Democratic
in sentence
5167 examples of Democratic in a sentence
Likewise, the economic transfers conducted through the Structural Funds and the Cohesion Fund involved sovereign,
democratic
countries.
The Battle for Churchill’s BustNEW YORK – The election of the United States’ next president is surely the most important contest in the
democratic
world.
They believed that the world would be safe from future Hitlers if it were, at least for some time, under the enlightened leadership of the
democratic
English-speaking peoples.
On the
Democratic
side, Hillary Clinton’s campaign materials and the party platform point to a detailed plan to defend Dodd-Frank and to go further in terms of pressing the largest firms to become less complex and, if necessary, smaller.
If Clinton wins, she will draw strong support from Congressional Democrats – including her rival for the
Democratic
nomination, Bernie Sanders, and his fellow senator, Elizabeth Warren – when she pushes in this direction.
This is more likely under a Bush administration with better open-market credentials and a more assertive foreign policy than any
Democratic
alternative.
In the realm of politics,
democratic
experimentation is confined to the local level, permitted only insofar as it strengthens CPC rule.
But it was also defined by adherence to Deng’s “four cardinal principles”: the socialist road; the people’s
democratic
dictatorship; the leadership of the CPC; and Marxism, Leninism, and Mao Zedong Thought.
It is shameful that a country known for its
democratic
values and its unparalleled commitment to human freedom should stoop so low as to kill innocent men, women, and children.
Instead of moving towards peace and democracy, the situation in Iraq remains so dangerous that Paul Bremer, the American occupation leader, is using instability as his rationale for avoiding
democratic
elections this year.
Now, everyone agrees, the most important task - beyond creating a
democratic
state and restoring security - is reconstructing the economy.
The dream of Iraq's American invaders was to create a stable, prosperous, and
democratic
Middle East.
The interdependence of all states – large or small, weak or powerful,
democratic
or authoritarian – has become the organizing principle of today’s international security system.
India, which is both poor and democratic, is a happy exception to this rule.
In Cambodia, China’s Yunnan Province, the Lao People’s
Democratic
Republic (Lao PDR), Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam, more people are free of malaria’s deadly menace than ever before.
From Twitter trolls sowing discord among voters, to the Kremlin’s alleged support for extremist groups, Russian propaganda is undermining trust in
democratic
governance.
Meanwhile, the relative moderates who have remained committed to contesting official policies by
democratic
means are sidelined and mocked.
So selling access seems to be a perversion of
democratic
principles.
In a part of the world where democracy is gradually advancing, Japan can point to firm
democratic
traditions and institutions.
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras recently adopted similar rhetoric, declaring that “all progressive, democratic, and pro-European forces have a duty to stand side by side on the same side of history.”
In the midterm elections, which Trump himself described as a referendum on his presidency, the
Democratic
candidates for both the House and Senate vastly outpolled their Republican opponents.
Summing up votes by party for the three recent election cycles (2014, 2016, and 2018),
Democratic
Senate candidates outpolled Republican candidates by roughly 120 million to 100 million.
Wyoming, for example, elects two Republican senators to represent its nearly 580,000 residents, while California’s more than 39 million residents elect two
Democratic
senators.
These developments reflect a
democratic
advance in both countries.
The US and Indian examples suggest that, in
democratic
societies, groups that promote social discrimination grow politically weaker over time.
(Democratic
South Africa shows how difficult it is to make a dent in economic apartheid).
Democratic
pressure changed our mandate.
Yet, scholars such as Ralph Dahrendorf and Joseph Weiler suggest that a European constitution does not make sense because a
democratic
constitution presupposes a paramount common identity that is absent in an EU where individual national loyalties still prevail.
For them, Europe may be too big to forge truly
democratic
institutions.
Democratic
governments are too complicated for that.
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