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party+office

  • 41 office

    ['ofis]
    1) (the room or building in which the business of a firm is done: The firm's head offices are in New York; ( also adjective) office furniture.) (de) birou
    2) (the room in which a particular person works: the bank manager's office.) birou
    3) (a room or building used for a particular purpose: Train tickets are bought at the ticket-office.) ghişeu
    4) (a position of authority, especially in or as a government: Our party has not been in office for years; the office of mayor.) poziţie de auto­ritate

    English-Romanian dictionary > office

  • 42 office

    ['ofis]
    1) (the room or building in which the business of a firm is done: The firm's head offices are in New York; ( also adjective) office furniture.) γραφείο
    2) (the room in which a particular person works: the bank manager's office.) γραφείο
    3) (a room or building used for a particular purpose: Train tickets are bought at the ticket-office.) γραφείο,γκισέ
    4) (a position of authority, especially in or as a government: Our party has not been in office for years; the office of mayor.) εξουσία/αξίωμα

    English-Greek dictionary > office

  • 43 office

    [ˈɔfɪs] noun
    1) the room or building in which the business of a firm is done:

    ( also adjective) office furniture.

    مَكْتَب الشَّرِكَه
    2) the room in which a particular person works:

    the bank manager's office.

    مَكْتَب المُوظَّف
    3) a room or building used for a particular purpose:

    Train tickets are bought at the ticket-office.

    مَكْتَب التَّذاكِر
    4) a position of authority, especially in or as a government:

    the office of mayor.

    مَنْصِب، سُلْطَه

    Arabic-English dictionary > office

  • 44 office

    ['ofis]
    1) (the room or building in which the business of a firm is done: The firm's head offices are in New York; ( also adjective) office furniture.) (de) bureau
    2) (the room in which a particular person works: the bank manager's office.) bureau
    3) (a room or building used for a particular purpose: Train tickets are bought at the ticket-office.) bureau
    4) (a position of authority, especially in or as a government: Our party has not been in office for years; the office of mayor.) charge, fonction

    English-French dictionary > office

  • 45 office

    ['ofis]
    1) (the room or building in which the business of a firm is done: The firm's head offices are in New York; ( also adjective) office furniture.) escritório
    2) (the room in which a particular person works: the bank manager's office.) escritório
    3) (a room or building used for a particular purpose: Train tickets are bought at the ticket-office.) gabinete
    4) (a position of authority, especially in or as a government: Our party has not been in office for years; the office of mayor.) função

    English-Portuguese (Brazil) dictionary > office

  • 46 party in office

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > party in office

  • 47 party in office

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > party in office

  • 48 office party

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > office party

  • 49 party (now) in office

    Дипломатический термин: правящая партия

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > party (now) in office

  • 50 party in office

    3) Дипломатический термин: (now) правящая партия
    4) Деловая лексика: правящая партия

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > party in office

  • 51 party in office

    політична партія, що перебуває при владі

    English-Ukrainian law dictionary > party in office

  • 52 office party

    вечеринка ( обычно в рождественский сочельник) в помещении офиса фирмы или государственного учреждения, в которой принимают участие руководители и подчинённые

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > office party

  • 53 party (now) in office

    Англо-русский дипломатический словарь > party (now) in office

  • 54 party (now) in office

    English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > party (now) in office

  • 55 party (now) in office

    English-russian dctionary of diplomacy > party (now) in office

  • 56 office party

    s.
    fiesta de la oficina.

