Sentences with phrase «with snp»

As soon as those who have recently contacted Dr. Leigh Anne Clark and is sending in their samples please be sure to send in your samples by May 15, 2009... Texas A&M University (TAMU) will have completed collecting blood samples from senior (8 years old or older) normal (dogs that DO NOT have EPI) German Shepherd Dogs (GSDs) for Phase III of the EPI Research Study with SNP technology in an effort to identify the complex genetic markers to EPI.
The top of the PATIENCE has «run thin» with the SNP thanks to their poor performance at rolling out superfast broadband, despite Westminster handing Nicola Sturgeon
An employer, for instance, might refuse to give a high - stress job to an individual with an SNP profile unique to heart attack victims — even if that profile raises the risk of a heart attack only slightly.
By tallying which SNPs co-occur with symptoms, researchers can determine how much increased risk is associated with each SNP.
[73][c] She pledged that, if elected, she would work with the SNP government when she felt it was in the best interest of Scotland to do so, but said Labour would also be an effective opposition, holding the government to account when necessary.
With the SNP winning a historic 56 of the 59 Scottish constituencies in 2015, the party had little room for improvement.
Ed Miliband: «I don't want to be inconvenient but we're not going to have a coalition with the SNP» (The Agenda, ITV, 9 April 2015).
Labour has now refused to rule out striking a deal with the SNP more than 100 times, analysis by the Tories has revealed.
Caroline Flint: «There is not going to be a coalition with the SNP and there are not going to be any SNP ministers» (LBC, 3 April 2015,).
Baroness Prosser: confirmed Labour would work with the SNP «on a very different basis» to a coalition (Daily Politics, 30 March 2015).
A former director at the data firm says it had meetings with the SNP - but the party calls them «cowboys».
Ed Miliband: «We are not going to have a coalition with the SNP.
Caroline Flint: «We do not want, we do not need and we do not plan to have any coalition with the SNP» (Andrew Marr Show, 8 March 2015).
Michael Fallon accused Labour of using the nuclear deterrent as a «bargaining chip» with the SNP, which would vote to scrap it.
It felt like the start of a possible shift in the centre of political gravity, with the SNP perhaps even finding itself outside the consensus in the way that Labour has been in recent weeks.
Ed Miliband: «Labour will not go into coalition government with the SNP.
Asked if Labour would do a deal with the SNP in the event of a hung parliament, Mr Miliband said: «There isn't going to be a coalition.»
Mr Miliband yesterday attempted to play down the prospect of Labour striking a deal with the SNP, saying there would not be no formal «agreement».
I have no qualms whatsoever about working with the SNP» (The Courier, 5 January 2015,).
Secondly, and more importantly, it would be electoral suicide for Labour to enter into any kind of agreement with the SNP.
Michael Fallon refuses to apologise for saying Labour would use the nuclear deterrent as a «bargaining chip» with the SNP as part of a post-election deal.
Lucy Powell: «We said very clearly that we are not going to go into coalition with the SNP» (Murnaghan, Sky News, 29 March 2015,).
Michael Fallon has refused to apologise for saying Labour would use the nuclear deterrent as a «bargaining chip» with the SNP as part of a post-election deal.
However, what's most worrying for Labour, even compared with two weeks earlier, is the drop in Labour support in the regional ballot — Labour has gone from +7 % to -2 % compared with the SNP, now — 10 %.
Lack of Lib Dem MPs and the difficulty for unionist parties in finding coalition agreement with the SNP may make minority government the only option.
Former director Brittany Kaiser told MPs that Cambridge Analytica had tried to win work with the SNP.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told MailOnline there was «one simple reason» why Mr Miliband won't rule out a deal with the SNP — because he needs the party's support to get into Number 10.
While Labour lost seats in 2007 in Scotland at least they still ended up broadly level with the SNP.
The Conservatives have announced a manifesto commitment to build four new nuclear missile - armed submarines, with Mr Fallon accusing Labour of using the nuclear deterrent as a «bargaining chip» with the SNP, which would vote to scrap it.
If the Tories fail to win the election with their SNP fear - mongering, they have surely done enough to undermine any Labour - SNP arrangement in English voters» eyes.
Whereas the same pollsters put Labour 10 points ahead of the SNP in November and another pollster had Labour 16 points ahead last month, they are now neck and neck with the SNP just ahead.
With the SNP now in a position of power and the potential for Scotland to vote on independence really the Tories in England should be re-considering their position on the UK and Unionism.
One explanation, advanced by Scotland on Sunday, is that the SNP have turned the regional ballot into a contest for First Minister, with the SNP's Alex Salmond preferred over Labour's Iain Gray by half the electorate and only a third preferring Gray.
But frankly the stakes have got much higher because of what's happening in Scotland with the SNP potentially wiping out Labour.
BlackRock, the world's largest fund manager, warned that Mr Miliband will create a «constitutional crisis» if he leads Labour into a power - sharing agreement with the SNP, which would leave Britain like a «pre-crisis Spain».
Even the seating arrangements in the Commons have changed, with the SNP occupying the front benches on the opposition side of the House and the Liberal Democrats being pushed into the far corner of the chamber.
The Tory press really had very little influence, Ed said he wouldn't do deals with SNP, and there wasn't a far factor, people already made up their mind to vote Tory before that,
«There will be no deals with the SNP,» he said.
Will you all forget the idea of a coalition with the SNP.
Ed Miliband has confirmed that he is ruling out working with the SNP and Plaid Cymru in a hung parliament.
Labour leader Ed Miliband has said he would not form a Labour government - if it meant making a deal with the SNP.
In Wales, contrasting with the SNP's large increases, Plaid Cymru lags behind somewhat.
Labour retained their dominance of the council, with the SNP, who won the popular vote, forming the second largest party on the council.
As one disillusioned shadow cabinet adviser put it to Uncut, when describing the way the disparate coterie around Ed Miliband viewed a deal with the SNP,
These weren't with the SNP, so who were they meeting and did anyone hire them?
According to a Daily Record poll from January, the largest proportion of Scottish voters want to see Labour govern with SNP support after the general election.
This is a bigger possibility than it might seem as Plaid Cymru could negotiate en bloc with the SNP and Greens.
As private debate within Labour circles intensifies on the terms of a potential deal with the SNP, Uncut has learned that some of Ed Miliband's closest advisers are plotting to sack Ed Balls in a bid to secure Ed Miliband's tenure in Number 10, in the event of a hung parliament where Labour is not the largest party.
Ed Miliband confirms that he is ruling out working with the SNP and Plaid Cymru in a hung parliament.
Day after day, interview after interview, he refuses to rule out categorically, once and for all, doing any deal with the SNP.
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