Not exact matches
One outcome could be to prove to
conservatives agitating for a repeal - only vote that
such repeal - only legislation can not pass the Senate.
Alberta's Progressive
Conservative tent is a broad one, including constituencies such as small - town social conservatives, fiscally conservative suburbanites and Calgary's white - coll
Conservative tent is a broad
one, including constituencies
such as small - town social
conservatives, fiscally
conservative suburbanites and Calgary's white - coll
conservative suburbanites and Calgary's white - collar oilpatch.
If Kenney doesn't follow the lead of Brown, his fellow social
conservative caucus colleague, it likely signals
one of two things: he does want the support of voters for whom parental rights regarding their pre-adolescents and teens are a big issue; or that he's calculated that a softening of his image would show weakness and isn't worth it, because his party has
such a comfortable edge over Notley that he can afford to lose voters wary of anything resembling social conservatism.
But whether it's a taxpayer advocacy group, a policy institute, a coalition akin to the
one now fighting proposed changes to private corporations, opposition
Conservatives and New Democrats, or even a more tax - reduction friendly government
such as Quebec, the idea of a $ 10,000 TFSA should be a positive rallying point for many reasons.
Finally, this is
one piece of advice that is likely to do you well if you've chosen to build a long - term,
conservative investment portfolio based upon dollar cost averaging, low - cost ownership methods
such as a dividend reinvestment program (also known as a DRIP account), and do not expect to retire or need the funds for ten years or more, the best course of action based upon historical experience may be to go on autopilot.
One reason that Rand Paul is
such an effective ideologue is that he makes an effort to affiliate with
conservatives.
But still, if a rich and high - powered
conservative donor came to ask my advice, whether they should try to start a new college, or whether they should try the easier and apparently more civic - spirited task of helping to reform existing
ones (by aiding things like existing APT programs,
such as the
one that employs me), I think I am obliged to advise the former.
And would I tremble to give the advice, because the logical result of
such a start - new -
conservative - colleges - because - the existing -
ones - have - proven - hopelessly - dominated - by - leftists - and - technocrats strategy is an ideologically segregated system of higher education.
Sane people can disagree about whether there ought to be a right to privacy, i.e., about whether it is logically a natural right and if so perhaps ought to be put into the Constitution via amendment, or about whether we (usually at state - level) should pass particular laws,
such as
ones that legalize gay - marriage, that factually expand what might be called privacy, but no sane U.S. Citizen, gay, straight, liberal, or
conservative, should be left ignorant about the Constitution - wounding judicial usurpations done in the name of this right, more of which are planned to be done soon enough.
The
conservative view of the Bible is not
one arrived at after historical - critical study, but
one held before
such study.
Such conservatives, estimated by pollster Daniel Yankelovich as
one American in five, are actually somewhat marginal to the mainstream of national life, have few polished spokespersons, and are given to unsophisticated and vehement expression of their resentment about assaults on their convictions and values.
In the dispute over «speech codes» on campuses, to take but
one example, there was the irony of
conservatives, in their opposition to
such codes, sounding like moral libertarians, while liberals were determined to impose moral standards.
This is
such a truism that
one is almost ashamed to pen the words, and yet it remains a fact that, in a great deal of the more
conservative biblical scholarship, it does seem to be assumed that the appeal to factual accuracy would he as valid and important a factor in the case of ancient Near Eastern religious texts as it would be in a modern western court of law or in a somewhat literally - minded western congregation.
I recall the reaction of a priest friend to a text setting out the
conservative version of Anglicanism,
one which espouses fidelity to the monarchy, to the liturgical tradition of the Book of Common Prayer, and to the rural pastoral tradition, of
such great comfort to the people.
Nevertheless, it seems to me as a Protestant outsider that, when
one sets Newman in the context of his brothers, the
conservative interpretation is surely strengthened: John, Charles, and Frank were all responding to the same challenges to authority; in juxtaposing them, it is clear that it was the paths of the other two brothers which represented that of private conscience and there seems no reasonable way to interpret Newman's move to Rome as anything other than a decisive rejection of
such a move in all of its forms, even the moderately Christian.
