Not exact matches
The NDP needs to regain the union
vote as it tacks back to the left and will likely oppose
much of the deal unless it is radically
changed to protect Canadian jobs, something no one here has signalled.
Is it going to
change anyone's
vote that
much?
As he says
much more eloquently in this address: lunch counters and
voting booths are easy; everything else that needed to
change (and he did have a
Yep you are right, I moved down here in the state of Mississippi, north of Crystal Springs from Chicago when I was ten years old but still I visit once in a while, now it's twenty years and sad to not
much has
change, like the parts you said about non-whites discrimatory or rasicts at other non-whites, when I went to school here they treated me as a alien from another galaxy, they pick at my voice cause I didn't had that southern dialog, unlike them I said my words correctly, but not just me, they even hated at others who had better intelect I am not picking at them, It is what I went through all these years, Mississippi and mainly this small town of Crystal Springs see America in a crazy awful view, They don't like difference that even within they own race, ther not that politcal, when some one say God they got there
vote, I don't to say
much to waste your time, I still remember when I was ten years old I had a constanct back ground check on me to see were I really come from evn though I had the paper saying Chicago Illinois barely no jobs but a church on every street for a town barely under five Thousand, till this very day, they look at me like I am a alien, did you ever had that experiance down here damn my keybroad mess up,
In the cutthroat world of F1 teams will do pretty
much anything to gain even the tiniest advantage over each other, whether it's by pestering stewards for a rival to get a penalty, or
voting for rule
changes which benefit themselves over the greater good.
Things couldn't have worked out
much better in Lincoln, but it's still wild to wonder what a stronger
vote of confidence or a cleaner bill of health in Newcombe's favor might have meant to Crouch's place in Huskers history — and how his hypothetical transfer might have
changed the college football landscape in the early 2000s.
Also, the
voting panel seems to often
change significantly (it used to be a
much larger group) all this depending on the organization's whims, and some fighters are removed / inserted somewhat arbitrarily by the UFC.
The main
changes that I've read about were that it would introduce instant - runoff style ranked choice
voting and that it would put districting in the hands of an independent commission that would create
much larger districts with multiple representatives versus single representative districts that currently exist.
Of course, as that link states, there's not
much stopping me from
changing party affiliation at any time and
voting in whatever primary I choose.
They are able to respond to
changes / problems / needs without
much delay (
voting) and are able to withstand the many sudden
changes of opinion in the population (e.g. populism).
Today's Marist poll finds voter sentiment hasn't
changed much when it comes to the upcoming midterm elections, with voters closely divided on whether they're willing to support incumbents or
vote for new faces.
Turns out, not so
much: OFA was a non-factor in the health care battle, and though its post-2012 incarnation is trying to
change that, it still hasn't demonstrated the ability to shift
votes on the Hill.
There's certainly
much more to be said about the economic repercussions of the Leave
vote, which, alongside
changes in party leadership is a genuine «leap in the dark,» but it is important to address directly and forcefully the question of popular anger that led to the success of Leave.
If these numbers were publicized it would be
much easier for the
changes in how state allot their Electoral College
votes.
Among the Labour seats polled the SNP
change since 2010 was similar to that in Scotland - wide polls but the drop in the Labour
vote was
much bigger, 21 points rather than 15 points.
Real social
change is to be achieved over the long term through organisation, agitation, and direct action, as
much as it is through debates,
votes, and detailed committee work in parliament.
Now, either Labour has a huge amount to fear from forthcoming boundary
changes (and
much - needed reform of the corrupt postal
voting system), or Cameron is an electoral genius.
Belesis» supporters say they've locked down about 40 percent of the weighted
vote, but the situation is subject to
change, depending on how
much horse - trading and arm - twisting takes place over the next several hours.
«Our country has
changed, and while any racial discrimination in
voting is too
much, Congress must ensure that the legislation it passes to remedy that problem speaks to current conditions,» Roberts wrote.
But in 2014, something
changed: A little - known, poorly funded Constitutional law professor named Zephyr Teachout ran against Cuomo in the Democratic primary and captured a third of the
vote, proof that not only was a restive progressivism already brewing in the pre-Trump, pre-Sanders era, but that the party's liberals didn't care
much for their governor.
A plurality think he's
changed, they think he would make a good comptroller and they don't think the sex scandal matters all that
much in deciding their
vote,» Marist pollster Lee Miringoff said of the results, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Israel has a closed list proportional representation electoral system with a single nationwide constituency so, apart from the 3.25 % threshold,
changes in seats are pretty
much perfectly sensitive to the
changes in the share of the
vote.
He uses her story to dramatise how
much America has
changed -
votes for women and blacks, World War Two, man on the moon, that sort of thing - always cutting in with the phrase «yes we can».
