Sentences with phrase «voters as at today»

We have 74 million registered voters as at today (February 1), but we are already inching close to the million mark for new registrants, registered in the last three weeks and we are going to continue with the registration as provided by the Electoral Act until close to the election.»

Not exact matches

Today, Pew offered an interactive flowchart of how GOP voters arrived at Trump, as well as further analysis of its data.
Sen. Neil Breslin, who, as I mentioned earlier today, is facing an active primary challenger in Luke Martland, has been striving to put some distance between himself and the dysfunction of his Democratic conference at a time when voter disgust with Albany — and incumbents in general — is running very high.
At the core of his narrative of spiritual redemption are his acts of violence as an angry young man — stabbing, rock throwing, brick hurling and baseball bat beating — that preceded Carson's sudden transformation into the composed figure who stands before voters today.
But progressive voters seem to care less today about the strength of their party, or even about a particular checklist of issues, than about their confidence in a candidate's sincerity — as Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a career independent, proved with his electrifying and magnetic charge at the Democratic nomination last year.
The video comes as the governor travels to Syracuse today at noon to pitch voters on his tax cap, as well as an ethics bill and the legalization of gay marriage.
The returning officer at the polling station, Gershon Kudzordzi said 19 out of the expected 171 registered voters had cast their ballot as at 2.30 pm at the polling station in today's exercise.
Whereas the country rated the coalition as doing a good job, with net positive approval of +23 in June 2010, today its score stands at — 16, with 33 % of voters seeing it as doing well and 49 % rating it as performing badly.
The 2016 presidential election season gets underway in earnest today as voters cast their first ballots at the Iowa caucuses.
If «stunned» is the adjective we keep hearing about the reaction to the news, there's good reason for that, right at the core of the UK's political elite: in an interview with former Prime Minister Tony Blair, CNN's Wolf Blitzer today has heard one of the most telling confessions of how things went this way, as Blair talks of the Labour Party failing to mobilize its voters by explaining to them, «This was not a protest vote.»
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