Nominee
in sentence
207 examples of Nominee in a sentence
But, then again, I wouldn’t have believed a few years ago, or even a few months ago, that the Republican Party in the United States would be choosing between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz as its presidential
nominee.
It should be no surprise that Sanders – substantive, authentic, and uninhibited by the need to placate the party’s various interest groups – is posing such a strong challenge to Hillary Clinton, the long-presumed Democratic
nominee.
Ben Bernanke, the
nominee
to replace Alan Greenspan this month as Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Board, is a highly capable economist who has devoted his professional life to understanding the historical role of central banks and the problems that they have faced.
In fact, if anything, Trump’s election was a confirmation of how partisan US politics has become: 90% of self-identified Republicans voted for Trump; they clearly could not fathom voting for a Democrat, even if many Republicans in surveys registered deep doubts about the party’s
nominee.
This logic appears to have persuaded the Republican Party's presidential
nominee
George W. Bush to support moving to a new strategic paradigm.
And because Donald Trump, the US presidential candidate, appears likely to become the
nominee
of the Grand Old Party of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan, we owe it to ourselves to ask in what sense and for whom he represents a triumph.
The presumptive Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, is at best a lukewarm supporter of freer trade, and of the Trans-Pacific Partnership in particular.
With just a week left before the election, the presidential candidates are crisscrossing the country: whereas Republican
nominee
Donald Trump is struggling to cobble together the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win, Clinton is trying to lock up as large a victory – in both the popular vote and the Electoral College – as possible.
There, leading politicians who choose to call themselves “fiscal conservatives” – such as Paul Ryan, now the Republican Party’s presumptive vice-presidential
nominee
to run alongside presidential candidate Mitt Romney in November’s election – care more about cutting taxes, regardless of the effect on the federal deficit and total outstanding debt.
The Coming Fed FightTILBURG – There is no longer much doubt that Mitt Romney will be the Republican Party’s
nominee
to challenge President Barack Obama in the United States’ presidential election in November.
Nixon then went on to become the party’s presidential
nominee
in 1968, winning out over Republicans who had alienated the party’s activist base by opposing Goldwater.
Reagan went on to become the party’s presidential
nominee
in 1980, winning out over Republicans who had stepped out of line with the party’s activist base.
Twenty-two years ago, when Anita Hill publicly accused then-US Supreme Court
nominee
Clarence Thomas of sexual harassment, it was she, the alleged victim, who was scrutinized and smeared as “a little bit nutty and a little bit slutty.”
In the US presidential election, the choice between Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee, and her Republican counterpart, Donald Trump, reflects an unambiguous battle between “in” and “out.”
So does Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and, perhaps most remarkably, John McCain, the party’s 2008 presidential nominee, whose military service Trump denigrated, saying that McCain returned from Vietnam “a war hero” only “because he was captured,” adding, “I like people who weren’t captured.”
One way to unite party factions is for the
nominee
to select his rival as his running mate.
The Republicans will also have a problem uniting around Trump, who is now the party’s presumptive
nominee.
Consider Donald Trump, the Republican presidential
nominee
in the United States.
All along Trump’s march to becoming the Republican Party’s presidential nominee, partisan commentators spun and re-spun his countless outrageous statements, sometimes with just a tut-tut of disapproval, while other on-air pundits all too often treated his malignant demagoguery as worthy of serious analysis.
The Fed chair appointed early next year, whether Yellen or a new nominee, should consider following the communications trail Trump has blazed.
Trump has singled out China and Mexico, and Sanders’s opposition to the Trans-Pacific Partnership – the proposed trade deal between the US and 11 Pacific Rim countries – has pushed Hillary Clinton, the Democratic Party’s nominee, to adopt a similar stance.
Coming from the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, that probably sounds like political spin.
These accounts should be frozen, despite the difficulty in doing so in a world rife with secret banking and
nominee
accounts that disguise true ownership.
Does it make any difference if Barak Obama or Hillary Clinton is the Democratic
nominee
and does it matter if one of them or the Republican John McCain wins in November?
That is why they have been blocking Obama’s more liberal nominee, Merrick Garland, since March.
The Europeans typically picked their
nominee
behind the scenes, as did the Americans, after only cursory consultation with developing countries.
Donald Trump, the Republican US presidential nominee, portrays Syrian refugees fleeing for their lives as a security threat, despite the thorough screening procedures implemented by the current administration, which has committed to taking 10,000 Syrian refugees by the end of the fiscal year.
Trump’s Emotional Intelligence DeficitCAMBRIDGE – Last month, 50 former national security officials who had served at high levels in Republican administrations from Richard Nixon to George W. Bush published a letter saying they would not vote for their party’s presidential nominee, Donald Trump.
Talks are ongoing between the CPC, the ACN, which is fielding Nuhu Ribadu, the former anti-corruption czar as presidential candidate, and the All Nigeria Peoples Party, a minor party running Ibrahim Shekarau as its nominee, to field a joint candidate.
Ironically, the United States – Europe’s greatest ally and the EU’s largest trading partner – may also end up as a beneficiary, though not if Donald Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, wins the presidential election in November.
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