Abstract

The new labor government in Great Britain has a magnificent opportunity for constructive achievement in India, with beneficial effects throughout the Far East and, indeed, throughout the world. With its record of traditional, though cautious, anti-imperialism, the Labor Party will at least inspire less mistrust in India than did Mr. Churchill and his Secretary for India, L. S. Amery, who was defeated at the polls. Even in the last days of the Churchill government a distinct, if tenuous, improvement in the political atmosphere in India had been registered at the Simla conference. Though it failed to produce positive re? sults, the conference demonstrated the emergence of a new and more constructive attitude on the part of both British officials and the Indian nationalists. As a result

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