Explore popular quotes and sayings by Hugh Dalton.
Last updated on November 18, 2024.
Edward Hugh John Neale Dalton, Baron Dalton, was a British Labour Party economist and politician who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1945 to 1947. He shaped Labour Party foreign policy in the 1930s, opposing pacifism and promoting rearmament against the German threat, and strongly opposed the appeasement policy of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in 1938. Dalton served in Winston Churchill's wartime coalition cabinet; after the Dunkirk evacuation he was Minister of Economic Warfare, and established the Special Operations Executive. As Chancellor, he pushed his policy of cheap money too hard, and mishandled the sterling crisis of 1947. His political position was already in jeopardy in 1947 when he, seemingly inadvertently, revealed a sentence of the budget to a reporter minutes before delivering his budget speech. Prime Minister Clement Attlee accepted his resignation; Dalton later returned to the cabinet in relatively minor positions.
Are not the worst examples of architecture to be found in private enterprise in cheap jerry-built homes?
During my first month in Italy I lived a nomadic life.
Unilateralism is not internationalism, It is nationalist egotism gone mad.
Nearly all Italian officers speak French.
One of the most important of all the causes of great inequality of income is the inheritance of a great fortune by a small minority.
The Board of Trade Make Do and Mend campaign is intended to help you get the last ounce of wear out of all your clothes
You can't have a motion without a debate.
A wretched disheartening result. And a little mouse shall lead them.
Some people say 'what would happen if we had a Communist Chancellor of the Exchequer?' I would ask in reply, 'what would happen if he had a lot of Fascist or Mosleyite bank chairmen?' In that event it might be thought disadvantageous to have publicity.
I myself share with the Conservative Party a profound dislike for such fandangles as proportional representation.