32 resultsfor “how many voters in Gaza elections”
Gaza-based groups, Future of Deir el‑Balah and Peace and Building, not affiliated with either faction. Abbas loyalists, meanwhile, swept the election in the West Bank, running unchallenged in many seats. ## Low voter
Gaza and Lebanon, and partly in widespread frustration among left-liberal voters at the Starmer government’s hardline rhetoric on immigration,” Bale told Al Jazeera. “The Greens have elected a headline-grabbing leader
voters. “We know that midterm elections are always difficult for the party of government,” he said. “We need to think about how we start to tell in a more coherent, systematic way, the story
many voters remain unconvinced, with dissatisfaction threatening to shape the November midterm elections and potentially hurt Republicans at the ballot box. - Henry Ensher, a former US ambassador to Algeria, said Trump is under growing pressure
Gaza and the Middle East, is also seeking to run. For him and many candidates, the challenge will be gathering obligatory backing signatures from 500 elected officials. Amid the high number of men seeking
many congressional races. Its tactics, they argue, undermine election transparency. “Every cycle AIPAC shows just how broken our democracy is and how corrupt our political finance system is,” said Usamah Andrabi, a spokesperson at Justice
voters are eligible to participate in the elections held in Deir el-Balah [Abdelhakim Abu Riash/ Al Jazeera] Like many of her peers, Dunia’s motivations are practical and directly tied to daily life, which
election. Politics around the Middle East have rapidly changed in recent years. Support for Israel has [long divided the Democratic Party](https://www.politico.com/news/2022/07/25/israel-divide-democratic-primaries-00047625), with some Democrats blaming the Biden administration’s approach to Gaza
Gaza as a “genocide” on the campaign trail. In one exchange with voters, Stanford appeared to say that using the term “genocide” was “harmful”. Street, whose victory would have made him Philadelphia’s first Muslim
election is seen as a [key test of Starmer’s leadership](/news/2026/5/5/starmers-referendum-how-local-elections-could-expose-a-fractured-uk), with Labour trailing behind Reform UK in opinion polls in recent months. In response to the early results, Starmer said he would take
many Democrats. Wednesday’s vote could nonetheless serve as an indicator of the depth of support for Israel among the chamber’s Democrats, who are grappling with souring sentiment among their voters towards prime minister
Voters will first choose one of four lists, then they will cast preference votes for five specific candidates within that list. The 15 candidates with the most support will form the new local council, while
elected SNP MSP Ivan McKee thanked voters in his Glasgow constituency “for rejecting those that seek to divide our communities”, but despite making fewer inroads than some polls had predicted, Reform picked up 17 seats
election is anyone's guess. Polls suggest Birmingham's electorate has fully embraced five-party politics, with a healthy number of independent candidates giving city voters a sixth option. Reform UK is feeling confident
many political actors and media outlets fell back on lazy, divisive narratives about Muslims, spreading misinformation and misrepresenting how our communities actually engage politically. Commentators repeatedly raised the spectre of “family voting”, claiming that Muslims
elections – but are aware underpaying stamp duty remains a big problem to overcome. They are also anxious about a renewed focus on her private life. Some allies have been urging Rayner to mount an immediate
many voters, the contest appeared less about Kentucky, less about conservative priorities, and less even about US national interests than about enforcing ideological conformity to Israel’s political preferences and punishing dissent within the Republican
many over the money” before issuing a warning to those who might seek to undermine the movement his campaign had built. “They’re going to try and tear us apart. We’re not going
many saw as a broad rejection of her government, it remains fragmented and has no clear leader to credibly take on the prime minister in the next election, which is due to take place before
voters now consider, as if swopping from a Mazda to a Renault, rather than their party affiliation meaning any more than that. On top of this, there is the difficult backdrop, economically and internationally