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republicans English

Examples republicans examples

How do I use republicans in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Democrats and Republicans worked together.
Republicans were furious.
Republicans were defeated in many states.
The Republicans want to repeal Obamacare.

Movie subtitles

You mean like the Republicans?
There is some talk of the Republicans wanting to blow the bridges, but.
When the Nationalists came, they lined up the Republicans against the wall.
Who knows the way through to the Republicans?
The Republicans do.
I mean, they're all Republicans or Democrats.
The Democrats have their donkey, the Republicans have their elephant.
These pigs Republicans not scare me.
If you drop these pigs Republicans back and deep pockets.
Her brother is fighting for the Republicans!
After all, didn't most ordinary Nazis join the Party. in about the same way Americans become Republicans or Democrats?
How could you compare Republicans and Democrats to the Nazi Party?
We're republicans.
They say they're republicans, but you know them.
Don't you know we have a new governor who eats Republicans for breakfast?
Oh, yes. there is some talk that the Republicans Want try to blow the bridges, but.
Who knows the way through to the Republicans? - I do.
Well, have you had enough, as the Republicans used to say?
Because they got a solid majority of Republicans and Democrats who've agreed that if anything is said about pensions, they'll actually reduce your pension!
And not just for Republicans.
I think you must have been sent over here by the enemy to destroy our relations with the Japanese and undo all the work that's been done by the Republicans!
Namely, Mr. Philippe Chalamont, convenor of a group of independent republicans.
The head of the Independent Republicans seems to want the government to call for a vote of confidence.
We'll hand 'em out to the republicans too even if they throw us out.
Democrats, Independents, Republicans and others.
They had to be republicans, because the partisans died in the valley, shot on the squares and hanged from the balconies or they were sent to Germany.
Alvarez, the Catalan featherweight, has joined the Republicans.
It is unfortunate that these so-called Republicans have forced him to take the action he has taken.
In case you didn't know, these are the Republicans of New York.
The one thing on which both Democrats and Republicans agree. is that most Americans harbor serious doubts about the economic future.
Think only Republicans pay for sex?
Republicans want to use it for tax relief.
The American voters like guts, and Republicans have got them.
Thank the Republicans.

News and current affairs

While the Iraq War discredited the idea of coercive democratization, both Republicans and Democrats have a strong strand of idealism in their foreign policy orientations.
One can anticipate the Republicans, now in control of the House of Representatives, exploiting their ability to convene hearings to question and review foreign policy.
Republicans have historically been more supportive of such bilateral free-trade agreements.
Failure to address the deficit (and the mounting debt) will create pressures to reduce what the US spends on foreign aid, intelligence, and defense - although Republicans are more likely than Democrats to protect such spending (except for foreign aid).
That effort appears to have backfired, because the Republicans that he leads initially balked at passing the legislation.
That means that both parties increasingly defend the interests of the rich, though Republicans do so slightly more than Democrats.
While a post-election, lame-duck session of Congress will address the fiscal cliff, the deep differences between Republicans and Democrats on taxes and spending remain wide and difficult to bridge.
And yet he has gotten next to no Republicans to support their own policies.
That was the Republicans' calculation in 2011-2012.
And November's election did not change the balance of power anywhere in the American government: Obama remains President, the Republicans remain in control of the House of Representatives, and the Democrats control the Senate.
One political party, the Republicans, stands for little except tax cuts, which they place above any other goal.
But, like the Republicans, the Democrats, too, are keen to shower tax cuts on their major campaign contributors, predominantly rich Americans.
The Republicans are out to prevent that by any means.
But that is the one item most Republicans won't touch.
That leaves only about one-third of total federal spending from which to cut, and much of that goes to the defense budget, which Republicans will attempt to protect in the future.
The current attempt by Republicans in the US Congress to roll back America's effort to ban incandescent bulbs has revived this discussion.
Some believe a political compromise between Republicans and Democrats can be reached before the 2012 election; others suggest an agreement is more likely after the election.
Republicans and Democrats alike argue that this is the crux of America's jobs problem. After all, trade deficits mean job losses.
In principle, this should help Barack Obama and the Democrats, because polls show them stronger on economic issues, whereas Republicans and John McCain do better on security issues.
When Obama attracted a crowd of 200,000 to a speech in Berlin last summer, Republicans criticized him as an elitist who appeals to crowds overseas but not to blue-collar workers at home.
By holding out, Republicans wish to force President Barack Obama's administration into massive spending cuts.
The refusal by both Republicans and Democrats to give ground on the budget is preventing the government from dealing with its massive fiscal deficit and rapidly rising national debt.
Republicans argue that the national debt's growth should be limited only by cutting government spending.
Republicans generally reject this form of spending reduction, because it results in additional tax revenue.
But the Republicans' opposition to anything that raises revenue means that this key to breaking the budget stalemate won't be implemented.
But will the new generation of Republicans continue this tradition?
But averting such a crisis requires that the White House and Congress, Democrats and Republicans, agree on a plan for moving the US budget toward balance.
This month's deal between President Barack Obama and the Republicans in Congress to extend the tax cuts initiated a decade ago by President George W. Bush is being hailed as the start of a new bipartisan consensus.

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