Sentences with phrase «new general election»

The National Bank of Greece study was published Tuesday as Greece heads to new general elections on June 17, amid Europe - wide concern of broader financial turmoil if Greece's place in the single currency is threatened by a victory for an anti-austerity party.
Parliament can anoint a new PM at any time without calling a new general election.
He argues that on independence day, Scottish MPs could exit the UK Parliament, leading the Queen to invite a new prime minister to form a government or dissolve Parliament entirely, prompting a new general election.
So if the two men enter coalition, they would be acting not only with half an eye to facing each other in a new general election but facing down rebels in their own parties.
Version A: «The Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, and other parties would fight a new General Election in your area.
Version B: «The Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, and other parties would fight a new General Election in your area.
Trump made Twitter followers aware of the shooting, then went back to attacking Clinton — this time for a new general election ad — before penning more tweets about the tragedy in Orlando, in which a gunman entered a gay nightclub and mowed down 50 people, with another 53 left injured.
«I am therefore appointing Ian Lavery, Co-National Campaign Coordinator, to the additional role of Labour party chair to strengthen our campaigning and party organisation, as we prepare to contest a new general election and form the next government.»
Can the Parliament ignore the Fixed Parliament Act and announce a new general election with just a simple majority?
That survey also backs up ComRes on voters not wanting a new general election, with 39 % backing a new vote but 50 % opposed.
Is this closedown indeed a precursor to the Corbyn Circle lurching rightwards in its policy bundle ready for a new General Election — in an attempt to capture that old bankrupt obsession of the Labour Right and Centre, «the centre ground»?
In the event that no agreement can be reached to nominate an individual to lead a minority government, the previous Taoiseach (acting in a caretaker capacity) can then seek dissolution of the Dáil and call a new general election.
We know why there's an AV referendum - it's there because that was the price Nick Clegg required to deliver his party for a formal coalition rather than just the confidence - and - supply agreement he would otherwise have offered (and hence the new General Election later in 2010)- something his own party is now turning vigorously against, but too late (they're probably doomed).
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