The reason is that Ford made two types of carb, and the US style Pinto 2000 version without a return line (bleadoff line) came on a car with 4.5 psi fuel pressure. It leaked fuel in roll-overs, and had hot fuel handling (vapur lock) problems in hot conditions. The European type approval banned it from 1973, so Weber regiged that European 32/36 carb, and added a return line, aka 1983 Mustang 4-bbl, and the problems were solved. The US Holley Weber is just a pre 1973 Weber 32/36, with a few mods. Imported new 32/36's don't have return lines, and look to be based on the earlier casting.
The stock fuel pressure with stock fuel pump went down from 4.5 to the recommended 3.5 max for Webers.
Ford Australia did the same thing in 1973 on there Pinto engined Cortinas, and again in 1983 on the XE Falcon with Weber ADM 34. It got a return line on the stock Carter fuel pump to reduce pump pressure from about 5 to 6 pounds, to less than 3.5 psi.
In America, everyone it seams universally hates return lines. Hence six cylinder Fords with stock I6 fuel pumps and Webers just need a fuel pressure regulator which doesn't hurt volume to the carb. The benefit is
1) that the float won't surge, and
2)you have the choice of runing the float level at any one of the two recomendatios Weber used, 41 mms or 35, depending on how its measured.
3) Fuel economy on rough roads improves.
4) Cavitation due to hot fuel handling is reduced.