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alliance and pro
For Hitler, his speech illustrated the quid pro quo of an Anglo-German alliance, namely British acceptance of German mastery of continental Europe in exchange for German acceptance of British mastery over the seas.
On September 12, 2006, Zero1-Max joined 12 other pro wrestling companies and joined the Global Professional Wrestling Alliance ( GPWA ), an alliance that will keep the various promotions involved from stepping on each other toes and instead fostering an environment of cooperation rather than competition.
Gottfried called for a new more comprehensive fusionist alliance based upon “ similar ” Meyer-like principles that could now include a second generation Old Right that “ no longer extols an active government even in principle ,” a coalition that would only exclude the nationalist, pro big government neoconservatives.

alliance and Conservatives
The European Conservatives and Reformists group, typified by centre-right parties such as the British Conservative Party, along with the European United Left – Nordic Green Left which is an alliance of the left-wing parties in the European Parliament, is soft eurosceptic.
Parliament was dissolved, and in the ensuing general election, the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists agreed to a defensive alliance.
The Liberal Unionists managed to stay strong in the south-west of England, the West Midlands ( the centre of Chamberlain's power base ), and especially in Scotland, where the Liberal Unionists were initially the more dominant group in their alliance with the Scottish Conservatives against the Liberals.
They now numbered only 23 MPs ( or 25 according to other calculations ) in a combined Unionist alliance of just 157 in the new House of Commons-though in Birmingham the Liberal Unionist and Conservatives were triumphant.
After 1886 it was the Conservatives who enjoyed this position and they received a huge boost with their electoral and political alliance with a party of disaffected Liberals.
Though he had joined the Liberal Unionists late on, he was more determined to maintain their separate status in the alliance with the Conservatives, perhaps hoping and wishing that he would be able to refashion the combination under his own leadership at a later date.
In 1864, George Brown, leader of the Clear Grits in Canada West ( Ontario ), proposed an alliance with the Conservatives of Macdonald and Cartier.
Owing to the prominence of his father and the alliance between the anti-Home Rule Liberal Unionists and Conservatives, Chamberlain was returned unopposed on 30 March, and at the first sitting of the new session he walked up the floor of the house flanked by his father and his uncle Richard.
He has the distinction of having served as leader of three political parties ( in succession-as Leader of the Liberal Party in the House of Commons, 1875 – 1880 ; of the Liberal Unionist Party ( 1886 – 1903 ); and of the Unionists in the House of Lords ( 1902 – 1903 ), though the Conservatives and Liberal Unionists operated in close alliance from 1892 – 1903 and would eventually merge in 1912 ).
The first two Irish Home Rule Bills were put before the House of Commons of the United Kingdom in 1886 and 1893, but they were bitterly resisted by an alliance of Liberal Unionists and British Conservatives.
The most recent elections were in May 2011, following which the council is made up of 10 members of the Independents for Frome alliance ( IfF ), 4 Liberal Democrats, and three Conservatives.
Although the Social Democrats are currently speaking of the possibility of a broad centrist coalition including the Conservatives, the Conservatives appear to remain committed to a right-of-centre alliance, working most closely with the liberal Venstre and somewhat less closely with the Danish People's Party.
** Ulster Conservatives and Unionists – New Force ( Conservatives and Unionists )-electoral alliance between the UUP and the Conservatives in Northern Ireland, the Northern Ireland arm of the Conservative Party
News of this alliance was praised by several Conservatives, including Iain Dale and ConservativeHome.
It was won by the Conservatives led by Lord Salisbury who formed an alliance with the Liberal Unionist Party and had a large majority over the Liberals, led by Lord Rosebery.
Unable to work with Chamberlain, Goschen left the Liberal Unionists and joined the Conservatives in 1893-one obvious sign of his change of allegiance within the Unionist alliance was when he joined the Carlton Club in 1893.
In 1882, Norquay forged a new alliance with the province's Conservatives.
Their plans were thwarted by Premier John Norquay, who also supported the Conservatives at the federal level but included both Liberals and Conservatives in his governing alliance.
Norquay himself formed a reluctant alliance with the provincial Conservatives in 1882, in the face of strong opposition from Thomas Greenway's Provincial Rights Party.
The ALN and Conservatives formed an alliance, the Union Nationale, to contest this election, and after the election merged to formed the Union Nationale as a fully-fledged party, which soon became a dominant political force.

