Not exact matches
Cambridge Analytica reportedly
gave a slide presentation to the Russians «focus [ing] first on
election disruption
strategies used by Cambridge Analytica's parent company, SCL.»
gave a slide presentation to the Russians «focus [ing] first on
election disruption
strategies used by Cambridge Analytica's parent company, SCL.»
Douglas Alexander, the shadow foreign secretary and Labour's general
election strategy chair, has been
giving interviews this morning about the byelection results.
Given that he is a public figure — not only a peer of the realm but also the deputy chairman of the Conservatives, the party's biggest single donor and one of the architects of its general
election strategy — that right must surely be somewhat circumscribed.
Shadow communities secretary Jon Trickett then
gave a presentation on Labour's
strategy for the forthcoming
elections, before the MPs had to leave at 6.45 for a Commons vote.
That's the crucial distinction between strong polling and a winning
election strategy: people may support restricting benefits, but to get them to the polling booth you need to
give them something to improve their own lot.
«Unfortunately, this will not produce a winning
strategy, especially
given that these outside efforts do not have an «on the ground» field component meant to drive voters to the polls on
Election Day.
Perhaps unsurprisingly
given the paucity of success stories, rather than concentrating upon their record in power, the chief emphasis of Labour's misguided
strategy has been to scare voters with the prospect of the
elections returning a Conservative led coalition government.
King
gives an example of a group of students a few years ago who were working to replicate a paper about presidential
election campaign
strategies by a respected social scientist — King declined to name names — and after following the paper's methods section to the letter came up with vastly different results.
The House Republicans are betting that this road show and the larger
strategy of attacking a Democratic climate bill will
give them a leg up in the 2010
elections.
«Even if you have just one staggering likeable trait,
given the right combination of
strategies, you could win an
election against a very formidable opponent,» Nix said.