Clear Policy Wanted
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THE Labour Party does little more than give mostly unpleasant hints about what it would do to road transport if it had the chance. This was said in Nottingham on Wednesday by Mr. D. 0. Good, national chairman of the Road Haulage Association, at the annual lunch of the East Midland area of the R.H.A. , Mr. Good attacked the Labour Party
for not stating clearly a policy for transport. Instead of co-operation it talked
of integration—and here the choice of words marked an important distinction, he said. It could mean only rigid transport control by some unspecified transport authority. The traders' freedom of choice and the hauliers' freedom to work
towards maximum efficiency would fall by the wayside.
"It is difficult to understand the advantages of such a policy ", he added.