Sentences with phrase «like going to the voters»

Not exact matches

Sure, there's plenty of time for voter's remorse after the fact, but if folks don't like you to begin with, there's not going to be an «after the fact.»
They're going to give it to us like we're giving it to them,» said Samuel Perok, 92, a Democratic voter who spent time at a steel company after his Second World War navy service.
The German voters are very much in favor of more fiscal discipline, making it hard for the German government to openly consider any debt restructuring, which ultimately seems like the only way to go.
It wasn't like the median voter was going to forget that they disliked Bush's handling of Iraq, or that they would have concluded, from this one attack by an Al - Qaeda affiliate, that Obama's whole approach to terrorism was a failure.
If voters come to like Mitt along those lines, then they won't, of course, be buying it when the MSM says there that cold and classless ruthless downsizer goes again.
I think the sign off from CRA above says it all... Just like when you read a voter ballot on propositions, I go straight to the source of who is behind the voice, and CRA consistently has used this «trace» argument time and again, just like the chem companies do with the lead in lipstick (I just attended the Teens Turning Green national summit, and found the debriefing almost verbatim to the CRA «counterpoint» above... it's only a «little» lead, not enough to... blahdeblah, times «x» amounts of applications per day times «x» amounts of other products with «trace» amounts, ad infinitum...)
Right now, the Park District does not have the money to do anything with it, and would have to go back to its voters to ask for more money to build a golf course or water park, like they've been talking about.»
I, as a voter interested in this subject, don't want to sit there watching you two going at each other like... you don't see that in the school playground any more.
The governor reversed himself on the timing of a casino public referendum, saying he would like it to go before the voters this fall even though there are no statewide elections scheduled, and not in 2014.
If you support a traitor like Rump and you turn your back on the citizens of your state to provide tax cuts for the wealthy that virtually assure that after November the Pubs will be going after Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security as being too expensive you should be concerned about a negative response form voters.
To give you an idea of just how unhappy lawmakers are with the governor's habit — like other governors before him — of stuffing non-budget policy items into the budget, Deputy Senate Minority Leader John DeFrancisco has suggested the Legislature move a constitutional amendment that would go before voters to outlaw anything other than spending from being put into the annual spending plaTo give you an idea of just how unhappy lawmakers are with the governor's habit — like other governors before him — of stuffing non-budget policy items into the budget, Deputy Senate Minority Leader John DeFrancisco has suggested the Legislature move a constitutional amendment that would go before voters to outlaw anything other than spending from being put into the annual spending plato outlaw anything other than spending from being put into the annual spending plan.
And still its pathetic the Democrats don't want the majority until after the budget deal because they know voters aren't going to like their tax plans needed to support their spending plans.
«With his departure from the NY - 21 Congressional race, the choice for voters becomes much more clear and much more stark: Do we want to send Stefanik back to her DC cocktail circuit, send some candidates running on the Democratic side who are auditioning for the DC cocktail circuit, or someone who is going to stop talking like a cable news wannabe and just get to work.»
When you campaign to spend more and raise taxes like Curran has, you have to go negative at some point to distract the voters from your real positions.
«While most of Desperate Dan's stunts, like his post office art legislation or shameless flip - flopping on sanctuary cities, are simply embarrassing, in this case he has allowed his failing campaign to cross the line into outrageous voter intimidation,» the statement went on to say.
Cambridge purports to go beyond the typical voter targeting — relying on online clues like Facebook Likes to give a hint at a user's political leanings and construct a picture of a voter's mental state.
«If National Republicans think this is going to get Upstate New York voters to forget that House Republican incumbents like Elise Stefanik, and Republican congressional candidates like Claudia Tenney, George Phillips and Steve Wells, support a misogynist whose anti-constitutional policies would make America less safe, they are sorely mistaken.»
«The public likes to have transparency, but to actually roll this out is going to be a very difficult process,» said Jennifer Wilson, with the League of Women Voters.
It's time to move on to the issues that confront the state and its voters, like jobs; restructuring government to be what it needs to be to meet the needs of citizens that need help from government; addressing structural problems with the state's finances; ensuring that roads and bridges are safe for passage, not just today, but for tomorrow as well; making the state a place that people want to move to, not out of; and the list goes on.
«Voters in this district really like to go beyond party labels,» Democratic consultant Jonathan Yedin said.
Was it he knows the voters aren't going to like the Senate Democrats proposals to raise taxes / fees?
Landless peasant insulting ex labour voters who went to ukip, you sound like those labour members who 33 years ago couldn't understand why the working class voted tory
He described going to court in regards to a voter registration issue: «The judge looked like Charlene de Blasio,» he said during a Republican event.
Answers to this are heavily partisan, as you might expect: a hefty majority of Labour voters would like May to go now, only 9 % of Tory voters.
Only a quarter of voters who know Lee Zeldin have a favorable view, while nearly 60 percent don't know who he is, but once they do, they're not going to like what they see.
«Things like that are going to matter if the progressive populism that we need is spoken about in a way that connects to working men and women... Particularly for younger voters — we need their energy, we need their commitment — they need to feel like if they're going to put energy in that it's going to count at the end of the day, and it's not just going to be about TV ads.»
