptian independence would be respected. The Foreign Secretary, referring to the Zinoviev letter, said that from four sources the Government had evidence of its authenticity. Dividing on the Socialist amendment to the Address, the House gave the Government a majority of 231.

    Replying to questions by Mr Ramsay MacDonald in the House of Commons bearing on the Campbell case, the Prime Minister said there was no doubt that in particular cases of an exceptional character the Attorney-General, before undertaking a prosecution, had consulted the Cabinet. That, however, appeared to be an entirely different matter from the issue of a general instruction which would have the effect of placing the Attorney-General in a position of complete subservience to the executive authorities.

    Questions with regard to Sir Dari Singa’s A.D.C. were put in the House of Commons to the Under Secretary for India.

    Mr W. M. R. Pringle, supporting the Liberal candidate at a meeting in Dundee, was subjected to considerable interruption, and in a counter-attack said measures would be adopted to stop such tactics. Force would be met by force.

    A Paris newspaper says that the number of killed, wounded, and missing in the last Spanish retreat in Morocco amounted to 20,000 men, besides the loss of several thousand prisoners.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 15 December 1924

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 15 December 1924

    15 DECEMBER 1924

    Édouard Herriot, the French Prime Minister, is suffering from para phlebitis of the right leg, induced by the strain of overwork, and the possibility that he may be compelled to resign the French Premiership is admitted even in Government circles.

    Before dispersing the League of Nations Council at its closing session in Rome disposed of several questions relating to national minorities. The Permanent Court of International Justice is to be asked to give an advisory opinion with regard to Greeks “established” at Constantinople, whose case has been discussed in connection with exchange of Turk and Greek minorities.

    Judgment was given by Lord Blackburn in the action in the Court of Session arising out of the stoppage of work in connection with the erection of a new church in Cathcart parish, Glasgow.

    Recent statements that the South African Government was negotiating with German interests, for the establishment of an iron industry in South Africa are the subject of a published correction by the Managing Director of the South African Iron and Steel Corporation. “Recent developments,” he says, “are merely due to the impossibility of obtaining the necessary assistance from the British side, and surely nobody could blame the South African Steel Corporation for going elsewhere.”

    A Sub-Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives which drew up the naval appropriations for the next fiscal year deny that America’s naval prestige is rapidly waning. Two battleships are being transformed into aircraft carriers, giving the country a greater tonnage of such vessels than any other nation apart from Great Britain.

  • PRESS RELEASE : Tens of thousands more pensioners now in receipt of Pension Credit [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : Tens of thousands more pensioners now in receipt of Pension Credit [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Department for Work and Pensions on 28 November 2024.

    The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has released new statistics today [Thursday 28 November] on the amount of Pension Credit applications, as well as applications processed and those claims that were successful.

    Tens of thousands more pensioners now in receipt of Pension Credit

    • Since July, an extra 42,500 pensioners are now in receipt of Pension Credit and will receive the Winter Fuel Payment
    • Average number of Pension Credit claims a week have more than doubled since July
    • Comes as government continues to urge pensioners to check their eligibility and apply for pension credit

    New figures released today show an extra 42,500 households are now in receipt of Pension Credit, and therefore the Winter Fuel Payment, since the government launched its pension credit awareness campaign.

    The average weekly number of Pension Credit applications have more than doubled since the Chancellor’s announcement, with 150,000 more Pension Credit applications since July.

    It comes as the Department continues to urge pensioners to check their eligibility and apply for pension credit, with DWP deploying 500 extra staff to process applications as quickly as possible.

    It only takes 16 minutes on average to apply, and anyone who makes a successful claim for Pension Credit before 21 December will receive both backdated Pension Credit and a Winter Fuel Payment.

    Minister for Pensions Emma Reynolds MP said:

    We’re pleased to see more pensioners are now receiving Pension Credit and our staff are processing claims as quickly as possible.

    With the 21 December approaching, my message is clear: check if you are eligible for Pension Credit and if you are then apply, as it unlocks a range of benefits including the Winter Fuel Payment.

    Pension Credit acts as gateway benefit, so not only is it worth £3,900 per year on average, it means that people who are eligible may also qualify for help with housing costs such as rent and council tax as well as energy bills.

    The government will continue to stand behind vulnerable households this winter, including through the £150 Warm Home Discount for low-income households from October and by extending the Household Support Fund with £1 billion to ensure local authorities can support vulnerable people and families.

    Millions of pensioners are also set to benefit from an increase of up to £470 to the state pension in April and up to £1,900 more over the next five years.

  • PRESS RELEASE : New UK investment to unlock billions to tackle root causes of irregular migration, climate change and growth crises [November 2024]

    PRESS RELEASE : New UK investment to unlock billions to tackle root causes of irregular migration, climate change and growth crises [November 2024]

    The press release issued by the Foreign Office on 28 November 2024.

    UK announces contribution to International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank’s fund for the world’s lowest income countries.

    • UK’s boost to World Bank signals “new partnership” between the UK and the Global South and will mobilise billions of dollars in private finance.
    • Boost will provide growth and stability around the world in our shared interest, as the UK Government announces pledge and calls on other countries to step up.
    • Grants and low-interest loans will tackle root causes of issues facing the UK such as the climate crisis and irregular migration.

    The world’s lowest-income countries will receive access to billions of dollars in transformative grants and low-interest loans as a result of a new UK investment announced today.

    Development Minister Anneliese Dodds today announced that the UK will provide £1.98 billion over three years to the International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank’s fund for the world’s lowest income countries, to go towards projects promoting economic growth, tackling poverty and addressing the impacts of climate change.

    Through a unique funding mechanism, the UK contribution will help to unlock billions of dollars through other sources of finance, including from private markets: for every $1 a country pledges, up to $4 can be spent. This will be funded from the UK’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) budget.

    IDA is the largest source of grants and low interest loans for low-income and vulnerable countries and the UK’s contribution will help the World Bank support more than 1.9 billion people across the globe.

    The World Bank’s model has seen it provide $93 billion in finance to 75 countries, 39 in Africa, over the last 3 years. In that time, IDA has supported more than 86.5 million children with a better education and 75 million people with new or improved access to electricity, lifting individuals out of poverty and boosting economic growth in recipient countries.

    Foreign Secretary David Lammy said:

    Growth and stability in lower income countries is firmly in the UK’s interest. If we are to grow our economy, tackle the climate crisis and reduce irregular migration, we need to work in partnership with these countries.

    IDA’s track record shows that it is one of the best ways to do this. I urge other donors to step up at next week’s conference.

    Minister for Development Anneliese Dodds said:

    Britain is back with a voice on the world stage. When we said we would take a new approach to development, built on genuine partnerships and based on respect, we meant it.

    Leaders of low-income countries around the world called for stronger IDA contributions and we listened.

    We listened because we understand that more growth in IDA countries means stronger global growth, which benefits all of us. This funding will unlock billions to support vital economic growth, changing and saving lives.

    Today’s announcement is the latest example of the UK’s updated and modern approach to development, based on respect, partnership and common interests.

    The UK is a strong support of IDA due to its strong track record of working in partnership with recipient countries and delivering sustainable growth. Since 1960, 36 countries have ‘graduated’ from IDA.

    For example, South Korea, formerly a low-income country supported by IDA loans, is today one of the world’s wealthiest countries, and will be hosting the IDA donor conference next week.

    Anneliese Dodds set out the government’s “new approach to development” at a major speech to Chatham House in October. She outlined four key “shifts” needed to modernise the UK’s approach to development and restore its world-leading status: partnership, multilateral reform, harnessing UK expertise and growing opportunity for all.