Parties
in sentence
3799 examples of Parties in a sentence
Most interesting was the split in both
parties.
Both the Democratic and Republican
parties
are practitioners of populism, American-style: they repeatedly cut taxes, increase the public debt (which doubled from 35% of GDP in 2007 to 74% of GDP at the end of 2015), and generally blame somebody else for the slow US growth that arises from low saving and investment rates.
Premier Orban's semi-successful efforts to unify the right under the banner of FIDESZ are unique among Eastern Europe's fractured and fractious rightist
parties.
Since Communism's fall, center right
parties
in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia have suffered from disunity and a lack of vision.
Some problems faced by Central Europe's right are similar to those the political right faces elsewhere in Europe, where social democratic
parties
expropriated many formerly liberal ideas to seize a monopoly of the political center.
In Central Europe this effect has been amplified by the fact that, regardless of ideological leanings, rulings
parties
have had to privatize the economy and, under pressure from the European Union, introduce reform measures that would, in a classical Western system, usually be undertaken by the political right.
Leftist
parties
in various Central European countries, indeed, have often turned out to be more successful in reforming because they, paradoxically, have greater legitimacy in this respect.
While both the Polish and Hungarian communist
parties
experienced internal liberalization that allowed relatively large semi-official zones of activity outside communist control, Czechoslovakia after the Soviet-led invasion of 1968 became a rigid neo-Stalinist regime.
When the communist regimes collapsed in 1989, the communist
parties
of Poland and Hungary transformed themselves into credible democratic-left
parties
that became formidable opponents of the newly emerging political right.
Various rightist
parties
failed to decide whether the modus operandi on the political right should be traditional Western ideologies or a Hungarian brand of nationalist conservatism and populism.
Christian-democratic parties, associated with the Catholic Church, and the liberals have been to some extent marginalized.
The confusion has been made complete by the existence of relatively strong nationalist and populist
parties
that use the numerous Polish farmers as their electoral base.
Article VI of the NPT obliges
parties
to pursue “in good faith” negotiations to disarm, but the nuclear-weapons states that have ratified the treaty do not interpret this as a prohibition on their possessing a nuclear arsenal.
Meanwhile, the three main
parties
– the National Action Party (PAN), the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), and the Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD) – united in order to keep newcomers out of the electoral arena.
They evicted the Federal Electoral Institute (IFE) directors, who organized last year’s presidential vote; strengthened the ban on independent candidates; made it practically impossible to create new parties; and established a series of arbitrary, quasi-Stalinist restrictions on the content of campaign advertising, speeches, and exchanges among candidates.
The one positive feature of the reforms – a scheme aimed at ensuring equal radio and television airtime for
parties
during electoral campaigns – was tainted by serious legislative omissions.
While the IFE undoubtedly committed several serious public-relations mistakes during last year’s election, it remains one of Mexico’s most respected institutions, with credibility ratings that are regularly double or triple those of Congress and the three political
parties.
More fundamentally, Germany has benefited from the extraordinary culture of consensus that it developed in the post-World War II period, with social partners and political
parties
showing a remarkable ability to compromise.
So far, traditional center-right and center-left pro-European
parties
have dominated it, with more extreme
parties
never really pulling the institution far from its center of gravity.
Since the last European elections, however, the continent’s politics have undergone a profound transformation, with 41 new
parties
winning seats in national parliaments since 2014.
The same fragmentation is set also to weaken the European Commission, with commissioners from at least four countries – the Czech Republic, Greece, Italy, and Poland – set to be appointed within a year by Euroskeptic governing
parties.
To simplify matters, it will be important to keep the number of negotiating
parties
to a minimum, perhaps by forming country groupings.
Even if May remains at the helm of the next government, she will have to negotiate a Brexit agreement that will have little chance of getting through the House of Commons, as all other
parties
(including even Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, on which her next government would have to rely) want a relatively soft Brexit.
For just 300 rupees more, the reporters could print out – and start using – copies of anyone’s unique identity cards.Years of massive data breaches in the US (affecting companies such as Target, Yahoo, LinkedIn, and Intel, as well as the federal government’s Office of Personnel Management), and reports of companies such as Facebook and Google handing over personal data to developers and other third parties, have led to little concrete change.
Years of massive data breaches in the US (affecting companies such as Target, Yahoo, LinkedIn, and Intel, as well as the federal government’s Office of Personnel Management), and reports of companies such as Facebook and Google handing over personal data to developers and other third parties, have led to little concrete change.
The king was compelled to hand power back to the political parties, while a peace agreement emerged that ended the conflict, bringing the Maoists into an interim parliament and government and promising elections to a Constituent Assembly.
The Maoist and non-Maoist
parties
have asked the UN to maintain a political presence while the issue of the former combatants is resolved, and we stand ready to support peace-building, recovery, and long-term development.
But by linking both
parties
to his very unpopular self, Yeltsin damaged both.
Indeed, the SPS electorate is growing faster than that of other
parties.
The Kurdish and Arab Shia religious
parties
sought a very weak central government in Baghdad, the latter because they feared a return to Sunni minority rule.
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