adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
an election/electoral campaign
▪ He was candidate in the 2008 election campaign.
an election/electoral defeat
▪ It was their worst general election defeat since 1982.
an election/electoral victory
▪ The Democrats were celebrating their election victory.
an electoral alliance (=made between parties before an election)
▪ The weaker Liberal Democratic party was now considering an electoral alliance with Labour.
an electoral mandate (=gained by winning an election)
▪ Ford took over when Nixon resigned, and thus did not have an electoral mandate of his own.
an electoral/election contest
▪ What will be the outcome of the electoral contest?
electoral college
electoral fraud
▪ electoral fraud
electoral register
electoral success (=success in elections)
▪ The electoral success of the far right understandably fills many people in Europe with alarm.
the electoral register (=official list of voters)
the electoral rollBrE,the (voter) rolls American English (= a list of the people who are allowed to vote)
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
advantage
▪ At least he states his beliefs as they really are, and does not mould them to electoral advantage.
▪ Such measures, exploited for electoral advantage, were within the capabilities of the government to provide.
alliance
▪ Discussions took place between the two parties over a possible electoral alliance, but broke down in April.
▪ A further provision would have the effect of banning electoral alliances and coalitions.
behaviour
▪ The rules that used to cover electoral behaviour no longer apply.
▪ With this knowledge, electoral behaviour may be related to local area social and economic characterisation.
boundary
▪ Municipal elections in the province were postponed from November until next May, mainly because of unresolved disputes over electoral boundaries.
▪ It had previously been notorious in some areas for the manipulation of electoral boundaries and for the practice of religious discrimination.
▪ A boundary extension would require new electoral boundaries and these could not easily be adjusted soas to retain Unionist minority control.
campaign
▪ Barak's electoral campaign Even though this was an election that Netanyahu lost, it also required Barak to win.
▪ In all more than 1,000 people were arrested during the electoral campaign.
▪ The courts and tribunals were made responsible for ensuring the smooth running of electoral campaigns and equal treatment of candidates.
▪ The issue of the republics' future within the Yugoslav federation dominated the electoral campaigns.
▪ The exchanges between Bhutto and Ishaq Khan had grown sharper in the few last days of the electoral campaign.
college
▪ Outdated voting mechanisms, a decentralised, idiosyncratic procedure, and the archaic electoral college have received comment.
▪ Florida, with 25 votes in the electoral college that formally picks the next president, is pivotal to the outcome.
▪ This leaves 143 electoral college votes in 14 swing states undecided.
▪ Since the trade union votes count for 40 percent of the local electoral college, Mr Davies was declared the nominee.
▪ This electoral college system must be scrapped.
▪ That would deliver almost half of the trade union votes - 40 percent of the electoral college.
▪ The outcome, in the electoral college, is likely to be quite close.
commission
▪ Results were cancelled by the electoral commission in both places, where new elections were expected to be organized during December.
▪ But spokesmen said the electoral commission could probably only offer preliminary results Wednesday.
▪ In January 1877, Congress set up an electoral commission to decide the dispute.
▪ To this end it announced that the electoral commission was to be reconstituted in order to free it from political influence and manipulation.
▪ He praised the electoral commission for having had the courage to register him.
▪ The poll was organized by an electoral commission under a Kurdish judge, Amir Hawsizi and international monitors.
competition
▪ These expectations were nurtured by the adversarial nature of electoral competition and they pressed hard on to government.
▪ The particular method associated with democracy is electoral competition.
contest
▪ Tibbu further complicated electoral contests there.
▪ Yeltsin has entered an electoral contest that may be less bloody but even harder for him to win.
▪ He is both sharply divided from his party opponents and emotionally involved in electoral contests.
defeat
▪ Members of congress increasingly came to believe that they could insulate themselves against electoral defeat by assiduous attention to constituency casework.
▪ Carter suffered the worse electoral defeat of any incumbent President ever, including Herbert Hoover in 1932.
district
▪ Yeltsin won majorities in more than 80 of the 88 electoral districts.
▪ State electoral districts must be apportioned according to population. 43.
fraud
▪ Mr Berisha's Democratic party alleged widespread electoral fraud by the government and intimidation of polling station officials by the police.
▪ Milosevic promised the students he would investigate their allegations and punish any officials found responsible for electoral fraud.
▪ Widespread electoral fraud and intimidation already have been reported.
▪ Mr Milosevic is fighting for his political survival after a vicious campaign tainted by intimidation and haunted by fears of electoral fraud.
▪ For a start, they are likely to face charges of corruption and electoral fraud.
▪ The complicated ballot sheet was also relatively easily altered for the purposes of electoral fraud.
law
▪ The incumbent President, Alan García Pérez, was barred by electoral law from seeking re-election.
▪ Congress may pass measures of constitutional significance, for example, certain stipulations of electoral law or the War Powers Act.
▪ The opposition parties had also criticized other aspects of the electoral law.
▪ Under the current electoral law, parliament could have dissolved itself immediately and carried on until the election in a caretaker role.
