He said Thursday he was
considering other ballot lines like the Reform Party or the Independence Party.
Not exact matches
Here are some details about that November 2004
ballot proposal: 1) there was already in place a Utah law strictly banning same - sex marriage, which I fully supported; 2) all three candidates for the office of attorney general of Utah (the chief law - enforcement officer in the state) opposed the amendment, including the LDS (Mormon) Republican incumbent, Mark Shurtleff, mostly because they
considered it a poorly drafted amendment; 3) I refused to endorse the amendment, but I did not urge people to vote «no»; 4) the leadership of the LDS Church, which has a record for being as strongly opposed to same - sex marriage as the Catholic Church, did not issue a statement urging its members to vote one way or the
other; 5) inasmuch as two thirds of Utahans belong to the LDS Church, this means that the leadership of at least 80 percent of Utah churchgoers did not urge a «yes» vote on the amendment.
No 10 said the Tories would
consider other ways to make it harder for trade unions to secure agreement for strike action, including «timings of
ballots».
Because we hold that the failure to provide
ballots to forty percent of the voters by itself requires that the election be set aside, we need not
consider whether the several
other defects involved mandatory provisions that would provide additional bases for setting aside the election.
Those and
other local concerns should be
considered and addressed by East End representatives Al Krupski (D - Cutchogue) and Bridget Fleming (D - Noyac) as the bill makes its way through the Legislature and, hopefully, onto your
ballot in November.
The news comes as the union is
considering holding a
ballot for national industrial action over cuts to jobs and pensions, and talking to
other unions about co-ordinated action.
We summarize a body of work documenting that when institutions can not
consider race in admissions — as has been the case in states that have banned affirmative action via
ballot measures or
other policies — racial and ethnic diversity has declined across various educational sectors, not just at selective undergraduate institutions, but in the professional fields of law, business, and medicine, as well as
other graduate disciplines.
The California Charter Schools Association, which brought the lawsuit, said the agreement should send a message to
other districts that have a parcel tax or are
considering putting one on the
ballot this year: Give charter schools a fair share to avoid possible litigation and do what's right for kids.
(2.1) If a candidate requests, under clause 27 (2)(c), the use of a surname
other than his or her legal surname on the
ballot, the returning officer if section 27.1 applies, or the Chief Electoral Officer if section 27.2 applies, shall determine whether the requested surname is ordinarily used by the candidate and, for that purpose, the returning officer or Chief Electoral Officer may refer to such documents and
other evidence as he or she
considers relevant in the circumstances.