Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia TYMOSHENKO announced on Wednesday that she had formed a new parliamentary coalition with allies of President Viktor YUSHCHENKO. Ukraine's parliament had been without a governing coalition since September, when the previous coalition broke down after YUSHCHENKO's party withdrew from the coalition in protest of TYMOSHENKO's support of an opposition measu...
submitted by
ElectionGuide on 12th Dec 2008 (via electionguide.org)
Prime Minister Geir Haarde said he was unwilling to meet the demands of his coalition partners, the Social Democratic Alliance Party, which insisted upon getting the post of prime minister to keep the coalition intact.
submitted by
InternationalHeraldTribune on 26th Jan 2009 (via iht.com)
Asked whether the Prime Minister thought that today was one of the blackest days for Parliament, the Prime Minister s Spokesman (PMS) told the assembled press that the Prime Minister had been expressing his general views on this subject and he was sure the Prime Minister would say more about it himself during the course of his visit today. Asked if the Prime Minister had had any contact with Ellio...
submitted by
DowningStreetSays on 14th May 2009 (via downingstreetsays.com)
I was going to title this Prime Minister Miliband, but I think the best way for #RedEd to play his cards would be to make Cleggie PM. I'll outline that as option 1 and the more likely Prime Minister Miliband as option 2. Option 1: Labour offer the Lib Dems a coalition lead by Nick Clegg which would include all scroungers from the minor parties in an unexploded coalition. Why allow Cleggie to ...
submitted by
ManInAShed on 16th Dec 2011 (via atoryblog.blogspot.com)
Over the few days since the coalition government was announced I’ve been dismayed to hear several Liberal Democrat members say they will rip up their membership cards in protest. Whilst many are understandably disappointed that we now have a Conservative Prime Minister, or that we don’t have a Liberal Democrat Prime Minister, a coalition government
submitted by
LiberalDemocratVoice on 14th May 2010 (via libdemvoice.org)
On Thursday, Ukrainian president Viktor YUSHCHENKO threatened to dissolve parliament and call snap elections following his party's departure from the country's ruling coalition. YUSHCHENKO's party quit the coalition when Prime Minister Yuliya TYMOSHENKO teamed up with the opposition in support of a measure to limit presidential powers and reject YUSHCHENKO's condemnation of Rus...
submitted by
ElectionGuide on 4th Sep 2008 (via electionguide.org)
Unable to resurrect the ruling pro-western coalition in Parliament, Ukrainian president Viktor YUSHCHENKO dissolved the body and called for new parliamentary elections to be held on December 7, 2008. YUSHCHENKO's party quit the coalition in September when Prime Minister Yuliya TYMOSHENKO teamed up with the opposition in support of a measure to limit presidential powers and reject YUSHCH...
submitted by
ElectionGuide on 9th Oct 2008 (via electionguide.org)
The leaders of the coalition - Prime Minister David Cameron and Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg - were clearly brimming with enthusiasm about it in their joint press conference this afternoon. As well they might. There has been much talk over the decades about changing British politics (the old SDP, out of which the Lib Dems were born, sought to 'break the mould' but alas didn't) - these two, wit...
submitted by
PoliticsEtc on 13th May 2010 (via sgspolitics.blogspot.com)
DEPUTY Prime Minister Nick Clegg hit out today at critics of the new coalition's plans to make it more difficult for MPs to force out the Government if it is defeated on a
submitted by
Scotsman on 19th May 2010 (via news.scotsman.com)
JERUSALEM (AP) -- Incoming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu brought a nationalist religious party into what is shaping up to be a narrow, hawkish coalition, taking a major step Monday toward securing the parliament majority he needs to form the government....
submitted by
ElectionGuide on 23rd Mar 2009 (via hosted.ap.org)
Today I am writing an open letter to the Prime Minister. Dear Prime Minister, The Scottish Parliament will meet to debate the decision of the Scottish Justice Minister over the Lockerbie bomber. When you first took the highest political office in the UK you stated that you
submitted by
JohnRedwood on 24th Aug 2009 (via johnredwoodsdiary.com)