The next election looks like being about which party has the more credible plans to shrink the deficit.
As the outcome of
next election looks set to be one of the most hard to call in the last two decades, a one note hiring strategy focused on whichever party is flavour of the week is clearly a profoundly rash tactic.
Not exact matches
But here's the thing: Even back in 2012 — when Mike Duffy was a household name as a former broadcaster and Harper was
looking solid, solid, solid — 57 % of Canadians still thought he should quit before the
next election.
On the more intractable issues of Indigenous poverty, addiction, bad schools and substandard services, she
looks out past the
next election.
Gross» latest investment outlook has the genie Flav offering a
look ahead to
next week's presidential
election, to which Gross declines and shares his frustration with the two - party political system.
Even as the energy companies
look to savor the recent recovery in oil prices after a protracted slump, the U.S. presidential
election is seen as posing the
next big threat.
The impact of higher oil prices on the country's current account deficit and inflation rate, the Indian banking system's struggles with demonetization, scandals, bad loans and a government
looking ahead to
next year's general
election have all taken a toll on investor sentiment.
And now, without needing to present a clear vision for Alberta's future, it
looks like the PC Party could once again wipe out its opposition in the
next election.
With an
election expected to be held in the
next few months and a new Premier setting a new tone, many long - time and not - so - long - time Members of Alberta's Legislative Assembly have decided that now is time to retire or
look for greener pastures.
The sermon
looked at the time almost like an
election manifesto: this, he almost seemed to be saying, ought to be the message of the
next Pope.
It
looks like Bartomeu may not survive the
next presidential
election at the club.
Our
next piece took a
look at this week's Hollyrood
election debate and and suggested that the SNP's income tax policies show that the New Labour project lives on in Scotland.
The general
election is not over yet but some pundits are already
looking beyond June 8 to identify the
next batch of Westminster movers and shakers.
But like the Lib Dems and Labour fighting for second place, we should
look to the
next election to see if websites haven't replaced newspapers in the pecking order by 2015.
Next leader of Labour, if Miliband loses the next election and if Cameron is still in power and wins well, labour will look for somebody who has the same style as cameron, somebody who looks the same sounds the same, lets see who can that
Next leader of Labour, if Miliband loses the
next election and if Cameron is still in power and wins well, labour will look for somebody who has the same style as cameron, somebody who looks the same sounds the same, lets see who can that
next election and if Cameron is still in power and wins well, labour will
look for somebody who has the same style as cameron, somebody who
looks the same sounds the same, lets see who can that be.
So the
next election is open to whoever
looks best able to marry economic effi ciency and compassion while helping Britain out of recession.
For some Obama - campaign nuts and bolts advice,
look for the
next Campaigns &
Elections Technology Bytes column, which I submitted last week and which should be live soon.
The clock towards the
next general
election is ticking, but the situation is now
looking worse, not better, than it did on that morning of optimism in Downing Street's Rose Garden.
Cox suggested there's a bigger picture reason the president - elect is already
looking ahead; he sees an opportunity to stop potential rivals before the
next presidential
election.
Good information is creeping out about how Democrat Terry McAuliffe used digital and data tools to win the Virginia governor's race last week, and you can
look for my analysis piece in the
next issue of Campaigns &
Elections mag.
David concluded: - «I am therefore
looking forward to the
next election and I hope that all those that voted English Democrats their first or second preference this time round will give me first preference
next time and put the English Cause front and centre in South Yorkshire politics!»
Now that we are past the midway point in the parliament — and now that it's clear that the constituency boundaries will not be changing before the
next election — I decided it was time for a proper
look at the marginal territory where it will be decided who enters 10 Downing Street on 8 May 2015 and whether or not they have an overall majority at their command.
«He says he is not
looking beyond the Euro
elections next year and the general
election of 2015.
Next up in this series, Josh and Tyler
look at online advertising late in an
election, when the focus shifts to persuasion.
