Voters
in sentence
3161 examples of Voters in a sentence
Restoring these voters’ confidence in existing institutions, and reintegrating them into the political mainstream, will not be easy.
American
voters
would not elect a president who gave no more weight to their interests than to the interests of people living in other countries.
In 2015, PiS won its usual base, plus an additional 5-10% of more moderate
voters.
Those who care about democracy in Poland, Hungary, and elsewhere in Europe and beyond should acknowledge that many
voters
are buying into the nationalist right’s vision of a social state that advances national priorities, cares for the poor, and supports families.
In fact, the ability of
voters
to remove incumbent governments has proven to be a strength, not a weakness.
These
voters
generally do not reject the benefits of technologies that result from modern science, but they do reject the evidence and advice of scientists regarding public policies.
In the United States, presidential candidates appeal to anxious
voters
by blaming the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) for the erosion of the country’s manufacturing base.
The real hurdle is getting this message across to politicians and
voters.
The "social rights" in Part II are seen as compensating
voters
on the left for, say, enshrining "competition" as a fundamental objective of the Union in Part I.
But German
voters
did not appreciate her honesty.
Small wonder that a huge majority of the population – and even a slight majority of CDU
voters
– prefer a strengthening of the welfare state to a more market-oriented system.
Indeed, after Lafontaine’s “The Left” party merged with eastern Germany’s ex-communists, it secured a firm base among voters, changing the political equilibrium in the country.
In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel – Europe’s foremost politician – has attracted voters’ ire, owing to her principled policy to welcome refugees.
In the UK, where older, alienated working- and middle-class
voters
(mainly in England) pushed through Brexit, the new prime minister, Theresa May, is fighting to hold her party together.
To be sure, slow economic growth in the years since the 2008 global financial crisis has sapped voters’ enthusiasm for traditional parties fighting over the middle ground.
But how do we deal with the reality that so many
voters
prefer fiction to fact?
But in representative democracies like the UK (and nearly all other democracies today),
voters
choose leaders to weigh up complex arguments and make tradeoffs.
Voters
in the Turkish Cypriot north rejected the party of their leader, Mehmet Ali Talat, who has been meeting almost weekly for eight months with his Greek Cypriot counterpart, Demetris Christofias, to work out the terms of a settlement to reunify the island.
Voters
are feeling the pain of economic isolation, made worse by the global downturn.
Although the majority of China's exports now come from private companies that receive virtually no loans from state banks , American candidates in previous elections routinely sought to curry favor with working class
voters
by vowing to protect US jobs against China's supposedly unfair business practices.
After all, most US
voters
can be trusted not to learn how other countries, let alone countries in the Far East, really work.
There is no hiding these facts from American
voters
anymore.
The Brexit campaign, led by Johnson, warned British
voters
that their country would soon be “swamped” by Turkish immigrants, even though Turkey is nowhere close to joining the EU.
Though Clinton has plenty of weaknesses – voters, especially young people, do not trust her, and she may face legal repercussions for dealing with highly classified information using a private email server when she was Secretary of State – the nasty infighting among Republicans may give her a big advantage in November.
While a lot of attention has been paid to headline-grabbing issues like immigration and national security, American
voters
are highly concerned about economic issues – concerns that the leading candidates would address in very different ways.
Clinton has also inched toward Sanders’s position on financial-system reform, as his attacks on her for taking large donations and speaking fees from Wall Street have clearly struck a chord among young
voters.
To support those objectives, Le Pen promises to increase French defense spending to 3% of GDP (the NATO target is 2%), while making it clear to
voters
that none of that spending would support stabilization missions in Africa.
Politicians who come to power by winning a free and fair election are accountable primarily to
voters.
Having never held elected office, Macron created a new party centered on himself, with support from both center-left and center-right
voters.
The problem is that these parties seem outdated to many younger voters, regardless of their leaders’ age.
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