Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
A coalitionist Progressive, he had joined the Nationalist Party by 1922.
This brought a reply from Salvidge, still a convinced coalitionist:
He was never an ideological coalitionist and never fell under L.G.'s spell, for all their good personal relations.
"The advent of a convinced coalitionist to the leadership of the largest coalition party was indeed the beginning of the end for coalition.
Morris retired in 1965 and was succeeded by Sir Gordon Chalk, who was a very staunch coalitionist.
Michalchuk first campaigned for the Manitoba legislature in the 1941 provincial election, as an Independent Coalitionist.
Venables first campaigned for the Manitoba legislature in the 1949 provincial election, as a Progressive Conservative coalitionist.
Turnout was 77.1% as opposed to 68.2% at the previous general election, which had been a straight fight between Conservative Coalitionist and Liberal candidates.
His political position in 1854 was ambiguous, and he held some hopes of replacing Hincks as a coalitionist Premier when the overall results proved inconclusive.
Shewman ran as an independent candidate in Morris, and defeated coalitionist John C. Dryden by 153 votes.
Puerto Rico: Santiago Iglesias (Coalitionist)
So there you have it: William Hague, the centrist, the coalitionist, the internationalist, the admirer of Tony Blair, the diplomat.
As a coalitionist, Bennett was re-elected in 1945, but vacated the seat in 1948 in order to run, unsuccessfully, as Progressive Conservative candidate in the Yale federal by-election of that year.
While soon being approached by a number of local Liberals and urged to fight as an official Coalitionist, he wavered and the coalition coupon was bestowed on his Unionist opponent, John Taylor.
The National Union also reacted fiercely to the attacks on Younger by coalitionist ministers, most of all Birkenhead's description of him as "the cabin boy" and Lloyd George's of "a second-class brewer".
But by 1921 Austen was an ideological coalitionist for both personal and tactical reasons: he had fallen under the personal sway of Lloyd George, he was influenced by Birkenhead and Horne, and he had no doubt that a coalition alone would be able to contain Labour.