Michael Bloomberg is a Republican,
later running as an Independent.
Not exact matches
Ben Smith sees Bloomberg's
latest hire
as an attempt to revive «an almost lost strand of urban Republicanism» — an interesting move for a guy who may or may not be eyeing an
independent run for the White House in 2012.
An
independent Scotland would face the choice of cutting those services, or raising other taxes to higher than UK levels, so
as to be able to put the oil revenue into a long - term savings fund, or spending it to support services now, and face that choice
later when the oil
runs out, but with no cushion of money in the bank.
He's rationalized his retreat in increments, from his warning that a court -
run redrawing of the lines would result in «chaos,» to the subjective conditions he laid out for an acceptable gerrymander, to his uncharacteristic claim of powerlessness, to his criticism of an
independent judge's congressional map, to his lightly supported characterization of the
latest gerrymandered legislative draft - map
as «progress» from the previous gerrymandered version.
During the 2008 election, McEnulty was both the presidential nominee of the New American
Independent Party and the Vice-presidential nominee of the Reform Party
as the
running mate of the
late Ted Weill.
Kennedy,
as the (albeit
late) choice of Paddy Ashdown, was the candidate of continued co-operation with Labour, while Hughes
ran as the voice of feisty,
independent Liberalism.