Now we've got three months to go, and so we've decided, well, we can politick for three months.
From the stltoday.com
He'll politick for cars he'd like to build, but he's too smart to tell competitors about GM's plans.
From the freep.com
Does an actress really have to politick for a nomination?
From the courier-journal.com
Granted, show business folk have every right to politick.
From the time.com
These slates politick via posters adorning the innumerable concrete barriers that define Baghdad's traffic arteries.
From the time.com
No one can politick as well as her.
From the guardian.co.uk
Legislators will return to Harrisburg in mid-September after their summer recess but they'll go home by mid-October to politick for the Nov. 2 election.
From the post-gazette.com
Administrators can lobby and politick until their faces turn as red as their neckties, but WKU is at the mercy of the folks who distribute the invitations.
From the latimes.com
Pulpit Freedom Sunday is trying to completely rewrite the rules so that in future elections, churches around the country will be free to actively politick.
From the ideas.time.com
More examples
Engage in political activities; "This colleague is always politicking"
Politicks is a 5 piece eclectic rock band formed in 2001 at Radford University where three of its current members went to school. Politicks has performed on the east coast from New York to Florida and shared the stage with several Grammy Award winning artists.
(Politicking) holding a freshly backed bowl to tell a story, thus making everyone listen