    Nuevo Diccionario Inglés-Español > office party

  • 57 Socialist Party / Partido Socialista

    (PS)
       Although the Socialist Party's origins can be traced back to the 1850s, its existence has not been continuous. The party did not achieve or maintain a large base of support until after the Revolution of 25 April 1974. Historically, it played only a minor political role when compared to other European socialist parties.
       During the Estado Novo, the PS found it difficult to maintain a clandestine existence, and the already weak party literally withered away. Different groups and associations endeavored to keep socialist ideals alive, but they failed to create an organizational structure that would endure. In 1964, Mário Soares, Francisco Ramos da Costa, and Manuel Tito de Morais established the Portuguese Socialist Action / Acção Socialista Português (ASP) in Geneva, a group of individuals with similar views rather than a true political party. Most members were middle-class professionals committed to democratizing the nation. The rigidity of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) led some to join the ASP.
       By the early 1970s, ASP nuclei existed beyond Portugal in Paris, London, Rome, Brussels, Frankfurt, Sweden, and Switzerland; these consisted of members studying, working, teaching, researching, or in other activities. Extensive connections were developed with other foreign socialist parties. Changing conditions in Portugal, as well as the colonial wars, led several ASP members to advocate the creation of a real political party, strengthening the organization within Portugal, and positioning this to compete for power once the regime changed.
       The current PS was founded clandestinely on 19 April 1973, by a group of 27 exiled Portuguese and domestic ASP representatives at the Kurt Schumacher Academy of the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung in Bad Munstereifel, West Germany. The founding philosophy was influenced by nondogmatic Marxism as militants sought to create a classless society. The rhetoric was to be revolutionary to outflank its competitors, especially the PCP, on its left. The party hoped to attract reform-minded Catholics and other groups that were committed to democracy but could not support the communists.
       At the time of the 1974 revolution, the PS was little more than an elite faction based mainly among exiles. It was weakly organized and had little grassroots support outside the major cities and larger towns. Its organization did not improve significantly until the campaign for the April 1975 constituent elections. Since then, the PS has become very pragmatic and moderate and has increasingly diluted its socialist program until it has become a center-left party. Among the party's most consistent principles in its platform since the late 1970s has been its support for Portugal's membership in the European Economic Community (EEC) and the European Union (EU), a view that clashed with those of its rivals to the left, especially the PCP. Given the PS's broad base of support, the increased distance between its leftist rhetoric and its more conservative actions has led to sharp internal divisions in the party. The PS and the Social Democratic Party (PSD) are now the two dominant parties in the Portuguese political party system.
       In doctrine and rhetoric the PS has undergone a de-Marxification and a movement toward the center as a means to challenge its principal rival for hegemony, the PSD. The uneven record of the PS in general elections since its victory in 1975, and sometimes its failure to keep strong legislative majorities, have discouraged voters. While the party lost the 1979 and 1980 general elections, it triumphed in the 1983 elections, when it won 36 percent of the vote, but it still did not gain an absolute majority in the Assembly of the Republic. The PSD led by Cavaco Silva dominated elections from 1985 to 1995, only to be defeated by the PS in the 1995 general elections. By 2000, the PS had conquered the commanding heights of the polity: President Jorge Sampaio had been reelected for a second term, PS prime minister António Guterres was entrenched, and the mayor of Lisbon was João Soares, son of the former socialist president, Mário Soares (1986-96).
       The ideological transformation of the PS occurred gradually after 1975, within the context of a strong PSD, an increasingly conservative electorate, and the de-Marxification of other European Socialist parties, including those in Germany and Scandinavia. While the PS paid less attention to the PCP on its left and more attention to the PSD, party leaders shed Marxist trappings. In the 1986 PS official program, for example, the text does not include the word Marxism.
       Despite the party's election victories in the mid- and late-1990s, the leadership discovered that their grasp of power and their hegemony in governance at various levels was threatened by various factors: President Jorge Sampaio's second term, the constitution mandated, had to be his last.
       Following the defeat of the PS by the PSD in the municipal elections of December 2001, Premier Antônio Guterres resigned his post, and President Sampaio dissolved parliament and called parliamentary elections for the spring. In the 17 March 2002 elections, following Guterres's resignation as party leader, the PS was defeated by the PSD by a vote of 40 percent to 38 percent. Among the factors that brought about the socialists' departure from office was the worsening post-September 11 economy and disarray within the PS leadership circles, as well as charges of corruption among PS office holders. However, the PS won 45 percent of the vote in parliamentary elections of 2005, and the leader of the party, José Sócrates, a self-described "market-oriented socialist" became prime minister.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Socialist Party / Partido Socialista

