We have a responsibility NOT to pander to the lowest common denominators in our culture.
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Obama moreover will no longer have to pander to political donors if he wins a second term.
In his own pander to the youth vote, presumptive Republican nominee Mitt Romney quickly agreed with Mr. Obama.
And congressional candidates, who read the polls, are scrambling to pander to the free-lunch beliefs of their respective bases.
Brands need to respect, but not pander to these beliefs and cultural values.
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But Jindal has backed the teaching of creationism in Louisiana public schools in a pander to conservative populists.
There is not the inclination, however, to make too many concessions or to pander to what is called British exceptionalism.
To keep matters brief: it was more about laziness than a desire to use the trope to pander to a male audience.
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But Mr Panetta's words, intended primarily to pander to opinion at home, can only have given them encouragement and stiffened their resolve.
Although an ex-journalist himself, Mr Montgomery did not pander to his writers.
It is easier to pander to their ideal of the monogamous Kenyan family than to confront the difficult reality of widespread extra-marital sex.
That makes us very different from the official papers that write what they are told to and the commercial papers, which pander to readers.
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Republicans say that Mr Reid is seeking not only to pander to the Latino voters of Nevada but also to exploit Republican divisions on immigration.
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Some will say that such actions pander to a repellent elite.
And the true genius of a really good editor is to understand when what the target market believes has changed and to be able to pander to that.
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Plus, there are enough great designers out there that she doesn't need to pander to anyone, she said in a phone interview before the start of Fashion Week.
In a democratic age populism appeals to political demagogues greedy to secure a majority of votes against elite rivals who on principle refuse to pander to mob passions.
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For some countries, it will be a fine line between wanting to keep Britain in the union and a reluctance to pander to what they see as "British exceptionalism".
He has strong reasons not to pander to them.
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Economic weakness, especially if it is expressed in rising unemployment, will, however, make the Bush administration even keener to pander to domestic lobbies for trade protection, as it already has for steel and farms.
It would appear to me that our greatest failure comes from elected officials continuing to pander to the gun lobby and refusing to discuss ways to strengthen our guns laws to reduce gun death and injury.
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Mr Bush won roughly 40% of the Latino vote when he was re-elected in 1998, and he and other Republicans are careful to pander to Latinos by speaking Spanish, enjoying Tejano culture and being friendly to Mexico.
Michael Dell, 47, is betting that his company will be able to evolve into a more diversified seller of technology services, business software and high-end computers without having to pander to the stock market's fixation on whether earnings are growing from one quarter to the next.
Not least when they pander to a British public that no longer shares many of the fundamental values of the United States and our approach to the world and so distance themselves from the "special relationship" that has served both nations -- and the world -- so well.
Yet the Rev Dr Gordon Gatward, who runs the Arthur Rank Centre, says one of the greatest problems has been persuading foot and mouth-stricken farmers to come forward and apply for help - partly out of pride, partly out of reluctance to be seen to pander to the popular prejudice that farmers are always looking for handouts.
To the extent that any idea underpins all these policies, it is a vague feeling that Thailand ought to rely more on its own resources, and pander less to the concerns of meddling foreigners.
It would be absurd to suggest that all politicians who draw on nationalist feeling to criticise European integration pander, by definition, to racists.
The mutual fund business has never met an investment trend to which it wasn't willing to pander.
Yet, if statesmanship means anything, it should be a refusal to pander.
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