The outcome will depend on net movements in
votes, and each net
change is simply the difference between two, often
much larger, gross movements in support,
His candidacy, he said, is
much more than a protest
vote — he's more than ready to govern and lead, to bring the kind of
change so many New Yorkers are desperately yearning for.
UKIP's capacity to
change constituency - level outcomes by grabbing 15 - 25 % of the
votes in key seats will matter just as
much as its potential to win further seats outright.
Carroll views early
voting as a first step in modernizing our
voting systems, but feels that there is so
much more to do, «from allowing same day registration, no fault absentee
voting, allowing for party enrollment
changes to take place 10 days before an election and more.»
The generational approach falls flat — young people don't
vote much in low - turnout midterm primaries, lol, and anyway aren't necessarily clamoring for one of their own, and Maloney is not the right target for a «
change» campaign.
After
much heated debate and delay, the Village of Oxford Board of Trustees
voted 4 - 1 last night in favor of a
change in the municipal zoning ordinance that clarifies a prohibition against gas exploration, extraction, and disposal, establishing the first fracking moratorium in Chenango County.
I think you may underestimate how
much a preferential
voting system such as AV would
change our political culture, during the campaign, and not only in post-election negotiations.
The Conservatives will have a significant majority whoever leads them and the opposition
vote will splinter — to the SNP in Scotland and in the rest of the country a smattering to Labour, a rump to UKIP and loose
change to a Liberal Democrat party that left power regretting it so
much that it fled without a credible position to challenge from.
She said that «Europe had
changed so
much» as she debated with Lord Falconer, a former Lord Chancellor, over what MPs and supporters would make of the call, and when the
vote could take place.
Then in 2011 the Compass membership
voted to take the huge cultural and political step of
changing our constitution to open up membership beyond just Labour to welcome in party members from the Greens, Liberal Democrats, SNP, Plaid Cymru and anyone who supported our good society goals of
much greater equality, sustainability, democracy and pluralism.
Whipping (politician to politician lobbying) can
change vote to
vote,
much less from one prime minister to another.
«Welsh Liberal Democrats are trying to give this Bill a purpose by introducing a
much - needed
change to the
voting system for local council elections.
It is
much easier to rebel when your
vote does not affect the outcome of a
vote than it is to trigger real
change with a decisive
vote.
Since some leading trade union members of the NEC are known to favour circulating ballot papers to all levy papers — as was the previous practice — with
votes being counted provided that levy - payers tick the box to opt into affiliated supporter status, the union influence may in fact not
change so
much from the process that selected Ken Livingstone.
Last year, though, the failure led to
much more partisan finger - pointing as each side was upset about
changing a budget -
voting tradition that had been followed for decades.
As it happens the Conservative - Labour swing in marginals was
much the same as it was in safe seats in 2005, but the
changes in the parties
votes was different — both the Conservatives and Labour did better in their key marginals than elsewhere, it's just their mutual improved performances cancelled each other out!
Rep. Sean Patrick Maloney, the Cold Spring Democrat who represents
much of the Lower Hudson Valley, said in he
voted against the bill because of its «wide variety of cuts and programmatic
changes which failed to adequately address the needs of Hudson Valley farmers.»
But I doubt that tonight's programme will have done
much to
change voting intentions.
There is a large over 50's
vote in Bexhill & Battle and the majority are very disillusioned with the Tory's over the EU, immigration and the prospect of large housing estates being dumped on their characterful villages by ruthless planners and the National Planning Policy Framework that is set to
change so
much and not for the better.
The Labour
vote fragmenting is becoming a bit of a pattern though, reminiscent of what happened to the Lib Dems in 2015, giving the Tories a bunch of seats without
much change in
vote share.
Earlier this week, Whole Foods shareholders
voted to approve the partnership, and now, it seems Amazon's going to be making some
changes to the retailer — starting
much sooner than people expected.
I don't know
much about BAFTA except that they've
changed their
voting procedures a lot.
How
much this mood will
change for the
voting, I don't know.
«When we speak up and use our voices and
vote, we make so
much change and our world needs it right now,» Ross said in her acceptance speech.
latimes.com/local/educatio… KICKERS How a tombstone with Trump's name on it made this elementary school a target of conservative ire washingtonpost.com/news/education… OKCPS
votes to
change names of three schools named after Confederate generals — goo.gl / alerts / fsvzX #GoogleAlerts Children From Low - Income, Less Educated Families Spend Nearly Twice as
Much Time on Screens the74million.org/children-from-… -LSB-...]
Changed votes by two Board members over the approval of two Aspire charter schools at this week's Board meeting gave the public a glimpse at a
much larger debate over whether charter schools based in Los Angeles should be allowed to operate their special education programs through a partnership with a far - off district that costs...
«The Indiana bill, which began its life as a straight repeal of Common Core standards, was
changed so
much and left so many of the common requirements intact that the original author, state Sen. Scott Schneider (R), pulled his name and
voted against the final version.»