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renomination

n. The act of renominate, of nominate again.

Usage examples of "renomination".

But even after his renomination the opposition to Lincoln within the ranks of the Union party did not subside.

Two or three days ago I learned that McLean had appointed delegates in favor of Lovejoy, and thenceforward I have considered his renomination a fixed fact.

In both Houses of Congress, upon all possible occasions, they had been striving, as they still strove, with the venom of their widelycirculated speeches, to poison the loyal Northern and Border-State mind, in the hope that the renomination of Mr.

No political result followed the publication of this remarkable paper save that it probably defeated the renomination of Mr.

On the opposite side, Senator Sumner, who had sought in May to challenge and prevent the renomination of General Grant by concentrating in one massive broadside all that could be suggested against him, now appeared in a public letter advising the colored people to vote for Greeley.

The only definite policy anywhere suggested was that the position of the Democratic party demanded the renomination of Mr.

Senator Norman Grant, in the heat of his campaign for renomination to the Senate, announced that he would hold a press conference at noon sharp, and he telephoned Pope to ask if he would attend.

Bangor, where, feeling useless and rejected, he had withdrawn after failing of renomination for the Vice Presidency.

An astonishingly large number of States were instructing their delegates to the pending Republican convention to vote for the renomination of Abraham Lincoln.

But he would not leave until the matter of the renomination was settled.

President Carter seemed to have survived a vigorous challenge to his renomination from Senator Edward Kennedy, but Kennedy had not withdrawn.

As will be remembered, a majority of the delegates to that convention were favorable to the renomination of Mr.

But in 1873 he was very angry with the persons who signed the address in favor of the renomination of Governor Washburn.

But for those appointments, in my opinion, the strong objection felt by her people to giving any President of the United States a third term would not have prevented her supporting him for renomination in 1880, a support which would have insured his success.

He would have liked renomination, but Judge Logan was nominated and was not elected.