It's Nice Ed's coming back he was at stoke after all, Ed dropped the triangulation line that Blair liked, funny as he actually appealed to both Daivd Owen, Maurice Glasman and Tony benn in 2010 ′ but the triangulation of middle / working class votes has gone that it's not even Left / Right anymore, and the dozen or so policies that unite ex Labour voters who vote Libdem, and the ones who vote Ukip can be summed up in, ignore Soctland and Northern Ireland politics concentrate on the economy, Defence, freedom of speech and women's rights,
Mike Boland, the operative who left the party to run Teachout's campaign, and Bertha Lewis, who nominated Teachout from the floor of the W.F.P. convention, have both gone on record urging Teachout voters to hold their noses and vote W.F.P. as a way of keeping liberal pressure on Cuomo, reminding them of the party's successful pushes on items like paid sick days and the minimum wage.
Regardless, since New Hampshire has a very popular Democratic governor (70 % in the polls), the Bush regime and the kiss - ass Republicans in Congress have been like maggots under the skin (which is why both Repub reps got zapped - and Sen. Sununu is about to), and the dramatic increase in liberal voters in the southern tier population centers — all makes it more than likely that NH will be going Democratic this year no matter who heads the ticket.
While average voters don't follow the minutiae of legislative tactics and procedures they do tend to bristle at the idea of things going on behind closed doors; anything that feels like an end run around the «way things should be done» tends to be politically treacherous.
You must have misunderstood what I put, labour didn't keep the same sort of voters in 2015 as 2010 ′ see some constituencies that had a huge libDem collapse, like Kent Sussex But in south West England, labours vote went to Ukip, it wasn't the amount of votes it was we got different voters, voting for us in 2015,
For a start you're not questioning why working class socialist labour voters went Ukip in the first place, it wasn't some guardian reading, snobbery that the working class are think, therefore are bigoted, so they must vote UKIP as they're nasty right wingers who dint like immigration, the decrease in wages among blue collar workers, due to immigration, is by the bosses seeking immigration to pay lower wages to make themselves more profits, Appeasing implies going along with something through fear of something worse, to agree with controlling immigration, because ex labour voters are going UKIP isn't appeasing it, why would us being afraid of losing is our votes to.
Illinois Senate: Voters don't like state Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias (D) or Rep. Mark Kirk (R) much but they are going to have to choose one of them today.
The US Census published a report on voting in America last week that was the usual — the nation's voters don't go to the polls as often as they should and in some parts of the country, like New York, and for some age groups — mainly young voters — the turnout has been dreadful.
Even those who joined to oppose her are unsure of how the vote will go, but said Quinn likely won't get the kind of sweeping win that voters would like to see.
With unlimited room on their Emmy ballot, voters have the opportunity to nominate past winners like Claire Danes, Allison Janney, Andre Braugher, and Kathy Bates even after their shows have gone past their prime.
The Lobster I'm also going to scratch off as being too hardcore for Academy voters, despite how much critics like it.
Thus, voters are never going to be too strict if it means not being able to award someone like Vikander if given the chance.
Both Gone Girl and Nightcrawler made it to the Producers Guild but were killed when Oscar voters had to limit their scope to five slots for Best Picture nominations instead of ten, like the Producers Guild had.
I doubt a voter is sitting on her coach thinking to herself «I liked that screenplay, but I'm not going to vote for it because it had four writers.»
If not: «The Light That Never Fails» from Meru Lowdown: Going out on a limb here that the Academy music branch can't say no to the great track from The Weeknd just like they couldn't as Grammy award voters.
We don't know how the Academy ranking is going to go but there is the possibility that a large number of voters will block vote for women to help women, to show the world that they care about women in the industry, to make up for Hillary's loss; for all of those reasons it's possible we could see wins, like we saw at the DGA in the television categories.
Like it or not, Oscar voters draw their contenders from the ranks of studio films (either major studios, indie divisions of the studios or known - quantity indie studios), and studios wait until the fall to release the movies they're going to push for Oscars.
So, you have to fold in their choices with what you know to be true: a movie like A Most Violent Year was always going to be too esoteric for Academy / industry voters where thousands choose, as opposed to up to 100.
Manchester by the Sea was a hit with Academy voters because of its general critical acclaim, but that wasn't the only reason it did well with them — it also seemed like a real movie that the general public was excited to go see, rather than add to their watch queues at home.
It does not seem like the stars are going to align to give him a win for a Best Picture nominee or winner, but voters have a chance this year to give him the Oscar for a film that isn't nominated but would be well deserved win without a doubt.
While this seems more action - heavy like Fuqua's most recent film, «Olympus Has Fallen» and less likely to rack up any award consideration from stuffy Oscar voters, this looks like it's going to be one of the real gems this fall and a treat for action fans.
The film functions like a punch in the mouth to every Obama voter that went to Trump.
But maybe... just maybe... one of these races will end like it did two years ago when Oscar voters ignored their guild counterparts and the Hollywood Foreign Press Assn. members and went for Mark Rylance over Sylvester Stallone just as the orchestra was about to launch into «Gon na Fly Now.»
We're going with Mary J. Blige, who has become a standout in her first awards season as a representative of her daring film Mudbound; Octavia Spencer, a former winner who is both well - liked and part of a film industry voters seem to love; and Holly Hunter, perhaps the biggest underdog in this category, but a four - time nominee who proved with her surprise nomination for Thirteen in 2004 that, when Oscar voters are given the chance to notice her, they'll take it.
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