Not exact matches
The decisions taken in the
next 12 months — how the
coalition copes with the inevitable policy arguments and scraps that will ensue in the day - to - day business of
governing the country — will determine its chances of survival in the final two - year period.
The
coalition would
govern for a year - announcing the date of the
next election, and legislating for fixed - election dates, too.
Meanwhile, on the Conservative benches there is (shall we say) a diversity of opinion about the idea of
governing in
coalition after
next May.
Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, a Democrat, last week used the phrase «
governing coalition» to describe his expectation of Senate leadership
next year.
The party leadership should not forget that 79 % of Tory members want to see the Conservatives
governing alone rather than in
Coalition after the
next general election.
Speaker Scholes continued in the Chair for the remainder of the sitting under the new Government, 24 and remained as «deemed» Presiding Officer, under the Presiding Officers Act, until Speaker Snedden, who was a member of the
governing coalition parties, was elected when the
next Parliament met on 17 February 1976.25
But sympathy we did feel, if we had any ounce of soul, for the players caught up in
Coalition, James Graham's extraordinarily gripping re-engagement of that long week in May 2010 when voters could only wait with a kind of frenetic boredom to find out who was to
govern us for the
next five years.
Skelos said that he expects his GOP conference, which is in a
governing coalition with five independent Democratic lawmakers, would be briefed on chapter amendments to the law
next week.
The Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg defends his deal with the Conservatives - telling his party's annual conference that the
coalition government will «
govern well for the
next five years».
If we have a stable, Liberal Democrat - Conservative
coalition we can be certain that over the
next four years we can
govern in the national interest.
He lambasts the idea of the Lib Dems withdrawing their ministers before the
next election; he admits that he might have left his party had they not proved they were serious about
governing; he warns against excessive differentiation, from both sides, before 2015; he praises the original
Coalition Agreement as «fantastically ambitious»; and he emphasises the importance of spending cuts (alongside further Quantitative Easing and a bit more «investment spending» where possible, which is more or less the government's official position as well).
Although the 6.4 % increase falls short of her party's campaign promises, Bulmahn says the new
governing coalition of Social Democrats and the eco-friendly Green Party plans to continue the increases over the
next 5 years.
The
governing coalition of Social - and Christian - Democrats however had again inserted such a prohibtion into a new law coming into force
next fall.