Sentences with phrase «after next election»

We will likely have to wait until after the next election and see what the House of Commons looks like to know the answer.
On CBC this morning mentioned that one of his «selling points» is his understanding of constitutional issues, which would be helpful if we end up with a minority government again after the next election.
Implementation of «best value tendering» has now shrewdly been put back until after the next election.
* The Greens will almost certainly regain the balance of power in the Senate after the next election.
GaryM: «A rational, respectful presentation of real science, admitting its real uncertainties and limitations, will find a receptive audience after the next election.
Private people are better at getting things done than bureaucratic government organization that may not have a budget after the next election so I think that fusion power will see the day by a private effort rather than a government effort.
Our effective date of withdrawing from Paris is pretty much after the next election.
I think fielding is a special case, to stay in parliament after the next election he has to find a block of votes.
This would be laughable, were it not for the sad fact that Barton may well be in a position to continue his politically - motivated vendetta against climate scientists after the next election.
What they meant was: ``... one in two thousand chance that by 2100 after the next election there'll be no any human beings left on this planet in the climate commission and the other satellite industries»
By the time the global economic depression reaches its deepest level (well after the next election) those earlier days may have returned.
This inquiry could just be the start, an evidence gathering stage to justify a major change of policy after the next election.
The earliest that there will be any real pain for the consumer — and matching persistent profits for the energy industry — will be right after the next election, especially if the democrats win.
This is a key plank of the the Australian Opposition (the conservative parities) who are likely to be in government after the next election.
It seems to be inproved just enough to cover the time period right after the next election.
There is the outside possibility that things could change dramatically after the next election.
Federal employees will be required to make higher pension contributions and, after the next election (2015), MPs and senators may pay a higher pension share.
And he is open about the fact that he approaches the issues from a more left - leaning perspective, something that might come in handy after the next election.
But it is believed some Conservative MPs hope to be able to mount a challenge to unseat him after the next election.
Other Tory MPs said that they would oust Speaker Bercow once they had a Commons majority after the next election.
And outside the event a Labour blogger mutters that the Lib Dems could end up with only 11 seats after the next election on current polling (and if they don't get AV through)... so the whole question could end up being academic.
«Ruth Davidson has made a good start,» said one Downing Street insider, «but to rely on the Scottish Conservatives contributing anything substantial to the Westminster party after the next election would be a triumph of hope over experience».
Here are the ten reasons why Number 10 thinks a continuing coalition remains very likely, even desirable after the next election...
Many people may be impressed by the notion of a party prepared to foreswear the attractions of ministerial cars and salaries, just as the pollsters are prepared to speculate that the Lib Dems may, conceivably, hold the balance of power after the next election and find themselves able to dictate terms.
Mr Cameron promised to hold a referendum on Europe after the next election to give voters a choice of staying within a reformed EU or leaving.
If there is a Lib - Lab partnership after the next election, expect electoral reform to be back on the agenda.
But what is really needed is for the Labour government after this next election to abandon the present cronyism of appointment to the Lords and replace it by an electoral system geographically based on Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the major English regions.
Meanwhile, Gordon Brown, who is being closely advised on this matter by Peter Mandelson, is not only contemplating a grand coalition in the event of a hung parliament after the next election, but he is also ready to consider heading a national government in the coming months in the event of the economic situation getting worse.
Another MP said: «Dozens of ex-Labour MPs will be looking for work after the next election, given the predicted scale of our defeat.
Ed Miliband's brother, David, in a valedictory TV interview at the weekend, cautioned against the conventional wisdom that a hung parliament was likely after the next election.
The Lib Dems are in a truly dreadful place with the polls putting them neck - and - neck with UKIP and predicting only handfuls of Lib Dem MPs after the next election.
In the event of a coalition government after the next election, voters would prefer the Liberal Democrats to Ukip as the junior partner by 42 % compared to 35 %.
One would have thought that, with the LibDems trailing at 10 % in the polls and likely to end up after the next election with little more than 10 MPs, and with Labour leading the Tories by a solid 10 % in the polls, we should be going flat - out for an outright Labour victory.
After the next election, I suspect many senior Lib Dems will find time on their hands to hold their very own tea parties, drinking expensive yellow tea, a favourite of the Imperial Court.
Scottish First Minister Alex Salmond says the SNP should have more sway in the House of Commons after the next election.
However, clearly our tantric prime minister knows better — this morning David Cameron finally delivered his «jinxed» speech on Europe, committing Britain to an in - out referendum soon after the next election.
Another option might be a Speaker's conference, or perhaps an independent commission, set up soon after the next election to examine the current dysfunctional workings of parliament and how they could be improved.
In October, in the aftermath of the collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers and the UK's government banking bailout, our poll gave Brown a massive «Churchillian» lead, but saw Cameron as top choice for PM after the next election.
If there is a finely balanced parliament after the next election, each nationalist gain will be all the more painful.
The second is whether the Conservative Party should try to prolong the coalition with the Liberal Democrats after the next election (and work to that end before it).
Cameron has promised to ringfence health spending after the next election if the Tories win, a decision that would put greater pressure on other government departments to find savings.
David Cameron has held out the prospect that the tax cuts he announced at his party's conference earlier this week could be implemented shortly after the next election.
In an online ConservativeHome survey participants were asked who could be the next Tory leader if (for unspecified reasons) Cameron is forced to quit before the next election and who might be Tory leader if he steps down after the next election, sometime during the next parliament.
These arguments matter to anybody with an interest in progressive politics because the winners will be dictating policy after the next election if — oh, lets drop the pretence — when the Conservatives win.
The Mail on Sunday and Sunday Times (#) are suggesting that backbench Tory MP Adam Afriyie is lining up a campaign to challenge for the Tory leadership - most likely after the next election but possibly beforehand.
The Mail pours a little cold water on the idea that she might be a near time challenger for the Tory leadership but it also presents «Britain's Mrs Merkel» (© ConHome) as the «Stop Boris» candidate at some point after the next election.
A hung parliament after the next election could mean a move towards a form of proportional representation.
Tomorrow night, Lib Dem MPs will all vote to postpone the review of parliamentary constituency boundaries until after the next election.
In the longer run, both parties are talking up a centre - Left coalition after the next election.
He is part of the Labour's Future Group, which last week published a pamphlet warning that the party is «intellectually exhausted» and could be out of power for a generation after the next election.
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