Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Union Labour" ¶ 0
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

provincial and election
Although most South African parties announced their candidate list for provincial premierships in the 2009 election, the ANC did not.
In the 2009 provincial election the NDP formed a majority government, the first in the region.
In the 1997 federal election, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's Liberals endured a bitter defeat to the PCs and NDP in many ridings as a result of unpopular cuts to unemployment benefits for seasonal workers, as well as closures of several Canadian Forces Bases, the refusal to honour a promise to rescind the Goods and Services Tax, cutbacks to provincial equalization payments, health care, post-secondary education and regional transportation infrastructure such as airports, fishing harbours, seaports, and railways.
A general election in June 1999 produced the first freely elected national, provincial, and regional parliaments in over forty years.
Almost three months later, in the election of September 18, 1867, the Anti-Confederation Party, won 18 out of 19 federal seats, and 36 out of 38 seats in the provincial legislature.
A regional peace-monitoring force and a UN observer mission monitors the government and provincial leaders who have established an interim administration and are working toward complete surrender of weapons, the election of a provincial government and an eventual referendum on independence.
Elected to the Canadian House of Commons in 1911, Bennett returned to the provincial scene to again lead the Alberta Tories in the 1913 provincial election, but kept his federal seat in Ottawa when his Tories failed to take power in the province ; such practice was later forbidden.
Just prior to the election, King carelessly remarked that he " would not give a five-cent piece " to Tory provincial governments for unemployment relief.
King's promise not to impose conscription contributed to the defeat of Maurice Duplessis's Union Nationale Quebec provincial government in 1939 and Liberals're-election in the 1940 election.
In the following figure one can see the election results of the provincial election of 2003, 2007 and 2011 per province.
The Alberta Alliance continued to grow following the federal party's merger, and the provincial party fielded a full slate of candidates for the 2004 provincial election, on November 22, 2004, and won one seat in the Legislature.
Opposition parties boycotted provincial elections in 2000, and the 2001 presidential election produced more controversy.
In conjunction with the provincial election in 2007, the province of Ontario voted on a mixed-member proportional representation electoral system and British Columbia held two consecutive referendums on BC-STV in 2005 and 2009.
Gilles Duceppe announced on 11 May 2007 that he would run in the Parti Québécois leadership race to replace André Boisclair, who resigned on 8 May 2007, after the poor performance in the March 2007 Quebec provincial election and internal dissent forced him to step down.
From then to the subsequent election, the Bloc continued to denounce the federal government's interventions in what the Bloc saw as exclusively provincial jurisdictions.
Gilles Duceppe helped Pauline Marois campaign in the 2008 Quebec provincial election, she did not win and the Liberals gained a slight majority.
Aberhart mixed his own interpretation of scripture and prophecy with the monetary reform theories of social credit to create a movement that swept across Alberta, winning the provincial election of 1935 in a landslide.
Mulroney enthusiastically embraced political organization, and assisted the local PC candidate in his successful 1956 Nova Scotia provincial election campaign ; the PCs, led provincially by Robert Stanfield, swept to a surprise victory.
He was unsuccessful in his first foray into politics as an official constituency candidate for the provincial Progressive Conservatives in the 1967 provincial election.
Clark missed being elected to the Alberta Legislative Assembly in the 1971 provincial election.

provincial and 1922
In 1920, the Department of Mindanao and Sulu was officially dissolved and Zamboanga became an independent province and in 1922, elections were held for the first elected provincial officials of Zamboanga.
Accordingly, in this initial period of the Weimar Republic, in 1922 the Protestant Church in Germany formed the German Evangelical Church Confederation of 28 regional ( or provincial ) churches (), with their regional boundaries more or less delineated by those of the federal states.
More trouble with the legislature struck Greenfield in August 1922, during a special session called for the purpose of passing enabling legislation for a provincial wheat board.
In both of these capacities, he was faced with a provincial deficit, which reached an accumulated total of $ 4 million between his taking office and the end of the 1922 fiscal year.
By 1922, the government had lost a total of $ 6. 7 million on the endeavor, with an additional $ 5 million expected to follow that year — 37 % of the estimated 1922 provincial budget.
In 1922 – 29, the provincial wings of the WPC / CPC also affiliated with the Canadian Labour Party, another expression of the CPC's " united front " strategy.
All provinces follow suit by 1922 except Quebec, which does not give women the right to vote in provincial elections until 1940.
* United Farmers of Manitoba, a farmers ' organization and political party which won the 1922 provincial election and became the Progressive Party of Manitoba
Between 1922 and 1924, the provincial affiliations of the Workers Party of Canada ( the legal face of the Communist Party of Canada ) also joined the CLP.
The United Farmers of Manitoba ( UFM ) won the provincial election of 1922 but did not have a leader, so they asked Bracken to head the party and become Premier of Manitoba.
Had the UFM run a united campaign, it probably would have won the 1922 provincial election.
He became a chief assistant in the Native Lands Commission in 1922, and a decade later he was stationed in Lomaloma, and also on the island of Lakeba in the Lau Islands, as a district and provincial commissioner.
In 1922, he became the head of the local Agitation and Propaganda Department, and two years later, an agent of the provincial Financial Department of Moscow.
Between 1922 and 1926 the town was a provincial center and the districts of Gelibolu, Eceabat, Keşan ( Enez became part of Keşan before 1953 ) and Şarköy.
He stepped down as provincial Conservative leader just before the 1922 provincial election, and was replaced by Taylor.
He was elected for Turtle Mountain in the 1922 provincial election, and was re-elected in 1927.
The Workers Party ran three candidates in Winnipeg for Manitoba's 1922 provincial election: Mathew Popovitch, Arthur Henderson and William Hammond.
He was elected for Portage La Prairie in the provincial election of 1920, and was chosen as party leader in a second attempt on April 5, 1922, defeating John Thomas Haig.
Its provincial organizations joined the CLP in various stages between 1922 and 1924, and the leaders of the Communist Party believed that they would eventually be able to shift CLP policy to reflect their own policies.
Puttee ran for the Manitoba legislature in the provincial election of 1922 in the riding of Winnipeg -- not as a Labour candidate, but as a Progressive, aligned with the United Farmers of Manitoba.
This concept further evolved during the 1920s, when in the 1922 Board of Commerce case, it was stated that POGG could be invoked in times of war and famine, to allow Parliament to intervene in matters of provincial jurisdiction.
The federation operated officially through the representative German Evangelical Church Confederation ( Deutscher Evangelischer Kirchenbund ( DEKB )); the League was itself established in 1922 by the Church General Assembly ( Kirchentag ), which was composed of the members of the various provincial churches.

1.996 seconds.