Election
in sentence
5411 examples of Election in a sentence
Voters should be able to check that their votes are counted correctly, without breaking
election
secrecy, which is so very important.
How do we make an
election
system completely verifiable while keeping the votes absolutely secret?
And after the close of the election, you can check that your vote was counted by comparing your receipt to the vote on the website.
And remember, the vote is encrypted from the moment you leave the voting booth, so if an
election
official wants to find out how you voted, they will not be able to.
But the
election
magic doesn't stop there.
Instead, we want to make the whole process so transparent that news media and international observers and anyone who wants to can download all the
election
data and do the count themselves.
They can check that the announced result of the
election
is the correct one.
In this digital age where fake news can influence
election
results, this is very concerning.
Also, Netflix as its main distributor advertised it before the fun
election
we just had by sending out a mass e-mail to its entire roster to see the film.
I expected this movie was originally supposed to show before the
election.
The computer glitch/twist in this movie was embarrassingly stupid, and by the end you don't care who wins the
election.
There are a few cheap Hollywood political shots as well (really pathetic and oh so typical for an
election
year).
this movie, while it could be considered an alright attempt at comedy, is not what the previews made it out to be. the first half is comprised of typical robin Williams stand up material, though he really didn't do many voices; he was always great at the one liners and hitting the punchlines... somewhere during the
election
there is a problem with the computer program that is used in the
election.
A few weeks later, Dobbs decides to run for President and low and behold wins the
election.
the performances are very good especially by jeff goldblum as the head of the
election
company.
Our
election
process is unclothed and dismal.
I am sick of this
election
process already,anyone else?
Witness Dan Rather's attempts to assassinate W's character on the eve of the 2004 election, or the constant drumbeat that the 2000
election
was stolen, although constitutional scholars continue to scoff at such irresponsible drivel.
The incident comes during 1904 as Theodore Roosevelt runs for
election
to the presidency in his own right.
In times of election, the American President Theodore Roosevelt (Brian Keith) agrees with the proposal.
So much of what we see and hear in regards to any
election
is such a joke.
Another good teen comedy that I recommend which was made recently is
ELECTION
but it's more of a satire on school and politics.
Now living in America especially during this
election
I see some very deceiving things but I have to say these previews were towards the top of list.
Interposed with Moretti's political ravings are the events leading up to the birth of his son, and subsequent home movie shots of him with the baby and later the infant Pietro (the film drags us through several years and more than one
election
period).
Some of these are dealt with in the truly excellent and far superior sequel,
Election
2: Harmony is a Virtue, but it's still a dependably enthralling thriller about a contested Triad
election
that bypasses the usual shootouts and explosions (though not the violence) in favour of constantly shifting alliances that can turn in the time it takes to make a phone call.
My former Cambridge contemporary Simon Heffer, today a writer and journalist, has put forward the theory that, just as British film-makers in the eighties were often critical of what they called "Thatcher's Britain", the Ealing comedies were intended as satires on "Attlee's Britain", the Britain which had come into being after the Labour victory in the 1945 general
election.
Though, in the case of Mexico, the
election
was clearly stolen by Calderon.
Every two years an
election
is held to decide on a new leader, and at first it seems a toss up between Big D (Tony Leung Ka Fai, or as I know him, "The Other Tony Leung") and Lok (Simon Yam, who was Judge in Full Contact!).
The film here proposes a vision of 2036 with a world government that is absolutely dictatorial in the fact that there is no election, no parliament, no really democratic institution, only peace imposed by military conquest, and the government is dominated by one man or at the most one man and his few councilors.
A campaign based on no comment, "I'll take it under advisement," and "Maybe yes, but then again, maybe no," is the nearly perfect way to win an
election.
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