The
Conservatives ought to be able to win around
one - third - and perhaps more - of those 117 seats in London and the south east alone, with suburban wins likely in places
such as Crawley, Harlow, Watford and Milton Keynes.
There has previously been some speculation that if the
Conservatives win the general election and David Cameron becomes Prime Minister, he might combine the Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland Offices into a single «Department for the Nations» or
such like, with
one minister sitting in the Cabinet.
Such an outcome might still leave Labour with just three seats more than the
Conservatives, but it still represents a more attractive prospect than the
one Panelbase portrayed in their previous poll a fortnight ago.
That scenario no longer seems far - fetched, especially with Ben Carson fading and the
conservative bracket of the GOP primary now cleared of
one - time threats
such as Scott Walker, Bobby Jindal, and Rick Perry.
The real danger for Mr Cameron then is not becoming embroiled in a controversy,
such as the
one Policy Exchange's report threatened, but the emergence of a decent rival, like David Miliband perhaps, who can offer the electorate real policies and ideas, sweeping the political rug from underneath the
Conservative Party's feet.
The value of his diaries after 1992 is that they give an insight into
one strand of parliamentary euroscepticism, but their downside is that, all too often, we get bogged down with the personality and policy clashes of what now appear to be obscure
Conservative parliamentarians, and other major political issues,
such as the economy, merely become noises off.
He was a lifelong
Conservative supporter for
one thing, and as a day job collected rent from the very subjects for whom his brush was supposed to conjure
such sympathy.
As
one senior
Conservative told me,
such a super-tax might be bad for the UK, but it would not be great for the Tories to oppose a tax that may give a nice warm feeling even to many of their core supporters.
Thankfully, however, there were no
such problems for Alex Salmond, whose defeat to the
Conservatives in Gordon provided
one of the shocks of the night at the general election.
The first results of the night had produced Labour wins in Sunderland but outside of its strongholds in the north, it failed to take vital seats
such as the number
one target of Warwickshire North, where the
Conservatives increased their share of the vote.
Have things reached the perverse situation where in order to get elected Labour have to cut public spending for their first term although they want to increase it and the
Conservatives have to increase public spending in order to get elected, usually when people vote for a different party it is because they expect something to be different from the way it was,
such plans leave it wide open for the Liberal Democrats to come out and propose a series of economy measures and be the
one of the 3 parties proposing the lowest levels of public spending and tax cuts targeted at the poor.
Under the
Conservative Party's bylaws, the power to grant
such indulgences lies not with local party chairs when a district crosses county lines (as this
one does), but with the executive committee, which almost always votes in tandem with Chairman Mike Long.
It appears the No camp were very active at the
Conservative conference but during all the coverage of the Labour
one, I heard no reports of
such an organisational flurry.
One option for the Chancellor, supported by senior
Conservatives such as Communities and Local Government Secretary Sajid Javid, would be to expand the role of the state in supplying new housing.
«Even if the stars had aligned in
such a way as to make a minority
Conservative government a real possibility, the choice David Cameron made to enter a coalition would still have been the right
one, both for the country and for the
Conservative Party.»
A striking similarity between the
Conservative proposals and the Labour
ones endorsed by Gordon Brown earlier this week is the taxes that are reserved for Westminster control,
such as air passenger duty and corporation tax.
Donovan must still get the Brooklyn Republican and
Conservative committee support, a formality since he is the only
such candidate seeking it in the special election to fill the congressional seat left vacant when Michael Grimm resigned after pleading guilty to
one count of felony tax fraud.
On New Year's Day, New York State Senator Greg Ball, a
conservative Republican, went on New York Post state editor Fred Dicker's Talk1300 show and warned listeners about
one such bill.
