Sentences with phrase «as the voters get»

And as voters get hit with more and more advertising / media messages every day and through every conceivable medium, personal contact is one of the few things that can begin to break through the information clutter.
As the voters get to know a man who is virtually unknown even in his home county, things can only get better, they suggest.
As voters get ready to consider more than 70 school district referendums as part of the statewide elections in a week, a state lawmaker's aide is saying his boss plans to reintroduce legislation that would limit when such votes can take place.
Now that the state budget has been passed, school districts in New York have a better idea on what to expect in state aid, as voters get ready to decide local school budgets on May 16.
As voters get ready to elect a new Monroe County Clerk, they may be wondering, exactly what duties does that elected official perform?

Not exact matches

Analysts argue that Germany will fight to get the top role at the ECB as it needs to restore credibility among its voters and they believe its own central bank governor, Jens Weidmann, will land the job.
Analysts argue that Germany will fight to get the top role at the ECB as it needs to restore credibility among its voters.
«We were getting metro areas correct, but in the non-metro areas, and this will be true in Wisconsin and Michigan as well, that, a certain type of Trump voter seemed more [unwilling] to talk to pollsters.
States permit poll watchers so long as they are registered, trained, and abide by state rules designed to make sure voters aren't impeded or intimidated while getting to and from the polls.
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 9 - Facebook Inc Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg is kicking off an effort to get U.S. small businesses to spend more on advertising as the image of the social media network's ads have taken a hit for their role in alleged Russian attempts to sway U.S. voters.
In the olden days, voters during presidential races would get into heated arguments over such amusingly quaint topics as tax policy, health care, and the future of Social Security.
The only goal that matters is to get your messages in front of highly influential people (think digital multipliers and megaphones) who are tightly connected to significant (and fairly sizeable) niches of active and desirable individuals whose actions and attitudes they can directly influence (amplification) and whose behaviors as consumers, voters, or other cohort members you are looking to change and channel into actual results.
As Clinton gets closer to securing her party's nomination, Democratic voters believe it is important that she throw a bone to her party's base; 52 percent of them said it is important for her to choose a liberal as her running mate, and 41 percent said that it was important for that person to be from outside of Washington, D.As Clinton gets closer to securing her party's nomination, Democratic voters believe it is important that she throw a bone to her party's base; 52 percent of them said it is important for her to choose a liberal as her running mate, and 41 percent said that it was important for that person to be from outside of Washington, D.as her running mate, and 41 percent said that it was important for that person to be from outside of Washington, D.C.
Anyway, it'll be on policy choices that the Trudeau Government stands or falls with Canadian voters, regardless of the effort of the Conservatives to make couture an issue, and while there's plenty to criticize in the Liberal policy book, taken as a package Canadians don't yet seem that dissatisfied with what they're getting.
The larger GRCs are unpopular with voters as they are seen as unfair and undemocratic — allowing politically inexperienced rookies to get elected on the coattails of their heavyweight leaders.
Even if third parties could only get a little of your data — your hometown, say, or your gender — they could match it up with all kinds of other records, such marketing databases or voter registration databases, to paint a more complete picture of you as a person.
Fully half of U.S. registered voters chose the «we should get out of NAFTA option,» as seen in the following graph:
If it was Dick Morris I would just dismiss it as an attention getting stunt from a guy who makes his living reassuring and fundraising from right - leaning voters and knowing he will still get bookings regardless of whether he is right in the end.
I am white and I supported President Obama in both elections as did many other white voters so it wasen't just the black community that got President Obama elected..
@Howard — As a republic, which is a version of representative democracy, it means we do not have a true or direct democracy where each law would be voted on by each citizen, but an elected representative for larger groups of people that gets to cast the vote, which may or may not at times represent the will of the voters who elected the representative.
This goes for all parties, and is as much the «fault» of the voter as the candidate; it won't change because the voter simply won't get smarter.
In order to get a large number of people whom they regard as undereducated, easily led sheep to vote against their own best interests, they push emotional buttons, invoking images of Jesus and helpless babies, to make voters think this is what they stand for and want to protect.
It is too bad for the rest of us as he seems to be the only potential candidate with the chance to form a nominating coalition from social conservative and somewhat conservative voters — and he would be our best chance to get a Republican nominee who is not in the orbit of the lobbying industry.
