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<blockquote data-quote="Morrissambit" data-source="post: 1016161" data-attributes="member: 85778"><p>Ccbd The Surprising Thing That Could Help Ease Inflation</p><p>Brazilians wait in line to enter a polling station in the Rocinha f <a href="https://www.stanleycup.com.se">stanley cup</a> avela in Rio de Janeiro on the day of the presidential election on Oct. 5, 2014Mario Ta <a href="https://www.stanleycups.at">stanley cup</a> ma鈥擥etty ImagesBy Elizabeth BarberOctober 6, 2014 4:23 AM EDTBrazilrsquo presidential election is headed for a runoff after incumbent President Dilma Rousseff took the top spot in the first-round on Sunday but failed to get the majority needed to win overall.Rousseff, of the leftist Workers ; Party, won 41.4% of the vote in the tight race, riding the success of her social-welfare programs, the Guardian reports. She will duel with Aeacute;cio Neves, of Brazilrsquo pro-business Social Democratic party, who took 33.7% of the vote in a last-minute and unexpected surge.The first round of the election closes an agonizing campaign season full of unexpected flips and flops, including one candidatersquo death in a plane crash, another homophobic rant, and another candidate ties to a massive oil scandal.The coming election mdash; a squaring off between Brazilrsquo established left and the right mdash; will be a disappointment to voters who had backed third candidate Marina Silva, a former Environment Minister who had at one point led the polls.Rousseff is projected to win in the coming runoff, though Neves may further harness resentment towar <a href="https://www.stanleycups.it">stanley cup</a> d the incumbent administration for continued sluggish economic growth, the New York Times reports. Silva may also choose to throw her weight behind Neves, the G Vaux Global Support for Hong Kong Student Protest Intensifies</p><p>By Denver NicksJune 24, 2014 11:21 PM EDTSen. Thad Cochran narrowly won Mississippirsquo Republican primary election Tuesday, prevailing over <a href="https://www.adidascampus.us">adidas campus</a> a Tea Party challenger in a hard-fought runoff vote that was seen as a proxy for the intramural fight between the GOP establishment and conservative insurgents.Cochran, a six-term incumbent <a href="https://www.adidas-yeezy.it">yeezy</a> , beat two-term state Sen. Chris McDaniel, a former talk-radio host with strong Tea Party support, by just a few thousand votes. The Associated Press called the race for Cochran a few minutes after 11 p.m. E.T. With 98.1% of precincts reporting, Cochran had 50.7% of the vote to McDaniel 49.3%. McDaniel had bested Cochran by a half-a-percentage point in the i <a href="https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr">yeezy</a> nitial June 3 primary, but neither man won a clear majority, forcing the two into a runoff that culminated Tuesday. Cochran strategists called the June 3 primary a wake-up call for a candidate who had run a scattershot campaign up to that point.We all have a right to be proud of our state tonight, Cochran told supporters Tuesday night.What we have tonight is reflected as a consensus for more and better jobs for Mississippi workers, a military force and the capacity to defend the security interests of the United States of America, Cochran said. Those were our principle 8230; planks in the platform of the campaign.Cochran campaign had looked to expand the electorate after falling short in the runoff, heavily courting black voters and other</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Morrissambit, post: 1016161, member: 85778"] Ccbd The Surprising Thing That Could Help Ease Inflation Brazilians wait in line to enter a polling station in the Rocinha f [url=https://www.stanleycup.com.se]stanley cup[/url] avela in Rio de Janeiro on the day of the presidential election on Oct. 5, 2014Mario Ta [url=https://www.stanleycups.at]stanley cup[/url] ma鈥擥etty ImagesBy Elizabeth BarberOctober 6, 2014 4:23 AM EDTBrazilrsquo presidential election is headed for a runoff after incumbent President Dilma Rousseff took the top spot in the first-round on Sunday but failed to get the majority needed to win overall.Rousseff, of the leftist Workers ; Party, won 41.4% of the vote in the tight race, riding the success of her social-welfare programs, the Guardian reports. She will duel with Aeacute;cio Neves, of Brazilrsquo pro-business Social Democratic party, who took 33.7% of the vote in a last-minute and unexpected surge.The first round of the election closes an agonizing campaign season full of unexpected flips and flops, including one candidatersquo death in a plane crash, another homophobic rant, and another candidate ties to a massive oil scandal.The coming election mdash; a squaring off between Brazilrsquo established left and the right mdash; will be a disappointment to voters who had backed third candidate Marina Silva, a former Environment Minister who had at one point led the polls.Rousseff is projected to win in the coming runoff, though Neves may further harness resentment towar [url=https://www.stanleycups.it]stanley cup[/url] d the incumbent administration for continued sluggish economic growth, the New York Times reports. Silva may also choose to throw her weight behind Neves, the G Vaux Global Support for Hong Kong Student Protest Intensifies By Denver NicksJune 24, 2014 11:21 PM EDTSen. Thad Cochran narrowly won Mississippirsquo Republican primary election Tuesday, prevailing over [url=https://www.adidascampus.us]adidas campus[/url] a Tea Party challenger in a hard-fought runoff vote that was seen as a proxy for the intramural fight between the GOP establishment and conservative insurgents.Cochran, a six-term incumbent [url=https://www.adidas-yeezy.it]yeezy[/url] , beat two-term state Sen. Chris McDaniel, a former talk-radio host with strong Tea Party support, by just a few thousand votes. The Associated Press called the race for Cochran a few minutes after 11 p.m. E.T. With 98.1% of precincts reporting, Cochran had 50.7% of the vote to McDaniel 49.3%. McDaniel had bested Cochran by a half-a-percentage point in the i [url=https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr]yeezy[/url] nitial June 3 primary, but neither man won a clear majority, forcing the two into a runoff that culminated Tuesday. Cochran strategists called the June 3 primary a wake-up call for a candidate who had run a scattershot campaign up to that point.We all have a right to be proud of our state tonight, Cochran told supporters Tuesday night.What we have tonight is reflected as a consensus for more and better jobs for Mississippi workers, a military force and the capacity to defend the security interests of the United States of America, Cochran said. Those were our principle 8230; planks in the platform of the campaign.Cochran campaign had looked to expand the electorate after falling short in the runoff, heavily courting black voters and other [/QUOTE]
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