alliance and Peelites
Historically, the term referred to the broad liberal political alliance of the nineteenth century, formed by Whigs, Peelites, and radicals.

alliance and "),
The Vipava Valley, through which Alboin led the Lombards into ItalyAs a precautionary move Alboin strengthened his alliance with the Avars, signing what Paul calls a foedus perpetuum (" perpetual treaty ") and what is referred to in the 9th-century Historia Langobardorum codicis Gothani as a pactum et foedus amicitiae (" pact and treaty of friendship "), adding that the treaty was put down on paper.
This informal alliance, known as the First Triumvirate (" rule of three men "), was cemented by the marriage of Pompey to Caesar's daughter Julia.
* 43 BC – The Second Triumvirate alliance of Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus (" Octavian ", later " Caesar Augustus "), Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, and Mark Antony is formed.
To support the RS / 6000 and RS / 6000 SP2 product lines in 1996, IBM had its own design team implement a single-chip version of POWER2, the P2SC (" POWER2 Super Chip "), outside the Apple / IBM / Motorola alliance in IBM's most advanced and dense CMOS-6S process.
He gradually drifted further and further from his alliance with Caesar, eventually marrying the daughter of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius Cornelianus Scipio Nasica, one of the boni (" Good Men "), an archconservative faction of the Senate steadfastly opposed to Caesar.
" Francis John Byrne suggested that the Echtra was written by a poet at the court of Diarmait mac Maíl na mBó, an 11th-century descendant of Brandub, and was written to cement an alliance between Diarmait and the Scots king Máel Coluim mac Donnchada (" Malcolm III "), who claimed to be a descendant of Áedán.
Humiliated by the cession of Silesia, Austria worked to secure an alliance with France and Russia ( the " Diplomatic Revolution "), while Prussia drifted into Great Britain's camp forming the Anglo-Prussian Alliance.
British historian of fascism Stanley G. Payne, who noted that the Legion benefited from the 400 % increase in university enrolment (" proportionately more than anywhere else in Europe "), has described the Captain and his network of disciples as " a revolutionary alliance of students and poor peasants ", which centered on the " new underemployed intelligentsia prone to radical nationalism ".
They were part of the Popular Front, an alliance of liberals and leftists, including the Communist Party USA ( whose slogan, under their leader Earl Browder, was " Communism is twentieth century Americanism "), who had vowed to put aside their differences in order to fight fascism and promote racial and religious inclusiveness and workers ' rights.
Gabrielle Lavallée, wrote an autobiographic book about the sect titled L ' alliance de la brebis (" Alliance of the Sheep "), ISBN 2-920176-85-4
He opposed Hincks's alliance with the Clear Grit faction ( which he described as " socialist and anticatholic "), and turned down Hincks's offer to become assistant Provincial Secretary.
In June 1943, at a time when troops were suffering major defeats on the Eastern Front, the PCdR proposed that all parties form a Blocul Naţional Democrat (" National Democratic Bloc "), in order to arrange for Romania to withdraw from its alliance with Nazi Germany.
They called such an alliance with a commoner a mésalliance (" misalliance, marriage beneath one's station "), and the practice was often called déchoir (" to fall from rank ").
Her name appears on a list of Theorodokoi (" welcomers of sacred ambassadors "), in the recently established Epirote alliance.
Other proposed alternatives to the market economy — participatory planning as proposed in the theory of participatory economics (" Parecon "), an " artificial market " as proposed by advocates of Inclusive Democracy, and the idea of substituting a gift economy for a commodity exchange — have not yet been tried on a large scale in the modern industrialized world, though alternative organizational methods have been implemented successfully during short periods of time: the early stages of the Russian Revolution before it was taken over by the Bolsheviks, and the Spanish Revolution before it was crushed by the alliance of liberals and communists.
Each of the three kings of the alliance in turn assumed the title " huetlatoani " (" Elder Speaker ", often translated as " Emperor "), which placed them in a de jure position above the rulers of other city-states (" tlatoani ").

