| 例文 | 共起表現 |
「progressives」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 101件
| In 1911, Johnson and the | Progressives added initiative, referendum, and recall to |
| d basically by former Autonomists Democrats | Progressives, along with former Socialists and of the Re |
| Many | progressives also support the Green Party or local parti |
| The | Progressives and Liberals of Manitoba formed an alliance |
| Gosling and Crooks were elected as | Progressives and took the Progressive whip. |
| overnment", a coalition between the Tories, | Progressives and Independents. |
| attention and the patronage of like-minded | progressives and members of the WCTU. |
| leading member of the Autonomists Democrats | Progressives, and Amato Maquignaz. |
| There were now enough Democrats, | Progressives, and independents in the Vermont House to o |
| Miller lost the support of several notable | progressives and left-leaning organizations that normall |
| seats were contested in the election with 6 | Progressives and 3 independents standing in addition to |
| th this bill has earned him the ire of many | progressives and made him a topic in the national news m |
| he worked to keep peace among South Dakota | Progressives and sought to enhance control of government |
| the tariff split the Republican Party into | Progressives and Old Guards and led the split party to l |
| Prior to his work with | progressives and Democrats, Frisch worked in Republican |
| Ayala passed over from the Moderates to the | Progressives, and this political maneuver had its effect |
| y conservative constituency" and "targeting | progressives and 'change agents,' especially in educatio |
| Given that Conservatives, Democratic | Progressives, and Socialists were unable to gain tractio |
| large conference of religious liberals and | progressives, and on June 5, 2006, Rev. Hardies was show |
| In his inaugural address, Olson pointed at | progressives and the Left for his inspiration, citing th |
| awford, became involved with South Dakota's | Progressives; and, Byrne represented his district as sta |
| nds of its spectrum are transhumanists (the | progressives) and, at the other end, the bio-Luddites or |
| of these tensions between conservatives and | progressives are discussed in George Marsden's history o |
| In the United States, liberals and | progressives are often conflated, and in general are the |
| Progressives are in agreement on an international scale | |
| Progressives argue for elimination of the sentencing dis | |
| es seeing him as an unsurpassable peak, the | progressives as a new beginning in music. |
| Hampel then helped to lead the | Progressives back into the Republican Party fold after t |
| 50 Etudes Faciles & | Progressives Cahier 2 |
| d-1950s, the strong leftist policies of the | Progressives combined with the Red Scare led to their pu |
| vernment programme, which the Agrarians and | Progressives could support. |
| mers from themselves, transformed them into | progressives, created an industry and bequeathed the end |
| Progressives do not agree with any of the above statemen | |
| beral activism, with Democrats, Greens, and | progressives dominating city politics. |
| Progressives early in the 20th century had argued that i | |
| he council, the Municipal Reformers and the | Progressives effectively formed a coalition. |
| was inclined to view UFA politicians, like | Progressives elsewhere, as "Liberals in a hurry" who wer |
| lt brought into the Democratic fold western | progressives, ethnic minorities, rural farmers, and inte |
| majority against what they denounced as the | Progressives' extravagance and wastefulness. |
| nata no. 5 in A major (from the Six sonates | progressives for piano and violin obbligato, J 99-104). |
| In 1932, the | Progressives formed an alliance with the Manitoba Libera |
| The | Progressives formed the largest party with 27 seats, fol |
| In 1932, the | Progressives formed an alliance with the provincial Libe |
| In 1932, the governing | Progressives formed an electoral alliance with the Liber |
| Before the 1932 election, the governing | Progressives formed an electoral alliance with the Manit |
| Along with other | progressives, future U.S. President Woodrow Wilson contr |
| tern state of Abia, was a member of the All | Progressives Grand Alliance. |
| The | Progressives had lost a large part of the popular vote i |
| d to dislike Fry's music, whereas political | progressives highly enjoyed it. |
| Murphy aligns himself with | progressives in the House. |
| d is the present party caucus leader of the | Progressives in the House. |