▪ Happily, before the vote of no confidence, parliament set it right by passing a new electoral law.
▪ Brett spoke out firmly on the question of discrimination in housing, electoral laws and public employment.
▪ This rump has been ordered to draft a new electoral law within two months so that new elections can be held.
pact
▪ One problem remained to be settled, which was the working out of the electoral pact.
▪ Following Bartlett's victory at Bridgewater, he launched a grass roots campaign for an electoral pact with Liberals and Communists.
politics
▪ This is the new electoral politics.
▪ S policy hostage to electoral politics.
▪ Regional bodies of this sort encourage the representation of interests as interests, rather than their fragmentation through electoral politics.
▪ The 1992 political process demonstrated the impact of this dramatic episode on the electoral politics.
▪ Ideas as such are not central in electoral politics.
▪ Freed from electoral politics, she became an oracle of sorts.
▪ That success led the Newmanites further into electoral politics, where they finally emerged in 1979 as the neutral-sounding New Alliance Party.
▪ But focusing on electoral politics and economic development distracts us from the truly ugly side of our southern neighbor.
procedure
▪ In February 1990 the organization left Belgrade's Socialist Alliance, citing the shortcomings in the alliance's electoral procedure.
▪ The law laid down qualifications for Congressmen and electoral procedures to be followed.
▪ Secondly, normal time limits for electoral procedures such as submission of nominations were reduced because of the special circumstances of the December elections.
▪ It would require them to conform to stricter accounting and electoral procedures, and suggests scrutiny by the National Audit Office.
▪ They called into question various electoral procedures including the drawing up of electoral lists and the issuing of ballot papers.
process
▪ But how was this pluralism to be embodied in the electoral process?
▪ This electoral process provides both the president and the legislature with independent mandates to represent the citizens in the governing process.
▪ They broadcast a statement reaffirming the army's support for the process of democratization and denouncing the delays in the electoral process.
▪ But in fact they may actually have presaged that the contemporary presidency and electoral process were beginning to disintegrate.
▪ Observers had feared that violence would seriously disrupt the electoral process.
▪ Spoiled ballots accounted for 32 %, indicating the widespread dissatisfaction at the electoral process.
▪ Elite convergence progresses until the subordinate group of elites learns to beat the dominant group through the electoral process.
▪ The electoral process stopped abruptly with the death of the man most likely to be prime minister.
purpose
▪ Further, in a currency union no government of a member country can manipulate the money supply growth rate for electoral purposes.
▪ Similarly, a photograph of the congressman with the president at his side may be invaluable for electoral purposes.
▪ The attitude of employers is one of annoyance at what they see as government interference for electoral purposes.
▪ The most controversial elements of the new law were its provisions defining recognizable and legitimate political parties and groups for electoral purposes.
▪ It was deliberately smashed by people who used it cynically for their own electoral purposes.
reform
▪ Under a Labour government, this committee would become an official inquiry into electoral reform.
▪ Calls for consideration of electoral reform and a new form of black representation are both expected to be defeated.
▪ The case for electoral reform is best discussed in terms of the question: what kind of political system do we want?
▪ But his proposals for electoral reform, now moving ahead in fits and starts, contain no such provision.
▪ Yesterday's debate about electoral reform could provide the model.
▪ Reform, a friend to, i.e. a supporter of the electoral Reform Bill passed in 1832.
▪ Mandelson is probably right when he argues that the sudden salience of electoral reform hurt.
register
▪ The commission estimates the population on the basis of the electoral register - but is working with the artificially low 1991 registers.
▪ Go to the reference library and look up the electoral register for the last ten years or so.
▪ The other method for collecting facts about potential purchasers is through published lists - like the telephone directory or the electoral register.
▪ Is this one of the reasons why 1 million people are missing off the electoral register?
▪ This register is not identical to the electoral register and includes foreigners resident in this country and others not entitled to vote.
▪ Mr Alton said that the poll tax meant many people had dodged electoral registers in a bid to avoid payment.
▪ The poll tax registers, unlike the electoral registers, are updated monthly.
registration
▪ Mr Alton said official electoral registration surveys were inadequate, missing many people actually eligible to vote.
▪ Only 0.3 percent. of the advertising budget is spent on electoral registration.
▪ Each year every household receives an electoral registration form.
roll
▪ If you are not on the electoral roll you may get turned down for credit.
▪ They can not have their names on the electoral roll and, as a result, can not vote.
▪ Voluntary patients can register on the electoral roll and can have postal votes.
▪ Addresses don't have to be mentioned, they can easily be looked up in the electoral roll just from a name.
▪ Hoyte had twice extended the parliamentary session in 1991, ostensibly in order to allow new electoral rolls to be drawn up.
▪ Official funding would be made available for party political broadcasts and electoral rolls were to be updated.
▪ An estimated 40,000 names on a revised electoral roll were reported to be suspect.
▪ I am interested in whether the police national computer is linked with poll tax registers, electoral rolls and telephone numbers.
rolls
▪ Hoyte had twice extended the parliamentary session in 1991, ostensibly in order to allow new electoral rolls to be drawn up.