The LGBT folks
such an effort could reach are the
ones who will spread our message in that region, maybe convincing some hard - shell Republican senator that our lives are real and our issues have merit and they should look beyond the votes they can win through the nodding approval of fundamentalist churches in their districts or on the
Conservative Party line in the fall.
When initially asked by CNN's Wolf Blitzer about the possibility of
such a caucus, Republican Sen. Jim DeMint of South Carolina replied «Well, I'm chairman of the
conservative caucus already and I think
one mistake we're making in this election is to suggest that it's all about the official Tea Party movement.»
The newspaper notes the cost to the
Conservatives of the
one primary to take place so far - in Totnes, # 40,000 - and therefore the considerable cost of funding 200
such primaries would be # 8million.
It's easier to imagine the Liberal Democrats doing so:
one doesn't need to list the rows that have taken place over VAT, student finance, housing benefit, the immigration cap and so on to prove the point (though some of the Government's biggest disagreements,
such as those over prisons policy or the EU, are concentrated within
one of the Coalition parties, the
Conservatives, rather than between them).
Indeed, during his maiden speech in yesterday's debate on the Finance Bill he recalled that
one biographer of John Neilson Gladstone — a Liberal
Conservative predecessor as MP for Ipswich an done of the William Gladstone's brothers — wrote of him that «he took no strong independent line
such as would anger his father but accepted his minor role in the scheme of things.»
We also have political parties which are involved in more than
one issue
such as the
Conservative and Working Families Parties.
Honourable
one nation
Conservatives,
such as Sir John Major and Robert Halfon, have sought to address their party's problem by calling for a windfall tax on the privatised utilities to fund measures to reduce utility bills (as suggested by Labour's Manifesto Uncut).
One reason they got away with leaving the NI loophole open last time was because the
Conservative Party was in
such disarray.
Conservatives like Byron C. Nelson said that
such a compromise would open «the door of evolution so wide that I, for
one, don't see a place to shut it.»
One thing is clear, even with a
conservative definition of «scientist»: The top of the fame ranking is dominated by social scientists
such as Chomsky — by far the most famous living scientist, as measured by mD..
Steroids
One of the best ways to stop pain that is resistant to more
conservative treatments (
such as ibuprofen), says Dr. Goldstein, is through steroids and steroid nerve blocks.
If there were
such a thing as «boss Barbie» we imagine she'd look just like Rosie, who demonstrates how
one piece of statement jewelry (like her dramatic gold open collar necklace) gives an otherwise
conservative outfit a don't - mess - with - me vibe.
We have many cheap clothes
such as black dresses in mini length, more
conservative ones in midi length, and the ultimate in evening apparel in maxi length.
Ground - breaking though it is as
one of the first gay films to come out of Poland, Tomasz Wasilewski's Floating Skyscrapers brings home how happy endings on
such subjects are hardly to be hoped for in the
conservative, Catholic country.
This is where we encounter
such one - note nonsense as her snobby, rich,
conservative parents (Samuel West [Darkest Hour, The Riot Club] and Emily Watson [Kingsman: The Golden Circle, Everest]-RRB- sniffing at Edward's more humble background, and his mother (Anne - Marie Duff: Suffragette, Molly Moon and the Incredible Book of Hypnotism) serving to embody the opposing wacky nonconformity, which was apparently possible in postwar Britain only if you suffered from a traumatic brain injury, as she does.
Yet the dramatic growth in the 1970s of schools within «
conservative» Protestant religious movements led to a narrower definition: a «Christian school» is
one that's affiliated with
one of the
conservative Protestant denominations,
such as Southern Baptist and Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod, and, in general, with
one of the dominant streams within
conservative Protestantism — the evangelical, charismatic, fundamentalist, and Pentecostal religious movements.
The study found that self - described
conservative Christian schools, the fastest growing sector of private schools, fared poorest, with their students falling as much as
one year behind counterparts in public schools, once socioeconomic factors
such as income, ethnicity and access to books and computers, were considered.