| vincial Liberals merged with John Bracken's | Progressives in 1932, Campbell led a group of dissident, |
| Their opponents, the radical | progressives in Weimar, were represented by Franz Liszt |
| ected toward helping to elect Democrats and | progressives in Virginia and nationally. |
| cery was a hub in the network of Cincinnati | progressives including members from other prominent soci |
| Liberal-Progressive at a time when Manitoba | Progressives, including the Manitoba Progressive Party p |
| y was merged with the Autonomists Democrats | Progressives into the Autonomist Federation. |
| When King sought to absorb | Progressives into his Liberal Party to form a stronger c |
| the Republican party in 1910 even when many | progressives left the party in favor of West, a Democrat |
| The WLAA was supported by | Progressives like Theodore Roosevelt, and was strongest |
| epayers, Independent Labour councillors and | Progressives made net gains of 22. |
| After the | Progressives merged with the Republicans, he ran in the |
| ce: right versus left, conservatives versus | progressives, nationalists versus internationalists". |
| veness for the right-wing, arguing that the | progressives now dominant in French culture and media ca |
| Significant representation from the | Progressives of Wisconsin and Farmer-Labor Party of Minn |
| The | Progressives offered the Republicans a deal, but were tu |
| t creating a 'nerve center' that could book | progressives on TV news shows". |
| Progressives or Reformists, as they call themselves, ass | |
| d Bishop went on to join Dunnery in his New | Progressives project. |
| The | Progressives proposed stronger government regulation and |
| The | Progressives ran only five candidates in 1990, the minim |
| Labour and the | Progressives remained in power, with support in confiden |
| Robert Clouse writes about this event “the | Progressives showed considerable agreement in what they |
| While many | progressives stayed within the party framework, they mai |
| ber Spencer Bachus and its members, several | progressives such as bloggers Jane Hamsher of Firedoglak |
| American | progressives tend to support international economics: th |
| Later groups included the | Progressives, the Cooperative Commonwealth Federation, t |
| Nation convention in Las Vegas Murphy urged | progressives to take a long view as to their agenda, sug |
| icted, in a group which ranged from genuine | progressives to pro-Nazi agitators, in a sedition prosec |
| h she finds it a natural issue for straight | progressives to support: she says "we haven't gotten on |
| ernor Hiram Johnson, who himself would lead | Progressives to control the Legislature and Governor's O |
| ive Republican circles, fueling desires for | Progressives to reform the political nomination process |
| ubted whether the Tories could convince the | Progressives to support a Conservative government, were |
| ly support the national Liberal Party while | progressives usually support the New Democratic Party, w |
| The | Progressives were the municipal wing of the Liberal Part |
| The | Progressives were closely aligned with the Liberals, and |
| The | Progressives were initially the third-largest party in t |
| ime of the 1942 gubernatorial election, the | Progressives were no longer on the California ballot. |
| ilar ideology, were both considered radical | progressives, were part of the Chicago Jewish Left who w |
| A third party, the | Progressives, which had nominated candidates for the fir |
| lican troubles were extended when older era | progressives who had supported Theodore Roosevelt failed |
| After 1922, it became dominated by the | Progressives, who later became the Liberal-Progressives |
| In particular, the bill greatly angered | Progressives, who were beginning to stop supporting Pres |
| egan his tenure by punishing 13 self-styled | Progressives, who supported Robert LaFollette instead of |
| d a cooler reception from the then-dominant | Progressives, who disagreed with his calls for reducing |
| ll lead to rationing of health care, and by | progressives who believe the board will, as one writer p |
| er became chair of The Network of Spiritual | Progressives whose mission was to "challenge the materia |
| jority, as well as They Only Look Dead: Why | Progressives Will Dominate the Next Political Era (1996) |
| who "inspired a generation of reform-minded | progressives with ahead-of-his-time thinking on environm |
| The | Progressives won the election, and McKenzie served as a |
| A coalition of Liberals and | Progressives won this election, and Wiebe served as a ba |
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