Parties
in sentence
3799 examples of Parties in a sentence
Among them:Elections: these are confined to an Islamic discourse, and all candidates and
parties
must secure the imprimatur of the highest Islamic authority in the land before they can be listed on a ballot.
More important, although the AKP may be more willing than other Turkish
parties
to accommodate Kurdish concerns, it is unlikely to accept demands for devolution of powers to regional governments or any other decentralization program that strengthens the territorial autonomy of Kurdish areas.
While numerically possible, there are too many ideological differences between the HDP, with its goal of Kurdish autonomy, and the other two parties’ insistence on centralization.
Given how many shark species have been proposed, some have begun referring to the Convention’s Conference of the
Parties
as the “shark COP.”
In 2008, the government, despite fierce opposition from other political parties, changed the Law of Associations and allowed religious-minority associations to purchase real estate (and to receive contributions, regardless of size, from abroad).
In other words, the
parties
are encouraged – but not required – to submit increasingly stringent revisions of their so-called Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs), based on their own judgment.
The Paris agreement is a sprawling, rolling, overlapping set of national commitments brought about by a broad conglomeration of
parties
and stakeholders.
Second, the US should establish a credible enforcement mechanism to ensure that the
parties
comply with their respective obligations, particularly an immediate freeze on Israeli settlement activity throughout the occupied Palestinian territory.
The recently revived Central European Free Trade Agreement (CEFTA) is meant to be the main regional engine for trade and business generally, and will adhere both to WTO rules and the parties’ obligations towards the EU.
As we have seen, unemployment has been an important factor in the rise of populist
parties
that are now threatening social cohesion, democracy, and the rule of law in Europe.
This spring, Trump let it be known that he wanted the special counsel running that investigation, Robert Mueller, a former FBI director who is highly respected by both parties, to be fired.
The parliament currently is considering 15 bills along these lines, all of which have the full support of the main opposition
parties.
On the other hand, President Bill Clinton’s decisive action with regard to Kosovo in 1999 saved a country, just as NATO’s intervention in Bosnia four years earlier brought the
parties
to the table and stopped the killing.
He can probably count on the leadership of both
parties
in Congress here.
Third, the President and both
parties
in Congress are committed to balancing the budget in 2002.
The issues are hypersensitive, but President Clinton and both
parties
in Congress are under great pressure to agree on long-run solutions.
Indeed, nowadays political
parties
dangle the carrot of reservations to ever more castes, and even promise to extend the policy to admissions into elite educational institutions and the private sector.
Some countries, like Germany, have laws that make it possible to ban political
parties
whose programs are recognizably anti-democratic.
In the past, the law has been used to curb
parties
of both the extreme left and the extreme right.
However, it is not always evident when people and
parties
stand for election what they are going to do if they win.
Bringing in hedge funds as third
parties
will simply increase the cost.
Aside from the Annapolis talks, which seem to be going nowhere because of the parties’ irreconcilable differences over the core issues, all the other peace efforts are more tactical than strategic.
In none of them do the conditions yet exist for an immediate leap from war to peace, nor do the
parties
themselves expect that to happen.
The attempt by opposition
parties
to impeach South Korea's President Roh Moo Hyun on the flimsiest of excuses;Taiwan President Chen Shui-bian's inability to pass legislation through a parliament controlled by the opposition Kuomintang;Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo's stalemated first term and the logjam over the fiscal reforms needed to prevent a predicted Argentine-style meltdown early in her second: each bears testimony to democratic paralysis in Asia.
The problem in Asia often arises from something the French call "cohabitation" - an awkward arrangement by which a directly elected president must co-exist with a parliament controlled by a rival party or
parties.
Incompetent leaders blame legislatures for their failures; legislators blame presidents from rival
parties.
Neither Singapore nor Malaysia, where ruling
parties
have long dominated the parliaments, has a political culture as healthy as in Taiwan or South Korea.
The EU has started legal proceedings against Poland, and it is calling on the Polish government to work with opposition
parties
to reform the court.
There is no reason why some countries should not join both China’s AIIB and America’s TPP, or why overlapping memberships should not expand over time – or, indeed, why the hostesses should not eventually attend each other’s
parties.
Putin knows this, which is why the Kremlin has been reaching out to Euroskeptic
parties
and groups from both extremes of the political spectrum.
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