ticket splitters造句
例句與造句
- I usually vote Republican, but I admit I was a ticket splitter on this one.
- "We are ticket splitters.
- Bill Clinton won there in 1992 and 1996, and many voters now are ticket splitters, fiscally conservative and socially liberal.
- "Illinoians have a great reputation for being ticket splitters, " said Charlie Wheeler, director of public affairs reporting at the University of Illinois.
- For more than a year, polls have found that although tax cuts were the top priority for Republican voters, they were far less popular among ticket splitters, whose votes are critical for party success.
- It's difficult to find ticket splitters in a sentence. 用ticket splitters造句挺難的
- Ticket Splitters are people who vote for candidates from more than one political party when they vote for public offices, voting on the basis of individual personalities and records instead of on the basis of party loyalties.
- Focusing on ticket splitters, these studies depicted an independent voter who had the same level of political interest as strong partisans and who voted largely based on the issues with which they strongly agreed and / or disagreed.
- "It has been clear in our recent history that New Jerseyans are inveterate ticket splitters, " he said, " and more often than not they have voted differently for president than for senator ."
- Republicans, Democrats and ticket splitters alike laughed derisively when Gore, in one of his family-friendly moments, announced that all of his children had made independent decisions to fly to St . Louis to watch the debate.
- Paid field workers began arriving in January, and all during the spring and summer, volunteers made tens of thousands of phone calls to identify committed and potential Bush voters-- no easy task in a state full of independents and ticket splitters.
- The Zimmer camp expects to get the support of everyone who votes for Bob Dole for president and those Clinton supporters who can be persuaded that Torricelli is too far to the left . Ticket splitters can bring Zimmer a victory, his advisers say, unless Clinton wins more than 60 percent of the New Jersey vote.
- Over the last few days, Rep . Richard Zimmer, the Republican, has acknowledged that he is depending on New Jersey's " inveterate ticket splitters, " to help propel him into office, noting that voters here " more often than not have voted differently for president than senator ."