And if the Christian voter as depicted by the mainstream press was so powerful, something happened to it, cause obama got elected.
Maybe he fares well amongst bankers, insurance execs, and oil company types who bought and paid for him as well as the evangelicals contingent who believe that you've got to be «born again» to run this country, but for any thinking and reasonable voter Perry is simply unacceptable.
Now he is just toting it as a tool for getting voters attention.
Why is a guy with a record as impressive as Huntsman's getting so little attention from Republican voters?
Betts had one of the better defensive seasons in recent memory, according to advanced stats, and he should get a boost from the voters who prefer to think of the award as the Most Valuable Player on a Contending Team.
Princeton got three votes as a No. 3 while one voter questioned its RPI — which fell from 11th to 30th last week as the Tigers embarked on their weak Ivy League schedule — and unseeded them.
As long as Ball, Richardson and Randle are named as finalists, then the voters got it righAs long as Ball, Richardson and Randle are named as finalists, then the voters got it righas Ball, Richardson and Randle are named as finalists, then the voters got it righas finalists, then the voters got it right.
(The same thing happens when a voter makes an unconventional vote, of course — he or she gets mocked and ridiculed for not thinking like the rest of the pack, and his or her legitimacy as a voter is questioned.
Jay Jaffe now describes Morris as «a virtual lock»; he's real close now, and there's definitely a bandwagon effect as candidates who get close c) gain more attention, and d) elicit sympathy from voters who don't want to be the one to keep a guy out.
«I am at a loss as to how we got the number of voters to show up.
It's about realizing he couldn't litigate his past comedy, about trusting his staff, about understanding why politicians act the way they do in interviews, about recognizing why the norms of the Senate matter.So this is an interview about what it's like to be a politician, why perfectly nice and interesting people end up acting like all those other politicians after getting elected, and the role we as voters (and we in the media) play in it.
As a board member of Indian Prairie School District 204, he led the campaign to get voters to open their pocketbooks for schools and additions.
I spent almost 4 years of my life trying to get the funding for that Point of Sale system — we applied for grants, we looked for a private funder, we approached the city — until finally we were able to get it funded through a parcel tax which was sold to the voters as a pay increase for our hard working and underpaid teachers, but which also contained a small portion vaguely dexcribed as «technology.»
We're just proud as hell to be one of the first to provide this information in a way that actually allows the average voter to sort of «meet» their candidates and hear them give their take on actual questions about issues relevant to them — especially since these days, people get more and more of their information online.
As he later told me, «my goal of is to get in touch with the voters».
... increasingly, many campaigns see text messages as a primary way of getting in touch with voters.
As these buttons traveled around with supporters, potential voters could get an accurate look at the leaders they might be selecting to run the country.
What is clear is that even as a majority of all voters are still getting to know the Republican candidates, 36 percent of suburban voters would still prefer someone other than Kirsten Gillibrand.»
Moreover, the spreadsheet of potential volunteers or donors gets longer and longer as volunteers in the field log contacts about voters in the field who say they want to volunteer for the campaign, or as people signup on the website or engage on social media, and interact with emails and digital content.
Margaret Eaton, of the LGA, said that «council staff» were «huge enthusiasts» and would be doing everything they could to «get the right results to voters as quickly as they can».
The intervention signifies a distinct shift in thinking in the Labour high command, as party officials see a key opportunity for Mr Miliband to get a rare hearing with voters.
He needs to get the voters to trust Labour with the economy again, just as Brown did.
I was asked about it at Brighton Fabians last night: there is a lot of enthusiasm for campaigning on this issue, and indeed for getting voters registered as part of a campaign.
Over on Team Turner, campaign spokeswoman Jessica Proud took the opportunity to highlight the congressman's big get from last week — a nod from former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani — saying the poll results continue the «momentum - building» sparked by that endorsement, showing Turner as the favorite among Republican voters.
Certainly to me (a floating voter) it looks as if Labour have moved a long way to the right and to the authoritarian over the last 15 years or so, and if they want their old supporters to listen to them, they may have to migrate back a bit to get the conversation started.
Wow, now THAT's a real alternative to the current leading Republicans, as well as to the current administration — something guaranteed to get every voter fired up about the glory of compromise.
The Scottish city is the bookies» favourite for top Remain percentage of voters (you can get 2/1 with Ladbrokes as I write this).
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