Acronyms

DIKO

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AcronymDefinition
DIKODemocratic Party (Cyprus)
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References in periodicals archive
2-4, 2007, poll finds 54% of Americans saying they have a favorable opinion of the Democratic Party, while 37% have an unfavorable opinion.
But LaVera says a fact sheet issued the day after the Grassroots report shows the Democratic Party is as gay-inclusive as ever and that all outreach director posts were eliminated by Dean in favor of an untried new outreach program grandly titled the American Majority Partnership.
It is about the Democratic Party as a political system: where power is located within it, how it makes its decisions, how it defines opportunities.
If those of us who were dismayed--even outraged--by the Democratic Party's fumbling efforts in the last two Presidential elections can unite with the many independents who share our sense that these perilous times desperately require new leaders and new policies, we can form a new majority.
Most historians trace the origins of today's Democratic Party to the breakup of the Democratic-Republican Party in the late 1820s.
With their unique styles and political backgrounds, Sharpton and Moseley Braun are waging insurgent campaigns in the struggle over who will lead the Democratic Party in the fight to recapture the White House.
The conventional wisdom is that a Democratic party in which Moulitsas calls the shots would cater to every whim of its liberal base.
Continue reading "The Democratic Party Is Becoming Unsalvageable" at...
Pasban Democratic Party Vice chairman of economic affairs division Dr Shahida Wizarat said the budget lacks balance, adding we have to change our economic policies and economic managers.
He said that Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)'s Atiku Abubakar, scored 448, 015 votes, while Mr Omoyele Sowore of African Action Congress (AAC) got 8, 910 votes to come out in the third position.
Although the Republican Party is considered the primary booster of the super rich, the leadership of the Democratic Party has for long subtly or otherwise backed the interests of the wealthy over that of the rest of society.
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