Presidential
in sentence
2603 examples of Presidential in a sentence
What this new middle-class “Muslim Street” wants is an inclusive political system – a demand heard not only in Egypt, but also in Iran, as Hassan Rouhani’s victory in the country’s
presidential
election in June attests.
And backing for the far-right National Front, whose leader, Marine Le Pen, lost to Macron in the
presidential
election, fell to a mere 13.2% in the first round.
Rather than continue fighting (as in the US) after a heated
presidential
election, Mexico’s major political parties appear poised to cooperate on a number of critical structural reforms that could energize economic growth for decades to come.
The next act in America’s political drama, following the 2018 congressional midterm election, could be marked by a kind of reckoning, with the 2020
presidential
campaign accompanied by civic breakdown and the escalation of violent confrontation that has lingered beneath the surface for years.
And in the United States, Republican
presidential
candidates are promising more.
The Left Must Vote for MacronLONDON – In 2002, Jacques Chirac, the French right’s leader, faced Jean-Marie Le Pen, the leader of the racist National Front, in the second round of France’s
presidential
election.
ATLANTA – Ever since the 2016 US
presidential
election, with its revelations about Russian meddling, European officials have been on the lookout for similar attacks.
They have launched cyberattacks against US
presidential
campaigns, expatriate Tibetan movements, and Uighur activists.
And although he has not yet coupled these programs with China’s clandestine forces to launch the kind of audacious attack that roiled the 2016
presidential
election, he clearly is establishing the means to do so.
This raises an obvious question: If Russia could roil a US
presidential
election without such intimate business relationships, what will China be able to do in the years ahead?
But, while Obama’s emphasis on institutions is particularly striking when compared with other major US
presidential
addresses, the starkest contrast is with British Prime Minister David Cameron’s speech about Europe, delivered two days later.
And he vowed repeatedly during the
presidential
campaign to withdraw from the Paris climate agreement.
And it is reflected in the current
presidential
campaign – most notably, in remarkable support for Senator Bernie Sanders’s leftist bid for the Democratic nomination.
While the US
presidential
election is not particularly focused on policy at the moment, the campaign will soon end, at which point people will govern and policies will be adopted.
Consider Democratic
presidential
nominee Hillary Clinton’s proposal – which Vice President Joe Biden has endorsed – to use the capital gains tax to encourage shareowners to hold on to their stock for a longer time.
We will pursue our goals regardless of where we find may ourselves - in parliament (supporting the government or in opposition), in the
presidential
palace, or even in prison for our beliefs (as I found myself not many weeks ago).
As a
presidential
candidate, Obama spoke of the need for “sustained, direct, and aggressive diplomacy” to deal with North Korea.
But now that she is on the
presidential
campaign trail, she has changed her tune.
Given all of this, one hopes that opposition from political figures like Clinton amounts to naught – an entirely plausible outcome, in Clinton’s case, because the TPP should be enacted before the
presidential
election in November 2016.
When it comes to Ukraine, Russia has made it clear that it hopes to obstruct the May
presidential
election, which Western leaders hope will cement change in Ukraine, while turning the country’s constitutional negotiations into the opening act in the establishment of a new European order.
That dark ambition has gained urgency, because the country is due to hold its first democratic
presidential
election since the transition began in 2011.
Rajapaksa’s unexpected defeat by a coalition of Sri Lanka’s democrats and Tamil political parties in last January’s
presidential
election – a result that he then sought to annul – should have ended both his career and the politics of race-baiting.
Presidential
assassinations do not necessarily lead to civil wars, but in Burundi, a large-scale massacre of Tutsi civilians by Hutu immediately followed the coup attempt.
Coming immediately after the upcoming French
presidential
election, the event offers an ideal opportunity for Sarkozy or his successor to engage in a symbolic act of repentance.
Political shocks included Brexit and Donald Trump’s victory in the United States’
presidential
election – both unforeseen by the media or political elite.
Donald the DestroyerWASHINGTON, DC – Donald Trump, the Republican Party’s presumptive nominee to contest the United States’
presidential
election in November, is clearly not a standard Republican.
Without question, Trump is the most anti-immigrant
presidential
candidate the US has seen in modern times.
For example, Republican
presidential
candidate Mitt Romney likes to castigate President Barack Obama for “apologizing for America’s international power,” for daring to suggest that the US is not “the greatest country on earth,” and for being “pessimistic.”
Milosevic would be squeezed into a ceremonial
presidential
role.
Brazilian Democracy on the BrinkRIO DE JANEIRO – With Brazil’s
presidential
and state elections just days away, the country’s citizens are frustrated, disillusioned, and angry.
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