Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
But by the 1870s, electoral corruption had again become a problem in Boston.
Christie returned to an old topic, campaigning against electoral corruption.
This incident eventually shocked the nation and became the basis of a national movement against electoral corruption on April 19.
Oldfield then turned informer on the electoral corruption that had been involved.
Pitt also supported parliamentary reform measures, including a proposal that would have checked electoral corruption.
Although both bills are supposed to clean up electoral corruption, the Liberal Democrats' version is far less rigorous.
The official reason for dissolving of Klamath County was its electoral corruption.
His government was forced to resign in 1894, however, due to allegations of electoral corruption in the previous year's election.
He was known, in a time when electoral corruption was rife, as a man of great integrity and probity.
The constituency elected a borough representative for over 300 years, until it was disenfranchised as a result of electoral corruption in 1852.
On March 15, 1960, a protest against electoral corruption took place in Masan, a small city near the southeastern coast.
She was subsequently, impeached in June 2010 by the regional electoral court on charges of further electoral corruption.
Electoral corruption in the late republic."
Harwich constituency was then much troubled with petitions against electoral corruption, barely surviving the scrutiny.
Murray stood for election in Blackburn on a platform of opposition to the war in Iraq and electoral corruption.
- A protest against electoral corruption was spearheaded by the Democratic Party in Masan.
Even lacking hard evidence, Cato decided to prosecute Aulus Gabinius for electoral corruption.
The word ambitus for electoral corruption is a general term for the crime; defendants would have been charged under a specific statute (lex).
This is contrary to the path assumed by many Iranian intellectuals at the time, which involved quixotic solutions to problems such as electoral corruption and media censorship.
Sometime after Cispius's tribunate, most likely in early 56, he was defended by Cicero on a charge of electoral corruption (ambitus) and convicted.
In 116 BC he barely won election as praetor for the following year (presumably coming in sixth) and was promptly accused of ambitus (electoral corruption).
It is an important cause, however it's funded, because after a twentieth century largely free of electoral corruption, vote-rigging has made a minor comeback, especially in communities of immigrants, unfortunately.
So notorious and unmanageable did the borough become that Grampound became a byword for electoral corruption, and Edward Porritt noted its use was continuing in 1903.
Lex Acilia Calpurnia was a law established during the Roman Republic in 67 BC mandating permanent exclusion from office in cases of electoral corruption.