The party was effectively using the national exchequer for its own political purposes. |
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That, we respectfully submit, relates directly to a depredation upon the exchequer of the Commonwealth. |
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It is no secret that almost every department has become synonymous to outright corruption and plunder of public exchequer. |
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The resultant loss of revenue to the exchequer could be made good through hike in prices of some other items that do not affect the common man. |
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And as costs mount up and up, seemingly to be fixed on the public exchequer, there is no hint of concern from the government. |
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The most important post in judging the character of the government is its finance minister and chancellor of the exchequer. |
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After all, it is the private sector that generates exchequer funding for the public system in the first place. |
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A master stroke-it will solve the pension problems, boost the economy and the exchequer in one fell blow. |
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However, the Government remains unaware of the cost to the exchequer of an additional 33 tax schemes. |
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In response the government need only point to the huge gain that has accrued to the exchequer from lowering corporation and capital taxes. |
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Just as the finance available to the exchequer varies every year, the priorities on which it ought to be spent change dramatically over time. |
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Last Tuesday, the government published its first quarter exchequer returns. |
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By 2005 the ensuing renewed prosperity could be apparent, with more cash coming into the exchequer to spend. |
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There will be no further exchequer funding, and the agency is now depending on rental income. |
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Nevertheless, the state exchequer still stands to gain from the fines collected by the police. |
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Just think what even a small portion of this sum would do for the Irish exchequer. |
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At last the public exchequer has recognised the need for support and encouragement of the civilising Arts of life as a part of their duty. |
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The squeeze on the public exchequer also affects welfare expenditure adversely. |
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Thus, the direct burden on the public exchequer in creating infrastructure assets could further increase. |
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Is the trade-off of high-status acquisitions against parental childcare an issue that needs redressing with exchequer funds? |
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This was prompted by Fianna Fail's withholding of land annuities to the British exchequer. |
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Unemployment is widespread, inflation has turned the Zimbabwean dollar into Monopoly money, the exchequer is bare and foreign aid is being cut. |
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The former chancellor of the exchequer looms into the room, clutching his camera. |
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Carbon taxation should be fiscally neutral, and not a revenue-raising measure for the exchequer. |
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The President had no option but to dissolve the House and order a mid-term poll which cost the exchequer a king's ransom. |
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The Indian exchequer makes hefty investments in education and training these highly skilled migrants. |
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At the moment the central exchequer or the taxpayer, is paying for this, yet many do not benefit. |
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In addition to damaging patients' health, poor nutrition and the consequent increase in hospital stays may be costing the exchequer millions of pounds each year. |
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Goods found to infringe an intellectual property right may be forfeited to the exchequer. |
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It leaked, riling Mr Cameron and George Osborne, the chancellor of the exchequer. |
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Gordon Brown loved being Chancellor of the exchequer, because finance is the one thing he really knows about. |
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We are confident that by stimulating retail activity across the country the exchequer would increase the direct and indirect tax take. |
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The chancellor of the exchequer calls the prime minister a liar. |
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Mr Darling was chancellor of the exchequer during the financial crisis an impossible, belittling job. |
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It's written by the wife of the man likely to be Britain's next chancellor of the exchequer. |
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Pakistan's commitment to the Kashmir issue made refurbishing of the army a priority at whatever cost to the exchequer. |
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The money for the two aircraft will come from central exchequer funds. |
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The position differs where the security given by the debtor comprises marketable securities, such as bearer bonds, share warrants, scrip, or exchequer bills. |
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Pushed by Gordon Brown, Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, the new rules have a clear moralistic streak. |
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His unlikely ally in this mission is his current hero, the chancellor of the exchequer, George Osborne. |
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So we are receiving significantly more from both clinics and the central exchequer. |
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Documents of the exchequer show him sending letters threatening officials if they did not pay money. |
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In the great unlikelihood that the home secretary will change his mind, they then have an opportunity to appeal to the chancellor of the exchequer who has set up a special commission. |
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Of serving politicians, perhaps only George Osborne, the chancellor of the exchequer, and Alex Salmond, Scotland's first minister, rival him for sheer wiliness. |
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Since inaugurating the age of austerity in 2010, the chancellor of the exchequer has imposed a public sector pay freeze, signalled an end to universal child benefit and tightened spending across government. |
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A video of George Osborne, Chancellor of the exchequer... skipping rope. |
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A British prime minister feuding with his chancellor of the exchequer. |
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George Osborne, Britain's new chancellor of the exchequer who is readying his country for fiscal frugality, crowed that the G20 had come round to his way of thinking. |
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There has been no progress in establishing a single exchequer for the whole country, despite the advice of the international financial institutions. |
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Normandy was also governed through a growing system of justices and an exchequer. |
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One of the positive characteristics of the Netherlands programme, as I have said before, is the special attention it gives to the impact of the ageing of the population on the exchequer over the coming years. |
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Consequently, the Irish Government was forced to increase borrowing, which has resulted in an exchequer deficit that means Ireland will be spending a third more than it's collecting in tax revenue by the end of the year. |
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The flow of income from the New World proved vital to his militant foreign policy, but nonetheless his exchequer several times faced bankruptcy. |
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Yet during his reign he became a fiscally prudent monarch who restored the fortunes of an effectively bankrupt exchequer. |
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Additionally, the exchequer had to bear the cost of the ongoing military presence in Wales, including maintenance of the castles. |
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These were feudal tenants who held their lands from the King, and would pay their dues directly to the exchequer. |
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In 1372 he was one of the auditors of exchequer and in 1373 a clerk of audit. |
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Nonetheless, William was able to reconstitute the royal bench of judges and reopen the royal exchequer. |
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During the reign of Henry, there had been corruption in the exchequer. |
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Roger of Salisbury began to develop the royal exchequer after 1110, using it to collect and audit revenues from the King's sheriffs in the shires. |
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General Ma had been using the bank, a branch of the Government of China's exchequer, to arrange for silver currency to be transported to Baotou to use it to sponsor the trade. |
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They were now often lesser men appointed by the exchequer, rather than coming from important local families, and they focused on generating revenue for the King. |
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Michael McGrath is right when he says the industry never wanted to be subvented by the exchequer, but it was Fianna Fail policy that has led us to this situation. |
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In Normandy, Henry restored law and order after 1106, operating through a body of Norman justices and an exchequer system similar to that in England. |
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He also operated an exchequer court at Caen that heard cases relating to royal revenues and maintained a number of king's justices who travelled across the duchy. |
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After 1166, Henry's exchequer court in Westminster, which had previously only heard cases connected with royal revenues, began to take wider civil cases on behalf of the king. |
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