Sentences with phrase «of next elections»

We are endangering the future of our next elections each day that passes when these hooligans are walking free act after act.
Ahead of the 25th anniversary, the party took stock in Elmina in the Central Region to «retool» ahead of the next elections in 2020.
Such crisis however, will not be solved if each national political party keep worrying exclusively of the results of next elections.
Warren would be 71 by the time of the next election, but she is three years younger than Trump.
But Malia and Sasha Obama will be 22 and 19, respectively, by the time of the next election.
And at the start of the next election, there will be at least 303 ridings without a Liberal incumbent.
We see this as a defining element of the next election campaign in Canada.
Even Jim Flahertyâ $ ™ s â $ œWe Donâ $ ™ t Pick Winnersâ $ Conservatives were under pressure in this budget to do something for the auto industry. The fact that at least a dozen swing ridings in southwestern Ontario could determine the outcome of the next election might have something to do with their sensitivity to the continuing industrial destruction being -LSB-...]
While I would not place a bet on the outcome of the next election, Conservative politicians who brag about dancing a cakewalk back into government in 2019 should be reminded that it might not be that easy.
MoveOn.org Political Action is a federal political committee which primarily helps members elect candidates who reflect our values through a variety of activities aimed at influencing the outcome of the next election.
It's important he uses his time as leader to bring in new talent so by the time of the next election there's a more diverse face [in charge].»
Cameron's commitment to spending more on health than the rate of inflation every year of the next election will still leave the NHS under significant cost pressure as it tries to deal with the soaring demands of an elderly society.
With very goodrelationships across the parties, George is in a strong position to help keep the newly renamed company in poll position for government IT services, whatever the result of the next election.
It is far too early to begin predicting the results of the next election, but this is an opportune moment to examine the changing contours of the Israeli political map, and see to what extent the big stories of the last year have changed Israelis» opinions about the leadership they want for their country.
He sounds victorious, but remember that under these forecasts he will have a # 73bn deficit at the time of the next election, rather than the # 0 he promised.
The week ahead could help define the shape of the next election.
Bettws may be too clunky a name to be adopted by pollsters, but with the spectre of the next election looming, its message is clear: People are struggling to see how the democratic framework works for them.
42 % of UKIP supporters say they will definitely vote for their party which is a big enough figure to worry the Conservatives and make a mockery of those who hope that UKIP support will return closer to the 3.5 % they picked up in 2010 by the time of the next election.
The Electoral Commission must keep, for the purposes of the next election to be held in the district to which the dormant roll relates, a copy of the dormant roll as it exists on the day before polling day.
Regardless of whether they do though, one way or the other, the UKIP vote is likely to have serious consequences for the outcome of the next election.
Zuma, 74, will have completed two terms in 2019 and is not eligible to run for president again, but the ANC — which is packed with his loyalists — could replace him ahead of the next election.
The narrowing of the Tory lead in the opinion polls over recent months underlines that the outcome of the next election is not certain.
The coalition would govern for a year - announcing the date of the next election, and legislating for fixed - election dates, too.
It has been threatening for some time to pressure local Labour parties to withdraw their support for certain candidates ahead of the next election.
Well, firstly, the results of the next election aren't written in stone, and there's always a chance - slim though it might be - the party somehow recover from their current electoral horror story.
The boundary changes defeat matters far more to the outcome of the next election than even the coalition's biggest U-turn, or the resignation of a Cabinet minister.
But for now at least, on economic policy, on which the fate of millions and the result of next election will depend, Ed has failed to deliver the change Britain needs from the manifesto policy the electorate rejected.
No, Corbyn needs to press for Labour to drop its support for Trident replacement ahead of the next election.
But as the decades passed, lawmakers increasingly passed bills to raise their salary as far in advance of the next election as possible to reduce the likelihood of voter backlash.
First, it clarifies what could be one of the most important dividing - lines of the next election — between tax cuts and in - work benefits.