  • 58 Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático

    (PSD)
       One of the two major political parties in democratic Portugal. It was established originally as the Popular Democratic Party / Partido Popular Democrático (PPD) in May 1974, following the Revolution of 25 April 1974 that overthrew the Estado Novo. The PPD had its roots in the "liberal wing" of the União Nacional, the single, legal party or movement allowed under the Estado Novo during the last phase of that regime, under Prime Minister Marcello Caetano. A number of future PPD leaders, such as Francisco Sá Carneiro and Francisco Balsemão, hoped to reform the Estado Novo from within, but soon became discouraged. After the 1974 Revolution, the PPD participated in two general elections (April 1975 and April 1976), which were crucial for the establishment and consolidation of democracy, and the party won sufficient votes to become the second largest political party after the Socialist Party (PS) in the number of seats held in the legislature, the Assembly of the Republic. The PPD voting results in those two elections were 26.4 percent and 24.4 percent, respectively.
       After the 1976 elections, the party changed its name from Partido Popular Democrático to Partido Social Democrático (PSD). As political opinion swung from the left to the center and center-right, and with the leadership of Francisco Sá Carneiro, the PSD gained greater popularity and strength, and from 1979 on, the party played an important role in government. After Sá Carneiro died in the air crash of December 1980, he was replaced as party chief and then prime minister by Francisco Balsemão, and then by Aníbal Cavaco Silva. As successors, these two leaders guided the PSD to a number of electoral victories, especially beginning in 1985. After 1987, the PSD held a majority of seats in parliament, a situation that lasted until 1995, when the Socialist Party (PS) won the election.
       The PSD's principal political program has featured the de-Marxi-fication of the 1976 Constitution and the economic system, a free-market economy with privatization of many state enterprises, and close ties with the European Economic Community (EEC) and subsequently the European Union (EU). After the PSD lost several general elections in 1995 and 1999, and following the withdrawal from office of former prime minister Cavaco Silva, a leadership succession crisis occurred in the party. The party leadership shifted from Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to Manuel Durão Barroso, and, in 2004, Pedro Santana Lopes.
       During 2000 and 2001, as Portugal's economic situation worsened, the PS's popularity waned. In the December 2001 municipal elections, the PSD decisively defeated the PS and, as a result, Prime Minister António Guterres resigned. Parliamentary elections in March 2002 resulted in a Social Democratic victory, although its margin of victory over the PS was small (40 percent to 38 percent). Upon becoming premier in the spring of 2002, then, PSD leader Durão Barroso, in order to hold a slim majority of seats in the Assembly of the Republic, was obliged to govern in a coalition with the Popular Party (PP), formerly known as the Christian Democratic Party (CDS). Although the PSD had ousted the PS from office, the party confronted formidable economic and social problems. When Durão Barroso resigned to become president of the EU Commission, Pedro Santana Lopes became the PSD's leader, as prime minister in July 2004. Under Santana Lopes's leadership, the PSD lost the parliamentary elections of 2005 to the PS. Since then, the PSD has sought to regain its dominant position with the Portuguese electorate. It made some progress in doing so when its former leader, Cavaco Silva, was elected president of the Republic of 2006.

    Historical dictionary of Portugal > Social Democratic Party / Partido Social Democrático

  • 59 third party

    1. юр. третье лицо, третья сторона

    third party risk — риск, которому подвергается третье лицо

    accommodation party — лицо, выписавшее дружеский вексель

    defaulting party — сторона, не выполняющая обязанностей

    party in default — сторона, не выполнившая обязанность

    guilty party — сторона, признанная виновной; виновный

    2. третья партия

    third party vote — голосование за третью партию; число голосов, поданных за третью партию

    party in office — политическая партия, находящаяся у власти

    English-Russian base dictionary > third party

  • 60 ruling party

    пол. правящая партия (тип политической партии с точки зрения ее отношения к правящему режиму: партия, находящаяся у власти)
    Syn:
    Ant:
    See:

    Англо-русский экономический словарь > ruling party

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