Even republicanism has turned itself inside out in ever more radical attempts to show them a face they might accept. |
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I'm talking about galvanising the unionist family to speak with one voice instead of appeasing republicanism. |
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He has once more handed armed republicanism a veto over political progress. |
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He insists the military campaign was a priori a result of the intrinsic political failures of republicanism at the outset. |
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True republicanism is about fairness and solidarity, about equality and inclusion. |
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In latter years, he made a career out of his antipathy to republicanism and became a maestro of the sound bite. |
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From the beginning, he allowed an arrangement that blended notions of clerical rule with the principles and institutions of republicanism. |
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The conceptions of republicanism and citizenship were popularized by the upheavals of the American and French revolutions. |
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Despite his origins as a Whig and a constitutionalist, he is widely revered as the father of militant Irish republicanism. |
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More recently, although still a minority concern, there has been a steady growth of interest in republicanism. |
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It was enlivened by a fresh wave of working-class migrants who brought socialism and republicanism with them. |
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He was devoutly committed to principles of secularism, pluralism, liberty and republicanism. |
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It's an overview that emphasizes the importance of monarchist republicanism in the 19th century. |
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This vision of cooperative self-government often produced republicanism and even democracy comparable to classical Greek democracy. |
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Read on, for a compilation of rambling late night thoughts, mainly about unionism and loyalism but with a fair bit on republicanism. |
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There is an abundance of powerfully voiced republicanism, anticlerical fervour and epicurean life. |
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Catherine McGlinchey sees it as a sign that classical republicanism is being slowly painted out of history. |
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With her re-found republicanism, she is trying to tilt the party towards the new voters. |
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Throughout Europe, republicanism and republican forms of government have been associated with the emergence of strong business classes. |
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Those who doubted, and they were few, spoke of a man of integrity with a strong commitment to republicanism. |
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Nor, despite their republicanism, did they seek the destruction of aristocracy. |
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Republican sources say that the group has no organisation in that city, where republicanism has traditionally been strong. |
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Until the mid-1990s there was no history of organised nationalism there, let alone republicanism. |
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You don't say to a Democrat they'll see the light later on and convert to republicanism. |
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By completing the transition to republicanism, he humanized the presidency and made it a symbol not of the nation but of the people. |
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It's not surprising, therefore, that it's taken a long time to completely disentangle the GAA from violent republicanism. |
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Sean O'Callaghan, a former IRA southern commander who became Trimble's adviser on republicanism, recalled Burnside's lukewarm conversion. |
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In each of us, as in each of the European nations, something remains of the Greek philosophical tradition and of Roman republicanism. |
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Loyalists believed that the British connection guaranteed them a more secure and prosperous life than republicanism would. |
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Modern republicanism assumes the rule of law, and knows how important institutions and incentive systems are, but also knows their limits. |
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Adherents of civic republicanism, who see an intrinsic value in political participation. |
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Even the choice of heavily napped wool, instead of a luxurious silk, suggests the practical aspects of military dress in keeping with the republicanism of the Napoleonic myth. |
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But Perry sees it all as testimony to the wisdom of his brand of republicanism. |
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He was very much the acceptable face of militant republicanism. |
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After a long eclipse during the Middle Ages, the tradition of Greek and Roman republicanism was revived in the Italian republics of the Renaissance. |
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For all his failings, he was at least attempting to bring a European tradition of republicanism into politics and a pluralistic tolerance of religion into civic life. |
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Liberalism and republicanism gave a political cast, invoking collectivities of bounded, mapped extent, and ruled by popular, no longer divine, consent. |
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He appears to have synthesized the different and conflicting traditions of plebiscitarian leadership, Jacobin republicanism, and parliamentary democracy. |
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He has been a noted champion of republicanism, a political ethos that privileges the well-being of the nation over individual rights and liberties. |
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Is it republicanism to say that the majority can do no wrong? |
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One of the core tenets of republicanism is equality of treatment, and this should apply rigidly to all areas of government activity throughout Ireland. |
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Politically, republicanism and anticlericalism kept the liberating mission of the Revolution alive, though this appealed more to rebels than to foreign governments. |
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Vermont is one of the last bastions of liberal republicanism in the country. |
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His contributions to classical republicanism and liberal theory are reflected in the United States Declaration of Independence. |
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During the Enlightenment there was a great emphasis upon liberty, republicanism and religious tolerance. |
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Advocacy of republics is called republicanism, while advocacy of monarchies is called monarchism. |
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As a result of her seclusion, republicanism temporarily gained strength, but in the latter half of her reign her popularity recovered. |
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The document became a benchmark for republicanism and codified constitutions written thereafter. |
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Republicanism is as old as Greece and Rome, but in modern social-liberal democracies a new republicanism, a new call for republican virtues in governing the state, became an essential requirement. |
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In Western Europe it is the historic separatisms of Irish republicanism in Northern Ireland and Basque nationalism in Spain that have spawned the most lethal and protracted terrorism. |
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However, the reality is that many of the SDLP stalwarts who formed the party and who argued most fiercely against the so-called 'greening' of the SDLP, were of Labour traditions steeped in Irish republicanism. |
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It is useful to remember that Canadian republicanism in the last century was linked to continentalism. |
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The prospect of a British Queen visiting those hallowed sights will inflame further the passions of the unrepresentative but vocal, often violent, minority who adhere to dissident republicanism. |
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In the unfolding of the American Revolution such whiggism became known as republicanism. |
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In doing so, republicanism is not being utopian, but just acknowledging that in modern democracies voters require politicians and senior civil servants to be endowed with republican virtues. |
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During the Enlightenment there was a great emphasis upon liberty, democracy, republicanism, and religious tolerance. |
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Milton's own beliefs were in some cases both unpopular and dangerous, and this was true particularly to his commitment to republicanism. |
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Democracy and republicanism would grow to have a profound effect on world events and on quality of life. |
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The new states were all committed to republicanism, with no inherited offices. |
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The leaders were conservatives with little use for republicanism or revolution, both of which threatened to upset the status quo in Europe. |
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Manuel II of Portugal became the new king, but was eventually overthrown by the 5 October 1910 revolution, which abolished the regime and instated republicanism in Portugal. |
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Some groups of Celtic fans express their support for Irish republicanism and the Irish Republican Army by singing or chanting about them at matches. |
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Following independence, American Whiggism became known as republicanism. |
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Concepts of liberty, individual rights, equality among men and hostility toward corruption became incorporated as core values of liberal republicanism. |
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The press saw its lofty role to be the advancement of civic republicanism based on public service, and downplayed the liberal, individualistic goal of making a profit. |
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The more radical ideas of Sidney and Locke, argues Ward, became marginalized in Britain, but emerged as a dominant strand in American republicanism. |
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Former SDLP leader John Hume, MP for Foyle since 1983, also weighed in at the party's annual party conference, declaring that his party stood for true republicanism. |
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Connolly's party was small and unsuccessful in elections, but his fusion of socialism and Irish republicanism was to have a sustained impact on republican thought. |
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The Discourses, with its recommendation of virtue and republicanism, on the other hand, is thought of as an inconsistent extravagation from the true Machiavellian position. |
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Revolution became a tradition, and republicanism an enduring option. |
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Mary glossed Percy's political radicalism as a form of sentimentalism, arguing that his republicanism arose from sympathy for those who were suffering. |
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Other topics include convictism, bushrangers, Australian Rules football, compulsory voting, republicanism, multiculturalism and whether Curtin was our greatest prime minister. |
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