Sentences with phrase «voter trust after»

Mr Cameron and his ministers insist the process of lifting the «cloak of secrecy» around government is essential to win back voter trust after the expenses scandal and a breakdown of public belief in the political system.

Not exact matches

It's about realizing he couldn't litigate his past comedy, about trusting his staff, about understanding why politicians act the way they do in interviews, about recognizing why the norms of the Senate matter.So this is an interview about what it's like to be a politician, why perfectly nice and interesting people end up acting like all those other politicians after getting elected, and the role we as voters (and we in the media) play in it.
Just after midnight, Hamilton said, «I'm humbled and honored by the trust voters have placed in me tonight, and I'll spend every day in Albany working to live up to it.
The IDC wants to create a $ 400 million construction trust fund for schools, a proposal that comes after voters approved $ 2 billion in borrowing that's aimed at school infrastructure and technology spending.
In a not too distant land, our sister country Nigeria has conducted an election that meets internationally acceptable best practices and according to the then commissioner of Nigeria (Prof. Attahiru Jega) «it's illogical not to change a register that has so many irregularities in it», and after changing the Nigeria voters register, his team went ahead to clean it from 73.5 million to 58 million people all in an effort to follow best practices and ensure transparency in order to win the trust of the citizenry in the Commission.
Hawkins says progressive voters feel Cuomo can't be trusted after flip - flopping on positions and walking back on promises made to the WFP.
As the Lib Dems seek to woo traditional Labour voters and win back public trust, after being reduced to just nine MPs, Lamb will urge his party's spring forum this weekend to back higher taxes to pay for health and social care.
«Will voters trust a Democrat after four years of Democratic leadership?»
After David Cameron's well - reviewed conference speech last week, which promised income tax cuts, 39 % of voters say the prime minister and the chancellor, George Osborne, are the team they would most trust «to manage the economy properly», compared with just 19 % who say they would trust the opposition Labour leader, Ed Miliband and his shadow chancellor, Ed Balls.
A fortnight after Miliband was criticised for omitting passages of his planned conference speech which dealt with the deficit, the 19 % of voters signalling trust in Labour to run the economy equals the party's previous record low on this question, which was recorded in June 2013 (pdf).
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