Sentences with phrase «support conservative ideas»

So the article says that conservatives spend money to support conservative ideas?

Not exact matches

The Conservative government of the day followed through on some of the report's ideas, updating R & D tax incentives and boosting support for early - stage risk capital.
In doing this, the Conservatives mock the very idea they once supported.
One can see Bernie Sanders supporting it as a socialist add - on to current entitlements, Donald Trump not understanding the subtleties, the #NeverTrump conservatives fighting it on misguided principle and Hillary Clinton equally championing the idea and fighting it, depending on the event or fundraiser.
While the NDP have long supported the abolishment of the Senate, the idea has grown popular in conservative circles in recent years.
We should present an «Indivisible» conservative vision while forming new coalitions and expanding support for these fundamental ideas.
While I do share some conservative ideas they always seem more interested in just supporting Republicans in all things regardless of their effects on other people, myself included.
Conservative apologists of old (and their current imitators, like Strobel) operated on the basis of evidentialism — the idea that we can and should believe only what can be supported by empirical evidence.
Pro-life Conservatives in Alabama may be understandably uneasy with the idea of casting a vote for Doug Jones, a Democrat with a history of supporting abortion rights.
A «progressive alliance» is an idea that has plenty of support but few obvious prospects for success - with Ukip bleeding votes to the Conservatives, Tory dominance is on the way
Meanwhile, the party supports the idea that the Scottish Parliament should use its new income tax powers to raise rates in order to have more money to spend on public services (a far cry from their Westminster colleagues» advocacy of lower income tax when they were in coalition with the Conservatives).
Hanna, a moderate who represented Central New York in Congress for six years before retiring at the end of 2016, said he dismissed the idea because GOP state committee members likely would not support someone who has repeatedly broken from the party's conservative orthodoxy.
All it does is summarise ideas from IPPR and academics such as Prabhakar (ideas which would be supported by Labour), and then claims unconvincingly that Conservatives would support this because it's «fair».
Massey and Malliotakis come from different wings of the Republican Party, with Massey a moderate billing himself as a «non-political» technocrat open to «ideas from across the political spectrum,» in the Michael Bloomberg mold; while Malliotakis — as evidenced by her support from the Conservative Party — is further to the right, though she has also claimed to not easily fit into any ideological orthodoxy.
This has been a nightmare for Downing Street, which cobbled together the desperate idea of Conservative - only governmental support for a private member's bill at the last possible moment.
There is a sharp political divide here — Conservative voters overwhelmingly think it was a bad idea (72 % to 16 %), Labour voters broadly support it (48 % to 31 %), while Lib Dem voters are pretty evenly split.
It sounds like a great idea, and the Conservatives are urging Gordon Brown to support it - but is this technology all that it seems?
These ideas enjoyed broad support from conservatives, centrists, and liberals, who took leadership roles in charters, education nonprofits, and the foundations that supported them.
«Reform conservatives» in particular are showing an openness to new ideas, such as an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit, child tax credits, and more comprehensive wage supports.
Even though the two political sides have each different goal and idea on anti-Common Core, anyway, it is clear that the ties between the conservative and progressive parties support the back - step of the Common Core.
(Some may recall that Tracey Emin, who famously supported the Conservative Party, was critical of Gove's idea, and later boasted, «Michael Gove is scared of me.»)
But with the collapse of critical consensus supporting avant - garde modernism above more conservative styles coinciding with the end of modernism itself, there has been a greater curiosity about artists who forged careers based on ideas contrary to modernism.
Republicans generally argue that a carbon tax would hurt the economy by boosting energy prices on fossil fuels, but some conservatives have supported the idea as a way to offset lower personal taxes.
60 Plus ($ 16 million) is a senior citizens organization that supports conservative and free - market ideas and, on some occasions, sharply criticizes the positions taken by climate change activists.
Recent polling by Yale University and George Mason University found that conservative Republican support for the idea that climate change is real has fallen 13 points since 2008, to 37 percent.
A 2012 study led by Yale's Dan Kahan seemed to support this idea, finding that conservatives who are more scientifically literate are less worried about global warming.
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