▪ Official funding would be made available for party political broadcasts and electoral rolls were to be updated.
▪ I am interested in whether the police national computer is linked with poll tax registers, electoral rolls and telephone numbers.
▪ A period of three years was thought to be necessary for census-taking and drawing up electoral rolls.
▪ Authorities will be able to examine electoral rolls.
success
▪ Despite the recovery of the Labour Party after 1931, its electoral successes were unspectacular.
▪ To achieve electoral success, pragmatic parties might shift their position or expand the range of viewpoints they encompass.
▪ Its legitimacy was not based on electoral success but on its revolutionary principles and antecedents.
▪ Low local taxes are not always a recipe for electoral success.
▪ Such opinions have commendable moral tone but they are perhaps not a recipe for electoral success.
▪ Sometimes disagreement, in spite of attempts to conceal it, will become so public as to prejudice a party's hopes of electoral success.
▪ It also saw the first major electoral success for Labour: twenty-nine Labour and Lib-Lab members were returned.
support
▪ So after both of these elections a government was formed which had less electoral support than the opposition.
▪ In 1979 and in 1983 there was clear electoral support for several Conservative policies, even among many Labour voters.
▪ As a result, Shas's power base and electoral support have been garnered from the traditional strongholds of the Likud.
▪ It certainly owes nothing to any rational assessment of electoral support.
▪ Thus economic models of bureaucratic behaviour usually involve a theory of legislative behaviour in which politicians aim to maximize their electoral support.
▪ In the recessionary 1970s, most governments were turned out at elections or saw their share of electoral support fall.
system
▪ Plurality electoral systems tend to produce two identifiable blocs while majority run-off elections tend to produce more fragmented support.
▪ Will our major parties allow the electoral system to be changed?
▪ The electoral system would not be changed before the National Assembly elections due in March 1993.
▪ Changes in the electoral system recently brought in a new commission with six Hispanics, four blacks and three whites.
▪ He also told them to stop complaining about the electoral system.
▪ He also sees the need to reform the electoral system to clean up the political system.
▪ New Zealand's electoral system, a form of proportional representation, is a key difference.
▪ And they are treated harshly by the form of the electoral system.
victory
▪ This acceptance of the democratic rules of the game and the eventual sharing of electoral victories leads to democratic consolidation.
▪ Bolstered by his landslide electoral victory in 1972, the President moved to take on the legislature.
▪ This was undoubtedly the factor that led to the movement's overwhelming electoral victories in 1990 and 1991.
▪ After Papandreou's electoral victory in 1981, Tritsis was appointed environment minister.
▪ With the electoral victory of the Concertacion, the socialists felt a special mission to prove their loyalty to the ruling class.
▪ Equally, an electoral victory by Mr Tekere would have presented no particular problems to an administration whose members dominate Parliament.
vote
▪ The final result of electoral votes was: Clinton 370, Bush 168, Perot 0.
▪ Florida alone provided nearly one-tenth of the 270 electoral votes required for victory, while Ohio commands 21 votes.
▪ Hayes's election depended on contested electoral votes in Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida.
▪ He noted that Wisconsin controls only 11 of the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.
▪ The final electoral vote was 185 to 184.
▪ It takes 270 electoral votes to win.
▪ At 3.15 this morning Clinton had passed the magical 270 electoral votes he required to win the presidency.
▪ Clinton carried Ohio and its 21 electoral votes by barely 90, 000 votes in the three-way race in 1992.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
the Electoral College
▪ As the rule book insists, 12 weeks will elapse before the electoral college is convened.
▪ Even under the electoral college rules, this achievement ought to make Gore the next president.
▪ However, as it is for any poll, the Electoral College outlook is a snapshot in time, not a prediction.
▪ If the system had been built on popular votes rather than the electoral college, each would have pursued a different strategy.
▪ Instead, the candidates have to put together a jigsaw puzzle of states, bagging their votes in the electoral college.
▪ That would deliver almost half of the trade union votes - 40 percent of the electoral college.
▪ The most obvious example is the electoral college, the phantom body that stands between voters and the final outcome.
▪ The outcome, in the electoral college, is likely to be quite close.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Electoral systems vary from country to country.
▪ an electoral list
▪ Support for electoral reform is growing.
▪ the electoral system
▪ This was the first of her many electoral successes.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Bolstered by his landslide electoral victory in 1972, the President moved to take on the legislature.
▪ But spokesmen said the electoral commission could probably only offer preliminary results Wednesday.
▪ Congress may pass measures of constitutional significance, for example, certain stipulations of electoral law or the War Powers Act.
▪ On Feb. 20 the Volkskammer approved a new electoral law to have immediate effect.
▪ Reports of the electoral death of the Conservatives were exaggerated.
▪ This register is not identical to the electoral register and includes foreigners resident in this country and others not entitled to vote.
▪ Thus, during these years, the overriding concern of the government in office was parliamentary survival and electoral prospects.
▪ Yeltsin won majorities in more than 80 of the 88 electoral districts.