Candidates
in sentence
1335 examples of Candidates in a sentence
Our focus now is on completing clinical trials for two promising new antimalarial drug
candidates.
This gross mistreatment of the Palestinians in Gaza was escalated dramatically by Israel, with United States backing, after political
candidates
representing Hamas won a majority of seats in the Palestinian Authority parliament in 2006.
Forty-one of the 43 victorious Hamas
candidates
who lived in the West Bank are now imprisoned by Israel, plus an additional ten who assumed positions in the short-lived coalition cabinet.
Outsider
candidates
often bash China during their election campaigns, but quickly realize once in office that cooperation is in their own interest.
In hindsight, benchmarks of the
candidates'
ability to manage these risks should have supplemented the existing Maastricht criteria for adopting the euro.
Moreover, capital inflows to the EU
candidates
are likely to accelerate as accession draws near, adding to inflationary pressures.
At the end of 1997, the share of dollar-denominated debt in total external indebtedness among the leading EU
candidates
ranged from 46% in Poland to 78% in the Czech Republic.
Entering the eurozone could drive up the
candidates'
external debt-service costs--thus adding to the fiscal burden--if the euro remains weaker in dollar terms than their national currencies.
A DIT framework would affirm the commitment to disinflation and price stability as the euro
candidates
struggle with pro-inflationary factors.
This would bolster the credibility of monetary policy, enabling the
candidates
to lower their inflation and exchange-rate risk premiums.
Once a satisfactory level of price stability is achieved, euro
candidates
might apply a more flexible variant of inflation targeting that also targets exchange-rate stability .
They center on the social policies that would accompany a broadly similar set of economic measures; and, here, the differences between the
candidates
are consequential.
And, with headwinds from Europe and a synchronized global slowdown, the
candidates
will have no choice but to pursue, at least initially, similar economic policies to restore dynamic job creation and financial stability.
Until now, Australian politics has upheld a long and civilized tradition of support across party lines for those seen as being credible
candidates
for international positions.
Thus far, we are not hearing much about it from the Republican
candidates.
Perhaps Europeans could vote for members of the European Commission, with
candidates
campaigning in other countries, rather than just in their own.
If those countries have been egoistic in the past fourteen years, why should
candidates
believe they would not misuse new decision-making mechanisms to the detriment of small countries--hence the opposition of some candidate countries to creating the post of a European president.
They created direct primary elections, empowering citizens to choose which
candidates
to nominate, thereby undermining the power of party “machines.”
During the May-June quasi-panic that followed Bernanke’s statement, it was countries with large external deficits (making them the most obvious
candidates
for real depreciation) – for example, India, South Africa, and Turkey – that suffered the sharpest selloffs.
Political
candidates
must engage them, occasionally pander to them, and tailor their message to them, all of which steers leaders and parties toward moderate positions.
One would prefer to see Mexico’s presidential
candidates
offer platforms with ideas and proposals that respond to the challenges facing the country, but this substance deficit occurs everywhere now, almost all the time.
Neither of the presidential
candidates
has indicated either a plan or an inclination to reverse the projected rise in the national debt.
All countries, for example, should adopt quotas requiring that no more than half of parties’ legislative
candidates
in each district be of the same sex.
Under this system, voters can only vote for political parties as a whole, and thus have no influence on the order in which
candidates
are elected.
Open-list systems, where voters have influence on the order in which a party’s
candidates
are elected, provide no such guarantee.
One way to enforce the rules may be to say that parties that do not comply with the legislation in a district should not be able to run
candidates
there.
The basic problem for Anglosphere advocates is that none of the
candidates
for membership of this new club are likely to have the slightest interest – geostrategic, economic or political – in joining it.
Egyptian diplomats are thus excellent
candidates
to exert pressure for compromise.
When
candidates
repeatedly call Muslims dangerous, for example, no one should be surprised by a surge in anti-Muslim hate crimes, as has occurred in the wake of both the Brexit vote and Trump’s victory.
Ten days later, Cardoso did the same with the four leading
candidates.
Back
Next
Related words
Presidential
Their
Which
Other
Would
Political
Election
Democratic
Voters
Parties
Elections
Should
Campaign
There
Party
Between
Support
While
Three
Among