"I have a long experience and this has come into my mind. In critical
and baffling situations it is always best to recur to first principles
and simple action. Trust the people, go to the people, let the people
have their say. Let there be a General Election where they can express
their will - where they can express their will through a Parliament
worthy of what is strongest and best in our race. It is for this that
we are resolved to strive."

17 March 1951.  Stemming the Tide.


On Nov 5, 5:25 pm, "Kyle, David J. (CDC/CCEHIP/NCEH) (CTR)"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> After the results of last nights election, not surprisingly, I am
> reminded of a Churchill quote. Regardless of context, his words are
> resonant today.
>
> "The best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with
> the average voter."
>
> With apologies to KTL  :-)
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