Presidential
in sentence
2603 examples of Presidential in a sentence
This summer, during their bilateral summit in Helsinki, Trump even sided with Putin, a former KGB operative, over US security officials on the issue of Russia’s now-documented interference in the 2016 US
presidential
election.
Yanukovych was the man who sought to falsify the result of the
presidential
election of 2004, inciting the Orange Revolution.
There were many more candidates in 1997, three years before the 2000
presidential
election, a veritable parade of names representing different sections of the nomenklatura and political spectrum: Chernomyrdin, Yavlinskiy, Lebed, Luzhkov, Nemtsov, Zhirinovskiy.
Nor is a
presidential
candidate likely to be found among the regional governors, or among the leaders of the "old" or "new" parties.
He will most likely nominate himself during the 2008
presidential
election campaign, even if the Kremlin nominates another successor, although naturally he will try to ensure that he is anointed.
If the next
presidential
election in Russia were held this year, and if no decision were made to banish him from Russians' TV screens, there can be little doubt that Dmitriy Rogozin would win.
In Mexico and the Philippines, each
presidential
term lasts six years.
Such suspicion probably contributed to the victory of the political neophyte Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton in the 2016 US
presidential
election.
The “New” Trump’s Lopsided Foreign PolicyWASHINGTON, DC – After a series of foreign-policy U-turns, there is now talk of a “new” Donald Trump who is far more inclined to use military power than the Trump we saw during the 2016 US
presidential
campaign.
A Normative Approach to Preventing CyberwarfareCAMBRIDGE – A series of episodes in recent years – including Russia’s cyber interventions to skew the United States’ 2016
presidential
election toward Donald Trump, the anonymous cyber-attacks that disrupted Ukraine’s electricity system in 2015, and the “Stuxnet” virus that destroyed a thousand Iranian centrifuges – has fueled growing concern about conflict in cyberspace.
The US is preoccupied with the Islamic State and other terrorist threats abroad, and now with the
presidential
campaign at home.
If Europe conveys the impression that its friendship with America depends on who wins the US
presidential
elections, it is likely to freeze the transatlantic relationship for years.
In functioning democracies, the political drama usually remains confined to elections and referenda – such as the British vote to leave the European Union and the US
presidential
election, won by the populist outsider Donald Trump.
Consider Donald Trump, the Republican
presidential
nominee in the United States.
The purpose of Lula’s visit was to support his personally appointed
presidential
candidate, Dilma Rousseff, who was formerly his chief of staff and the main architect of the government’s investment program, designed in 2007 to accelerate growth.
As the battle for Aleppo rages on, so, too, does the US
presidential
election campaign that will determine his successor.
Although the US
presidential
election will be consequential, it has also become clear that peace cannot be delivered by the US and Russia on their own.
Meanwhile, most major social media platforms continued to feature whatever
presidential
nonsense interested or amused their users, like analyzing “covfefe.”
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.
A study by the public-interest group Free Press of political advertisements during the 2012
presidential
election found that stations in the six sizable television markets examined undertook virtually no reporting on the claims made in the political ads they aired.
In Denver, for example, local stations took in $6.5 million to air nearly 5,000 ads paid for by the 2012
presidential
candidates’ political action committees (ostensibly independent fund-raising groups that shield their donors’ identity).
But this year, America’s media industry seems more inclined to bank its profits than bolster its reporting on a
presidential
campaign that even its senior executives acknowledge has become a circus.
Now the global spotlight turns to France and its looming
presidential
election.
Globalization Is the Only AnswerWASHINGTON, DC – The Brexit referendum in the United Kingdom and the
presidential
race in the United States have shown, among other things, that public distrust of global integration is on the rise.
Indeed, Khamenei seems convinced that neither the United States nor Israel will attack its nuclear facilities – at least not before the US
presidential
election in November.
Recent editorials in Kayhan – the hardline Iranian newspaper that serves as a mouthpiece for the Supreme Leader – indicate that Khamenei is looking forward to the US
presidential
election.
Achieving such a consensus in the context of an American
presidential
election will be no small feat.
If Rouhani ever held the key to the door of prosperity, as he was fond of saying in his 2013
presidential
campaign, he failed to locate the keyhole in time.
As I have argued elsewhere, American
presidential
candidate Donald Trump owes his rise to many of the same factors that are driving Le Pen’s growing popularity.
Since Ortega reclaimed the presidency in 2007 (he had left office in 1990 after losing an election to Violeta Barrios de Chamorro, and lost
presidential
elections in 1996 and 2001), his regime has steadily slid toward authoritarianism.
Back
Next
Related words
Election
Campaign
Elections
Candidate
Candidates
Political
Which
Would
After
Democratic
Their
About
Country
First
Victory
During
Power
Could
Years
Party