Sentences with phrase «women in the party felt»

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg has admitted that women in the party felt «let down» by the way officials handled complaints against Lord Rennard.
But his re-emergence as an effective and active force as a Lib Dem peer — he scuppered the boundary review — perhaps meant some women in the party felt the dog had woken from its slumbers.
Many of these dialogue choices that determine the overall route your story takes also change how the women in the party feel towards you.

Not exact matches

Some of the elected officials present at the Equality Day rally — Public Advocate Letitia James and State Senator Liz Krueger — have been vocal in their support of the Working Families Party, though neither chimed in when Brewer expressed her feelings on the Women's Equality Party.
Indeed, the tweet to which Walker responded was, itself, misogynistic — but we would ask the Women's Equality Party to take into account the vast power inequality in this exchange and the fact that Walker felt it appropriate to share her «sex bot» comment with 33,000 followers.
Notwithstanding failures to predict rising immigration on its watch, and Gordon Brown's disastrous «bigoted woman» gaffe, the Labour party is not solely to blame for the effects of the multiculturalism that makes many Britons feel like strangers in their own land.
Still Feeling The Burn: In his remarks, Assemblyman Crespo defended the party's record in supporting countless women for judgeships («I'm surprised that men haven't sued the party claiming discrimation») and public officIn his remarks, Assemblyman Crespo defended the party's record in supporting countless women for judgeships («I'm surprised that men haven't sued the party claiming discrimation») and public officin supporting countless women for judgeships («I'm surprised that men haven't sued the party claiming discrimation») and public office.
He described how a female councillor said women who dress provocatively «are asking for it» and claimed that older people in the party tolerated sexual harassment because they felt they «had to put up with it».
While it's totally appropriate in England for women to wear them during the wedding ceremony, if it makes you feel more comfortable just remove it inside the chapel and add it back on when it's time to party.
It's been an odd year for powerful women in the US - with the very first female major party Presidential nominee in Hillary Clinton, 2016 feels like it could be a watershed moment.
A fun - loving pretty boy who loves to party, both in public and private;) I love to please the woman (or man) that I'm with, and I love nothing more than making my partner feel ten feet tall:) I like hanging out one on one, relaxing and talking, reading a good book or playing a favorite video...
SUBSTANCE USE - A man drinks window cleaner and passes out in a park, a woman smokes marijuana at home as well as in a car while riding and while driving and in a restaurant where other men and women are also smoking marijuana, a woman offers marijuana to a friend who declines, several house party scenes show people injecting themselves with drugs, we see prescription bottles and rubber tubing stretched around a person's arm (injections occur off screen), a man drinks from a bottle of codeine cough syrup, goes to the drug store, purchases another bottle and drinks part of it while walking home and later a female neighbor drinks the rest of it in his home, and a man places a marijuana cigarette in his mouth to hide it from a policeman and says it made him feel sick like a bomb was strapped to his chest.
A fiercely intelligent woman in a world of swaggering men who leer at her like she's an unattended purse, Graham still feels like one of the girls — she cowers before executive editor Ben Bradlee (Tom Hanks) as though he's her boss, and maneuvers between the gender - segregated rooms of a cocktail party with an ambidextrousness that alienates her from both sides of the house.
I feel like everyone in the world has read this book by now (or seen the movie), but in case a refresher is needed, this is the story of three women: Virginia Woolf as she's writing Mrs. Dalloway; Laura Brown, a smart, depressed housewife who's reading Mrs. Dalloway; and contemporary Clarissa who's throwing a party for a friend who is dying of AIDs.
She then threw in a dollop of spirituality for good measure and became a touchstone for millions of women who'd always felt unwelcome at the financial party.
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