Showing 61 - 80 results of 80 for search '"Chancellor of the Exchequer"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 61
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  3. 63
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  5. 65
    “…Channel 4 TV broadcast of a special report on British politics and inflation with former Chancellor of the Exchequer Norman Lamont. In the program he interviews Lord Nigel Lawson (Chancellor of the Exchequer, 1983-1989), George Soros (businessman and philanthropist), Karl Otto Pohl (Bundesbank President 1980-1991), and Lord Kingsdown (Bank of England Governor, 1983-1993).…”
  6. 66
    Published [1857]
    “…Letters to the Chancellor of the Exchequer (= George Cornewall Lewis).…”
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  7. 67
    Published 1900.
    “…Smith and the Chancellor of the Exchequer.…”
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  8. 68
    Published 1821.
    “…The manuscript of this pamphlet was communicated to the Chancellor of the Exchequer in February 1817.…”
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  9. 69
    Published [1889]
    “…The Prime Minister is Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne Cecil (3rd Marquis of Salisbury), the Chancellor of the Exchequer is G.J. Goschen.…”
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  10. 70
    Published 1911
    “…1911 1880-1914 "The National Insurance Act of 1911" [T0177.jpg], 1911, United Newspapers Ltd The National Insurance Act of 1911 was introduced by David Lloyd George, Chancellor of the Exchequer in Asquith's Liberal Government to provide sickness and unemployment benefit. …”
  11. 71
    Published 1955
    “…1955 1945-1960 "Equal pay on British Railways - 1955" [EP0105], 1955 In February 1955, the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced a date for the phased-in introduction of equal pay in the civil service. …”
  12. 72
    “…He became a minister in the 1964 Labour Government and was the only Prime Minister to have held all three leading Cabinet positions - Chancellor of the Exchequer, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary - prior to becoming Prime Minister in 1976. …”
  13. 73
    Published 1999
    “…He became a minister in the 1964 Labour Government and was the only Prime Minister to have held all three leading Cabinet positions - Chancellor of the Exchequer, Home Secretary and Foreign Secretary - prior to becoming Prime Minister in 1976. …”
  14. 74
    “…"In a speech to celebrate the centenary of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation in 2004, Gordon Brown, who was then Chancellor of the Exchequer, argued that the UK should aim for both 'full and fulfilling employment'. …”
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  15. 75
    Published November 1932
    “…But when all is said, if we expect that mother to provide food of adequate nutritive value and vitamin content for herself as an expectant mother on an income of that kind, we are expecting of her in administering her financial affairs much more exact and detailed scientific knowledge and foresight and skill than we have so far been prepared to demand of the Chancellor of the Exchequer or the Governor of the Bank of England. …”
  16. 76
    Published 1943
    “…Many of the Labour members of the House of Commons were very dissatisfied with this 1943 Means Test Act, but they were informed by the Chancellor of the Exchequer that this was all part of the Beveridge Plan. …”
  17. 77
    by Bevan, Aneurin, 1897-1960
    Published 25 June 1946
    “…In the past they had grown up and had been dependent upon heavy grants and donations from rich persons, usually by way of diverting it from the Chancellor of the Exchequer. In future the Minister of Health would be able to create a hospital as a teaching hospital and add to the teaching facilities. …”
  18. 78
    Published April 1943
    “…" One might answer with truth that we cannot afford not to afford a service so necessary for life ; but no such facile answer should satisfy us ; or, indeed, could satisfy a Chancellor of the Exchequer. Before asserting that the nation should undertake to foot this bill, we must have an adequate idea of the cost of the present service and of the reorganised service. …”
  19. 79
    “…If I could put into operation all the schemes that I have in my mind both for our Certified Schools and for our Borstal Institutions, the expenditure would be so enormous that the axe would at once decapitate me and my department, but still, what we can do we are doing, and I hope that with reviving trade and reviving prosperity, the Chancellor of the Exchequer will be more generous to my department, and we may be able to do in our schools many of the things we want. …”
  20. 80
    by Horder, Thomas, 1871-1955
    Published June 1948
    “…" When the Minister of Defence and the then Chancellor of the Exchequer made it clear that the Cabinet stood behind the Minister of Health in his effort to dragoon the doctors, they were followed by Sir Stafford Cripps, whose support took a more sinister form. …”
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