Every Party photograph

Every Party

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Initial release dateDecember 10, 2005
DevelopersGame Republic
Artists Momoko Sakura
PlatformsXbox 360
Publishers Microsoft Corporation
Xbox Game Studios
ModesSingle-player video game
Multiplayer video game
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2064205
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About Every Party


Every Party is a party video game developed by Game Republic and published by Microsoft Game Studios. It was a Japanese launch title for the Xbox 360.

Chris Mason: What's at stake in this week's local elections?

Chris Mason: What's at stake in this week's local elections?
May 2,2023 11:21 pm

... And so Every Party serves up a smorgasbord of expectation management in the weeks beforehand; talking down their prospects...

Freebies: The row over handouts and welfare schemes in India

Freebies: The row over handouts and welfare schemes in India
Sep 12,2022 12:31 am

... Providing voters with incentives before or after voting is not illegal in India - Every Party, including Mr Modi s BJP, does it...

Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss: Stakes high for first head-to-head debate

Rishi Sunak and Liz Truss: Stakes high for first head-to-head debate
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... Every Party member will see the debate, hear reports about it, clips from it, or be left with some sense of who won it, " one MP tells me...

This Matters: UK housing is broken, can anyone fix it?

This Matters: UK housing is broken, can anyone fix it?
Feb 16,2020 8:43 am

...More houses are being built - well, that s what Every Party is saying to get your vote...

Party election broadcasts: How you have changed it and you still have a role?

Party election broadcasts: How you have changed it and you still have a role?
Feb 16,2020 7:10 am

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Tory conference: Three Brexit champions hammer home PM's message

Tory conference: Three Brexit champions hammer home PM's message
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... Everybody from Every Party must unite to stop a no-deal Brexit...

David Cameron: EU referendum claim checked actually

David Cameron: EU referendum claim checked actually
Feb 16,2020 6:23 am

...Former Prime Minister David Cameron was asked on BBC Radio 4 Today programme, whether he reasons, the regret about the call to the 2016 referendum and whether it is party management ? Mr Cameron said: Every Party, was under pressure on this issue...

Brexit: What do the politicians, while the Parliament is suspended?

Brexit: What do the politicians, while the Parliament is suspended?
Feb 16,2020 6:06 am

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Chris Mason: What's at stake in this week's local elections?

Feb 16,2020 4:55 am

By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News

" Look at this! "

The senior political figure I'm having a coffee with leans over, clutching their phone, face animated.

Their finger is jabbing at an app. I Am being given a glimpse of electioneering, 2023 style.

Up pops reams of data: street maps, doors knocked on, the political affiliations of those at number 37 or whatever going back years and years.

The currency of a campaign. Collated, crunched, shared and analysed.

Elections to politicians are what oxygen is to the rest of us - Life is impossible without them, they are essential to survive.

So, Little Wonder there is a little breathlessness when an appointment with The People beckons.

Local elections are power-taking, mood-making Moments - and This Week 's in England, and those in a couple of weeks in Northern Ireland , are no different.

There are elections in parts of every region across England, apart from London. Around 70% of England's electorate have the opportunity to vote.

First, then, it is worth spelling out The Principal reason why these elections matter: they decide who governs closest to us, who will mould the places We Live and work, who will run so many of The Public services we rely on.

The councillors elected This Week , alongside those already in place not fighting elections, will face almighty difficulties.

Recent research by The Local Government Information Unit many local authorities have finances that are in a " critical state".

Plenty are cutting spending on services. Even more are putting up, or planning to put up, council tax.

What a combination.

Demands for adult social care, housing and children's services are spiralling for many councils, as more people turn for help with the cost of living squeeze.

Then there is collecting our rubbish and sorting planning applications among the things they do.

And all of this as councils, like the rest of us, deal with the consequences of inflation.

There is also the political mood-making bit of these elections: they are a brutal gauge of popularity, or otherwise, for party leaderships.

An opinion poll here or there can be easily dismissed. Real elections cannot.

And so Every Party serves up a smorgasbord of expectation management in The Weeks beforehand; talking down their prospects.

If you forecast oblivion, mere disaster can be spun as success.

The Most important word in all of The Noise of The Next few days is this: Benchmark.

Not one to quicken The Pulse , I grant you - But absolutely key to understanding what has happened.

The benchmark for the vast majority of the elections happening This Week That is when they were last fought - and so Against Which comparisons should be made.

We've had four Prime Ministers since then, a change of monarch and the UK has left the European Union .

Both the Conservatives and Labour did pretty badly in those local elections. The Liberal Democrats and the Green Party did pretty well.

There is loads of stuff you can read about these local elections, from how things are looking where you are to (no, you can't).

But , in big picture terms, here are the themes to look out for:

How badly do the Conservatives do? It is widely expected that the Tories are in for a rough time.

How well does Labour do? It is widely expected that they will do well.

But , The Key thing on both these things will be extent: Just how bad do the Conservatives fare and just how well do Labour get on?

This matters massively in terms of who runs your local services in The Coming years.

And it matters too in terms of what it says about the likelihood or otherwise of Keir Starmer becoming Prime Minister at The Next general election.

Labour will argue any slump by the Conservatives is dire, given headlines in the Tory-leaning Daily Telegraph, after the results in 2019.

The Conservatives will point to any gap between Labour's current or recent national opinion poll lead and how Sir Keir's party does as evidence plenty are still unconvinced by Labour and there is all to play for at The General election.

The Liberal Democrats are hoping to make gains in a semi circle of suburbia around London, among other places, where in almost every instance they are taking on the Conservatives.

Again, their success or otherwise will be a key indicator of the likelihood of breakthroughs at The General election, where The Party is being much, much more geographically focused on where they put their campaigning effort than they did at The Last general election.

Keep an eye on the Green Party too, which has fared well, albeit from a low base, in recent local elections and has a particular eye on Mid Suffolk among other places.

And Then , also into The Mix , a plethora of candidates, residents groups and local parties that aren't Conservative, Labour, Lib Dem or Green - But surprise us as the results become clear on Friday.

Do join us for all the results, across TV, radio and online, from late on Thursday evening and throughout The Day on Friday.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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