Socialist
in sentence
378 examples of Socialist in a sentence
The government’s renewed focus on such a target is thus another indication that the global economic crisis has strengthened those Chinese officials and intellectuals who advocate a
socialist
system.
Every society - communist, socialist, or capitalist - uses the market.
Among the former
socialist
economies of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union, few have caught up with real output levels that prevailed before 1990.
The
socialist
dream has been relegated to the dustbin of history.
In the opinion of Royal’s many opponents among
Socialist
leaders and militants, the dominance of the media in the political process is leading to mediocrity: the qualities required to be elected are becoming nearly incompatible with those needed to govern.
Indeed, on the same basis, Adenauer could be (and was) considered a national
socialist.
The young candidate’s unexpected popular support is rooted within the ruling coalition: his adoptive father is a prominent
Socialist
senator (his biological father, a leader of the revolutionary left in the 1970’s, was killed by Pinochet’s political police).
Such employee ownership, uncritically lumped together with
socialist
nostrums over the years, was once widely dismissed as a nutty, ideological illusion.
If we want market-determined rewards to equate with “just” rewards, we either have to abolish markets – the
socialist
solution – or restructure individual preferences.
That critique was valid for
socialist
societies, too.
Gender-policy in the former
socialist
system may be evaluated in many ways.
Granted,
socialist
era measures had flaws: they were often coercive; elements of "positive" discrimination built into them may have harmed women; the quality and the hidden ideological agenda of child care institutions were dubious.
After five years of an average annual economic growth of 9%, economic claims are strikingly absent, as are all
socialist
and even social demands.
But the Warsaw Pact, the Soviet Union’s “anti-NATO” alliance of
socialist
countries, was dissolved in 1991; communism imploded the same year, with Russia caught ever since in a struggle to build a market economy and define a new global position for itself.
That a
socialist
revolutionary – who first came to power after violently ousting the dictator Anastasio Somoza – should seek legitimacy in a Christian god is odd.
The combination of
socialist
rhetoric and business-friendly corporatism is mostly new to Latin America.
At the core of Magris’ book is the destiny of a group of Italian communists who travel to Yugoslavia after the Second World War to contribute to the construction of a
socialist
society, only to be caught in the conflict between Stalin and Tito.
At the same time, the weakening of the SPD will diminish the
socialist
faction in the European Parliament, where a similar eclipse of two-party rule could be in the offing.
France's
socialist
government continues to believe, despite contrary evidence, that a vast, centralized public sector is compatible with a dynamic market economy.
Nor is there much crisis potential in Western Europe in a shootout between
socialist
governments and a near-deaf central bank.
Since 1989, the firebrand labor leader and radical Lula of the 1960s, now in his fourth attempt at the presidency, has mellowed into "Lula lite," offering fewer
socialist
nostrums and more social-democratic banter.
Elsewhere, small, formerly
socialist
economies – Armenia, Belarus, Moldova, Georgia, Lithuania, and Kosovo – have grown very rapidly since the early 2000’s.
Czechs seem to be reverting to the politics of the interwar period, with most favoring some mix of state control and free enterprise: 61% of all respondents support a "social market" system, versus 28% who support a "free market" system and 11% who prefer the pre-1990
socialist
system.
(Only one out of 110 entrepreneurs surveyed reported that he preferred the old
socialist
ways.)
In his 2016 Democratic primary campaign, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a self-proclaimed socialist, condemned America’s rising inequality and actually came closer to being elected president than many had expected.
He repudiated its traditional
socialist
ideology, rewriting the party's constitution to remove all references to state ownership.
“If only we could have a more charismatic candidate than Hollande,” comes the refrain from the
Socialist
camp.
Long before the arrival of Muslim guest workers in the 1960’s and 1970’s Dutch society was in a sense ‘multicultural’ in that it was already organised into Protestant, Catholic, liberal and
socialist
“pillars,” each with its own schools, hospitals, TV stations, papers and political parties.
Has the Left strayed so far from its
socialist
roots that there is nothing left of them?
Not only would registered
Socialist
voters be able to participate; so would all voters who agree to sign a moral charter attesting to the values of the left and were willing to donate a nominal sum of one euro to the party.
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