alliance and Radicals
* GreenLeft of the Netherlands: a political party that began 1989 as an electoral alliance comprising the Communist Party of the Netherlands, Pacifist Socialist Party and the Christian left parties Evangelical People's Party and Political Party of Radicals.
Den Uyl's Labour Party won the 1973 elections in alliance with the progressive liberal Democrats 66 and radical Christian Political Party of Radicals, but failed to achieve a majority in parliament.
Similarly, when the Spanish Civil War broke out, Blum was forced to adopt a policy of neutrality rather than assist his ideological fellows, the Spanish Left-leaning Republicans, for fear of splitting his alliance with the centrist Radicals, or even precipitating a religious civil war in France.
Radicals and Socialist condemned the alliance, and brought down Giolitti's coalition in 1914.
Although this campaign represented the mainstream of the national UCR leadership, substantial elements backed other candidates, notably the Radicales K. Cobos was elected Vice President as the running mate of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner through the Plural Consensus alliance, and several Radicals were elected to Congress as part of the Kirchners ' Front for Victory faction.
Following the fall of the second Cartel des gauches, which united Radicals with the SFIO ( the PCF maintaining a " support without participation " position ), the Radical-Socialist Party had turned toward an alliance with the right, in particular with the Democratic Republican Alliance ( ARD ).
In 2005 SDI entered in alliance with the Italian Radicals, a libertarian party, forming the Rose in the Fist ( RnP ) electoral list.
In the 2006 general election the RnP list won only 2. 6 % of the vote, much less than the combination of the two parties before the alliance ( Radicals alone took 2. 3 % in the 2004 European Parliament election ), as the Radicals lost voters in their strongholds in the North to Forza Italia, while the Socialists lost ground in the South to the The Olive Tree parties ( see electoral results of the Rose in the Fist ).
By his alliance with the Liberals under Nicotera in 1891, and by his understanding with the Radicals under Cavallotti in 1894-1898 ; by abandoning his Conservative colleague, General Ricotti, to whom he owed the premiership in 1896 ; and by his vacillating action after his fall from power, he divided and demoralized a constitutional party which, with more sincerity and less reliance upon political cleverness, he might have welded into a solid parliamentary organization.
In November 2005 the Italian Radicals established an alliance with the Italian Democratic Socialists ( SDI ) and became de facto members of The Union coalition for the general election of 2006.
This decision led to a split by those Radicals who were more keen on an alliance with the centre-right: this group, led by Benedetto Della Vedova, launched the Liberal Reformers and joined the House of Freedoms, eventually merging into Berlusconi's The People of Freedom party.
The 5th Congress accepted anyway his proposal of General Motion ( co-signed with Bernardini ), that committed the Italian Radicals to relaunch the Rose in the Fist alliance and to press the Prodi II Cabinet for embark new libertarian proposals on economy and civil rights.
The Rose in the Fist was officially founded on September 25, 2005, when the Italian Radicals, a historical libertarian, laicist and socially progressive party of Italy, officially declared an alliance with the Italian Democratic Socialists in the form of a confederation, with explicit references to the politics of Tony Blair, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero and Loris Fortuna, an Italian politician in the 1970s who became famous for his laicist proposals, and is considered the father of the law on divorce.
However, in alliance with the Radicals the Democratic party managed to ensure that the new constitution would have the centralized form that, at the time, Pribićević supported.
With this appearance the hopes of the Christian Radicals within the KVP that a progressive alliance with the Labour Party would be formed, were shattered.
At that time the Liberals governed in alliance with the Radicals, the Democrats and eventually with the Reform Socialists.

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