The Israeli lobby in the United States will not accept anything but a veto at the UN and Obama is now
looking at the
next elections and would not want to anger it.
Labours
next program will be
looking for a New Blair, or a New Thatcher, or anyone who might win labour an
election, screaming and shouting the leaders name like the demented Americans is not going to make people vote.
«Any business that had done that would be
looking very hard now at both its strategy and its management to see how we get some of that back - because otherwise we're going to lose a large number of seats at the
next election.»
The team taking the party into the
next election may
look very different.»
It still
looks probable that the Conservatives will win the
next General
Election, with a large swing against Labour.
It makes for fodder for the dozens of politico talking heads, but politicos
look only to the
next election cycle.
The TV debates during
next year's general
election look set to end up in a» 5 -3-2 formation», rather than being restricted to just the three main party leaders.
He said: «We have work to do — we are
looking to the
next council
elections and building up Thirsk and Malton Labour party.
This one won't necessarily be as bang on as that in 2001, a poll of 661 party members has a margin of error of about 4 %, so we could be
looking at actual splits between 63/37 to 71/29, but either way, Cameron has won the
election and is going to be the
next Tory leader.
«We are
looking for ways to minimize rancor in the party ahead of the
next general
elections, and we are
looking for ways to save the party from potential legal booby traps.
If you
look at the demographics, at where we need to be at the
next election, we need more people in the north voting for us, more of what they call here «blue collar» workers and I call the white working class.
It's forward
looking, it's progressive, it's modernising and it wants to commit to the best possible platform on which we can fight and win the
next election.
He believes the Prime Minister's focus on the economy has left a dangerous void on other domestic policy issues, and he predicts that Labour will lose the general
election expected
next year unless it develops a wide - ranging, forward -
looking agenda.
Andrew Hawkins
looks at whether smaller parties, especially the Green Party, are likely to gain more support at the
next election
Scottish Labour is
looking to press home the party's lead in the polls nine months ahead of
next year's Holyrood
elections.
As a result, neither party
looks like they'll be winning a majority at the
next election.
At the outset of the general
election, Clinton's campaign
looks like a well - oiled juggernaut
next to Trump's vastly smaller, self - funded operation, a POLITICO analysis of FEC reports found.
Advising those
looking to get a new face in the Commons, Osland states: «The top priority for the labour movement right now is to secure the
election of more Labour MPs at the
next general
election.
The
next Labour leader should be ditched in mid-parliament if the party
looks set to lose the 2020
election, a newly elected Labour MP has warned.
Nick Clegg's position as Liberal Democrat leader is starting to
look «precarious», David Cameron has admitted, after a poll found nearly half of his members want him out before the
next general
election.
For his part, Mr Davis - who had led the seven - month race until the party conference in Blackpool - said he
looked at the debates between them as «not just a contest for the leadership, but a preamble to us winning the
next general
election».
Then we can
look at who ought to be coming in if we win at the
next election: Angie Bray Susan Williams Margot James Harriett Baldwin Philippa Stroud Nicky Morgan Priti Patel Joanne Cash Laura Sandys Penny Mordaunt Annunziata Rees - Mogg Jill Skalla Antoinette Sandbach etc..
Lord Ashcroft has repeated the same sort of large marginals poll that PoliticsHome did in 2008 and 2009,
looking at the clusters of key marginal seats that will provide the battleground for the
next general
election.
As it is, the
next political events we have too
look forward to aren't about Great Britain anyway, but the Scottish, Welsh and London
elections next year — I'm sure polling on them will start firing up in the
next few months.
It
looks instead like the government will use the constitutional reform and governance bill to pave the way for a referendum within two years of the
next election, ie in the
next parliament, but just on the alternative vote (AV)-- a system that allows preferences but isn't proportional.
At the
next election, David Cameron will be
looking to re-run the «tax bombshell» campaign of 1992 - with which he was intimately involved in the Conservative Research Department.