Sentences with phrase «when talking to voters»

«It's clearly an example of when you talk to voters about issues they care about, you cross party lines on issues like education and funding,» Pellegrino said.
«Sometimes when you talk to voters about Albany they literally shake their heads.

Not exact matches

When CNN's Poppy Harlow recently talked to voters in Ohio, a swing state that's struggling economically, she heard that line «a lot.»
She was of course talking about «The Apprentice,» the NBC reality show hosted by Trump that was a giant hit when it premiered in 2004 and is still very much at the core of his appeal to his voters (though after 14 seasons, he's now off the show for good).
confirmed that «voters are about six points more likely to support Trump when they're taking the poll online then when they're talking to a live interviewer,» said Dropp.
«I feel a strong connection with voters when I talk about how my parents worked hard to lift us to the middle class and instilled hard working values that allowed me to succeed,» Delgado said in a statement.
Flint compared herself to the hugely outnumbered band of Spartans in the film 300 when talking about the onslaught from Ukip - turned - Tory voters that she and others like Gloria de Piero and even Dennis Skinner faced.
«Democrats can use [expanded background checks] to talk to swing voters in a very targeted way, to suburban mothers, and when you are targeting like that you've really got options,» one national Democratic strategist said.
Mr Duncan Smith said voters responded better to «less finger - wagging, more arm around the shoulder» when talking about social issues» — Daily Mail
We've talked repeatedly in these pages about the Democratic advantages when it comes to the actual mechanics of running political campaigns this cycle: they're running more ads, building a strong voter contact program and raising more money (for better or worse) than their Republican counterparts.
We've talked repeatedly in these pages about the Democratic advantages when it comes to the actual mechanics of running political campaigns this cycle: they're running more ads, building a strong voter contact program and raising more money (for better or worse) than their Republican...
The Country's voters - I talk to ordinary folk when out and about - give me the message that they are totally sick and tired of the fact that British society and life is characterised and fundamentally motivated by money and profit.
Plaid's strength in Ynys Mon is its grassroots grounding; a solid core of activists who have been talking to voters in the seat even when they're not died - in - the - wool nationalists.
They rightly talk about reconnecting with voters, but when they also talk about the need for party unity this sounds like continuity and an unwillingness to make hard policy choices.
«Andrew Cuomo appeals to progressive liberals, left - leaning voters, and when he campaigns for their support he is going to be talking about marriage equality, paid family leave, the SAFE (gun regulation) Act, and clean energy standards that could [be] the toughest in the nation.
[Cameron] thinks that people who talk about Europe or «bang on» about Europe as he once put it himself, he thinks that people who talk about immigration and who are worried about the numbers of people coming to Britain, he thinks that people who are concerned about the blot of wind farms all over our landscapes and seascapes, he thinks that people who discuss those things are beyond the pale and I think when he insults us actually what he's doing, he's insulting a very large number of his own voters.
A twofold message: primarily, that Mr. Cruz is out of touch and out of step with New York voters, similar to the attack Mr. Trump levied against him in a January debate, when he talked of how the city «fought and fought and fought» to recover and rebuild after Sept. 11.
This is when the average voter begins to feel victimized and starts talking about how the movie that's going to win shouldn't win.
Just like we voters were lazy according to Gruther, we're equally as lazy when we stick to talking points and don't bother to try for real solutions.
The «stupidity of the American [democrat] voter» that Gruber talked about is what these socialists and leftist control freaks are banking on when it comes to SUV induced climate change.
This is what the stories mean when they talk about using psychographics to micro-target voters.
«Everything doesn't have to be open source,» he told LinuxInsider, «but when we're talking about elections software that requires the confidence of the voters, that's different from whether my car radio is proprietary or open.»
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