There is a Populus poll in The Times tomorrow which does not appear to cover voting intention, but rather asks the public what they expect they outcome of the next election to be.
The more seats a party or grouping has, the more chance it has of forming a government - with 198 seats out of 646 the Conservative Party could only form a government if significant numbers of other MP's decided to back them, as happened in 1924 when there was a situation that the Conservatives didn't want to form a coalition with either other main party and equally the Liberals didn't want a coalition with Labour and the Liberals and Conservatives saw it as an opportunity to allow Labour into government but in a situation in which legislation was still reliant on Liberal and Conservative votes and they could be brought down at the most suitable time, supposing the notional gains were accurate and in the improbable event of the next election going exactly the same way in terms of votes then 214 out of 650 is 32.93 % of seats compared to at 198 out of 646 seats - 30.65 % of seats and the Conservative Party would then be 14 seats closer towards a total neccessary to form a government allowing for the greater number of seats, on the one hand the Conservatives need Labour to fail but equally they need to succeed themselves given that the Liberal Democrats appear likely to oppose anyone forming a government who does not embark on a serious programme to introduce PR, in addition PC & SNP would expect moves towards Independence for Scotland and Wales, the SDLP will be likely to back Labour and equally UKIP would want a committment to withdraw from Europe and anyway will be likely to be in small numbers if any, pretty much that leaves cutting a deal with the DUP which would only add the backing of an extra 10 - 13 MP's.
44 % of people told Populus they thought it was important for a political leader to have strong religious belief, 53 % disagreed (for the record, Tony Blair is known to be a practicing Christian who regularly attends church, Michael Howard attends a Liberal Synagogue on the High Holy feast days — not that it matters anyway, since neither of them will be leader of their respective parties by the time of the next election).
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.
Labour desperately needs to develop its stars of tomorrow — the people who will get great media coverage and win over voters not just in advance of the next election, but in the run up to 2020.
The worry I have is the more we bang on about immigration — and it seems as though that is going to be one of the big themes of the next election — it resonates with what we understand people are concerned about, but the more we bang on about that as the Conservative Party, the more we will seem I fear to people in this country with brown skin, with black skin, people who've come from outside the UK, they will just think «God, Tories somehow see us as being second - class citizens».
Stephen Byers, holder of the honorary post of Blairite Outrider, condemned it for breaking a manifesto pledge not to raise income tax rates — because it would come in just before the expected date of the next election.
Asked what they expect the result of the next election to be, 40 % expect the Conservatives to retain power (27 % outright and 13 % in a coalition), compared to 28 % who think Labour will win (21 % outright, and 7 % in coalition).
«We must get beyond the short - term thinking in Albany that never sees beyond the horizon of the next election,» the report says.
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.
ToryDiary: «The Government's pledge to reduce net migration is a key plank of the next election campaign - CCHQ regularly issues infographics and updates reminding everyone that the Coalition's record starkly contrasts with Labour's incompetence in border control.
If the result of the next election is a German - style grand coalition you read it here first.
The three are committed to opening open up a dialogue within and between their parties over alliance - building ahead of the next election.
How these strands of opinion develop, and particularly how former Liberal Democrat voters perceive their party's role in the coalition, will determine the outcome of the next election — however the votes are counted.
However by the time of the next election Gordon Brown will be Labour leader, not Tony Blair.
The timing is absolutely right now for the unveiling of an election pledge to legislate to scrap any further MP and Ministerial final salary pension accrual from the date of the next election and to replace it with money purchase pensions with a decent employer contribution for all future service.
That compact at the heart of the current coalition is now breaking down as resumed growth and the prospect of the next election induce the parties to reposition themselves.
Balls argues that a central issue of the next election will be Ronald Reagan's famous question: «Are you better off than you were four years ago?»
By the time of the next election, Lib Dems would be able to say that much had been achieved «by a totally new way of doing politics»
But at the time of the next election people do remember such instances and also remember who was responsible.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z