Voters
in sentence
3161 examples of Voters in a sentence
They were destroyed, not by themselves or their unpopularity with voters, but by the mass media.
To understand what happened, we need to look beyond politics and into the psychological makeup of Russian
voters.
Such atrophy of critical thinking and unprecedented information naivete make it possible for a politically and financially motivated press to manipulate a good half of the
voters.
But a financial crisis does not give policymakers the time that they once had to explain to
voters
why one step required another.
If a majority of the
voters
in a distinct region of a country favor independence, does that mean that they have a right to secede?
For the past two years, Western Europe's
voters
have been turning rightward.
The decline has been gradual, so it fails to alarm voters, but Swedes certainly notice it when they go abroad.
Many observers expected the 2016 election to be a referendum on cultural values, but
voters
instead sent a clear message about an economy that has excluded them.
Contrary to the implications of the Meltzer-Richard framework, ordinary American
voters
do not seem to be very interested in raising top marginal tax rates or in greater social transfers.
What explains this apparent paradox is these voters’ very low levels of trust in government’s ability to address inequality.
With
voters
heading to the polls in early 2018, genuine progress toward resolving the energy crisis would presumably be good for Pakistan’s political leaders.
The perception among Italian
voters
that the EU has left them alone to deal with the problem of migration from Northern Africa is not particularly surprising.
The explanation is that only candidates winning more than 12.5% of registered
voters
in the first round can participate in the second.
Where the other party is on the right, left-wing parties and
voters
will support Macron.
Where the other party is on the left, it is the right-wing parties and
voters
who will support Macron.
Now French
voters
have rebuffed them.
The Rise of German IsolationismBERLIN – In Germany’s recent regional elections,
voters
delivered a resounding rebuke to Chancellor Angela Merkel’s party, the Christian Democratic Union.
After all, the sense of disenfranchisement among
voters
in the country’s populous north and northeast, as well as among the urban poor, is real.
With opinion polls indicating that only 18% of the electorate was concerned with the Palestinian problem, Labor, the party of Yitzhak Rabin and the Oslo Accords, refrained from even mentioning the peace process, lest it alienate potential
voters.
My advice to
voters
is: take everything you are given !
All that is necessary is for Ukrainian
voters
to bring to power people devoted to this task.
In Europe,
voters
in fiscally responsible countries like Germany and the Netherlands are balking at bailouts of governments, banks, and bondholders.
American
voters
traditionally have favored smaller government and lower taxes than Europeans have favored (or at least tolerated).
Given the already high unemployment levels that exist across much of the Continent, and the already heavy pressures on government finances, European
voters
may be unwilling to accept more adjustments and the hardships they appear to bring, no matter the proposed long-term benefits.
A referendum scheduled for January 9 will give
voters
in the South the opportunity to create their own sovereign state.
A separate but simultaneous vote in the oil-rich province of Abyei will allow
voters
to choose if they want to join the North or South.
We need Bill Clinton’s extraordinary ability to spin a political narrative that enabled
voters
to identify their own interests with his goals.
While Obama was hardly the first American politician to use the Internet, he was the most effective in using new technology to raise money from small donors, energize and coordinate volunteers, and convey his messages directly to
voters.
But sound economics should also have told us that there were bound to be losers as well as winners, with the losers – and potential populist
voters
– often concentrated in the same smaller towns and rural areas that form the backbone of the gilets jaunes movement.
Political leaders, Gehl and Porter continue, “compete on ideology and unrealistic promises, not on action and results,” and “divide
voters
and serve special interests” – all while facing little accountability.
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