Sentences with phrase «about winning the next election»

Not exact matches

While it remains to be seen whether Jones's win will lead to the same, Democrats appear to have every reason to be optimistic about what next year's elections hold.
If Labor wins the next election and manages to get its proposed reforms through the Senate, retirees may well think twice about holding big...
It needs more funding and if that comes from Unions or Non Doms... Labour has in the years shown us membership is not a priority but ensuring Unions funding is and the hot potato is that if the Tories win the next election and the argument is about funding the Tories may hit back and state union funding is illegal.
Good information is creeping out about how Democrat Terry McAuliffe used digital and data tools to win the Virginia governor's race last week, and you can look for my analysis piece in the next issue of Campaigns & Elections mag.
As the dust settles on the results of the 2014 local and European elections several questions remain unanswered about what the results mean for the future of British politics: Who will win the next general election?
The conversation, which has now been leaked, took place in a group chat described as a «professional discussion board» for activists communicating about how to help the Tories win the next election.
This one won't necessarily be as bang on as that in 2001, a poll of 661 party members has a margin of error of about 4 %, so we could be looking at actual splits between 63/37 to 71/29, but either way, Cameron has won the election and is going to be the next Tory leader.
Democrats are excited about next year's elections after winning a string of victories Tuesday — predicting an even more successful year in 2018 in the process.
The pumped - up PM was put on the spot about whether he would cut child benefit or tax credits if he wins next week's election.
Asked about the Conservative party's chances of winning the next election, 57 % thought they were improving at the moment.
«In 2011, when my defeat was very glaring, just like what we have now, I did not go about disparaging the winner; instead, I went back to prepare for the next election, because in any election, one person must win.
This is that elections are supposed to be won in the centre ground, but the one party that occupies precisely that territory is facing damnation — meaning to be cut by about half — in next year's election.
Not sure, if this is undetAnd, labour spent more than the Tories in 2005 75 % of labours spending in 1997 came from the private side, and recall 1979 when the closed shop meant everyone had to joina Union, that union had to give money to the labour party, we knew the next election would be the most vicious since 1992 ′ we win the campaign, lost the election that time, The Tory press isn't as strong as it was then, the tories haven't got lost of «extremist» stories about labour they had thrn to smear us now, They're a smaller party not just cos of Ukip, But labour has a lot of keen strong members, and it'll come doen to 70 or so marginal seats what happens, while not losing our working class votes in Newcastle, birmingham Luton Rotherham, Scotland, and if they're not abstaining, or voting Ukip, we have to ask why they're voting tory
Over the holiday period there was a lively and intelligent debate on the internet about whether the Tories have any chance of winning the next election.
That means, according to some estimates, that the winning post at the next election has got about twenty seats further away.
Alongside the strategy Lynton Crosby is developing to win the next Election, we need to think about a long - term plan to rebuild our Party.
They'll also talk about the possibility of Democrats winning a majority in the state senate in the next election and what it would mean for New York.
His reasoning has less to do with any medium - term stategy about how to broaden his electoral base, win the next election, isolate his right, and re-create a modernised version of the Macmillan conservatism of the 1950s than short - term tactics.
Last night, after the Conservatives overturned a 5,000 Labour majority to win the Norwich seat by 7,348 votes, Labour MPs gave warning that, unless the party did more than peddle scare stories about possible Tory spending cuts, it faced a wipeout at the next election.
The Labor Party has pledged to create a A$ 280 million research institute to «take politics out of the classroom» and «put an end to decades of ideological battles about school education», if it wins the next federal election.
The main thrust of the interview was about plans to ensure all pupils take a times table test at the end of primary schools - and an indication, by nodding when it was suggested, that the Conservatives would pledge to protect the schools budget - from age five to 16 - if the party wins the next election.
And if you stand up with me these next four months; if you march with me and knock on doors and make phone calls and register voters, and talk to your friends and co-workers and neighbors; then I promise you this: we will win this election; we will change education in this country; and we will bring about a better future for our children and for this country we love.
That implies that politics ignores facts (that wind turbines are currently the only answer) in favour of politiciams only caring about their skins and wanting to win the next election for themselves.
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