In the coming months and years, the locus of political struggle will lie between the executive branch and the legislature. |
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There are also significant structural impediments to presidential control of the executive branch of government. |
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It would involve a flagrantly illegal and unconstitutional intervention by the executive branch into the affairs of the legislature. |
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The adoption of a budget is the principal means by which Congress holds the executive branch to account. |
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The responsibility rests entirely with Congress allocating the appropriations required and with the executive branch of the Government. |
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That the candidate also had significant executive branch experience and helped remake whole areas of the law was immaterial. |
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From a machine perspective, such jobs are far more useful than appointive positions in the executive branch. |
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This executive branch of government never functions as accurate and honest mirrors of the president. |
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The legislature has made such designations, and has been uncomfortable with the executive branch taking an activist role. |
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In recent years, the executive branch has been looking for a more solid ground for its claim of executive privilege. |
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The president, who heads the executive branch, serves for a single six-year term. |
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On the one hand there are the Hamiltonians who place a great deal of trust in the executive branch to execute policy in a good faith manner. |
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Similarly, within the executive branch, most cabinet meetings are closed to the public. |
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The reform of the executive branch of government should aim at making the cabinet fully responsible to the parliament. |
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But just how the executive branch should help to deal with cyberthreats is proving more of a conundrum. |
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In contrast, he explains, the executive branch has burgeoned, and continues to grow stronger. |
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Extensive powers were vested into the hands of the President who headed the executive branch of government. |
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He will have the opportunity to be in charge of the whole executive branch of the municipality. |
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South Korea's government has an elected legislature and a strong executive branch. |
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It will also study reports issued by the executive branch on a wide number of matters. |
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The executive branch, the Consul, is elected by popular vote. |
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The congressmen and the public interest group then form links with journalists, concerned pressure groups, officials in the executive branch, and individual citizens. |
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As such, it is often beneficial to have a member of Congress who believes in the message to deliver it to the executive branch. |
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There are always limits to how much can be accomplished solely by the executive branch under the United States Constitution. |
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From here on, presidential appointees to the executive branch will get their up-or-down vote. |
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And many presidents with little private-sector experience proved very effective at running the executive branch. |
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The Court fully understands and appreciates that the first priority of the executive branch in a time of crisis is to ensure the physical security of its citizens. |
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Such bodies can be standing or ad hoc, part of or attached to the legislative or executive branch or independent therefrom. |
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These were administered by new executive branch agencies that remade much of the nation's economy even as they augmented presidential power. |
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The author submits that the Supreme Court rejected these statements only because it was not independent from the executive branch. |
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This idea of making laws through the executive branch, going around Parliament, is something with which we have to deal. |
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We believe that the powers of the executive branch and the judiciary should be kept separate. |
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Access to the executive branch, however, has always been more elusive and problematic. |
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Parliamentarians also approved resolutions and reports on topics of importance, and endorsed policies formulated by the executive branch. |
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In most countries, policies are the province of the executive branch rather than parliament. |
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In France, cohabitation within the executive branch has sparked wide debate in years past. |
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The White House claims the Congressional agency is overstepping its bounds and unconstitutionally interfering with the functioning of the executive branch. |
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The 1963 constitution provides for a civilian government composed of a dominant executive branch, a National Assembly, and an independent judiciary. |
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The Constitution clearly describes three coequal branches of government, not an executive branch and two lesser ones. |
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A supine Congress like the present one is rapidly eroding the American founding fathers' vision of a legislature keeping the executive branch on a tight leash. |
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Neither in World War II nor in the Cold War did US administrations go so far in restricting civil liberties or arrogating unlimited power to the executive branch. |
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As far as they have been concerned, reliance on staff has served their purposes better than a system that relies on the cabinet or the executive branch departments. |
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Many of these studies found that human rights were often at heightened risk of abuse, even in democracies, where emergency powers were increasingly concentrated in the executive branch. |
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The executive branch of government is the Council of Ministers, which is composed of members of Tynwald. |
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Parliaments in many LDCs continue to be faced with a series of grave difficulties among which is the overbearing attitude of the executive branch, sometimes backed by the military. |
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We call on the National Assembly to exercise its mandate to provide for the needs of the Afghan people, support the development of democratic institutions and hold the executive branch to account. |
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I think parenthetically he is alluding to the point that I made, that I thought a lot of members on the government side were uncomfortable with their executive branch decision on this issue. |
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The executive branch also needs to change. |
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The executive branch has a right to indicate a preference, but to get involved in any kind of militaristic way or in any way that goes beyond stating its opinion is totally wrong in my judgment. |
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In public opinion, the press and the executive branch, parliamentarians are perceived as nay-sayers and time wasters, sometimes because parliamentary work involves a lot of ruckus and is so slow. |
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He simply announced what his executive branch would do unilaterally. |
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In accordance with the Constitution, the Advisory Council has legislative authority, approves the general budget and oversees the executive branch. |
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In many MEDA countries, a powerful executive branch exerts significant control and is subject to inadequate checks and balances from the legislative and judicial branches. |
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It had also established the Office of the Ombudsman as well as an independent anti-corruption commission, and had separated the judiciary from the executive branch and strengthened the rule of law in general. |
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He wished to know whether legal aid was widely available in Chile and whether the legal aid programme had been established by law or in implementation of an order from the executive branch. |
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Legal norms are imposed on the basis of the power conferred on the legislative authority and are applied by the executive branch, with the use of force if necessary. |
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The Special Rapporteur has received credible reports from concerned judges and lawyers about pressures put on them by the executive branch of Government, with the effect of reducing or annihilating their independence. |
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Over the years, the Congolese executive branch has had recourse to special judicial and quasi-judicial entities as a means of sidestepping the minimal due process requirements of regular courts. |
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It is clear to MONUC, though, that the CVR will get support only if its enabling act contains sufficient guarantees of independence from the executive branch. |
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Those meetings are chaired by representatives of the executive branch, so his participation would contravene the principle of separation of powers by subordinating the judicial branch of government to the executive branch. |
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The sponsors of this bill would do well to invest their energies in fulfilling their duty to oversee the actions of the executive branch, including the security forces. |
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Most executive branch agencies in the United States federal government have some adjudicatory authority. |
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With the Prime Minister as its leader, the Cabinet forms the executive branch of government. |
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The Transitional Federal Government officially comprised the executive branch of government, with the TFP serving as the legislative branch. |
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All police forces are the responsibility of the executive branch of any of the federal or state powers. |
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The executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service. |
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The parliament is primarily responsible for the formation of the executive branch and the Cabinet of Ministers, headed by the Prime Minister. |
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The executive branch is led by a Chief Municipal Executive Officer which answers to the Mayor. |
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The official languages of the executive branch of government of Puerto Rico are Spanish and English, with Spanish being the primary language. |
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The executive branch is headquartered in the Government Palace, located in the Plaza Mayor. |
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South Carolina has historically had a weak executive branch and a strong legislature. |
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The state government is headed by an elected governor who controls the executive branch of government. |
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The President is head of the executive branch of the federal government, as well as the nation's head of state and head of government. |
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Precedent has since established that the courts could exercise judicial review over the actions of Congress or the executive branch. |
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The Louisiana Register is the official journal of regulations and legal notices issued by the executive branch. |
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Lastly, the Human Resources department also became an executive branch and now oversees the administrative unit responsible for the corporation's employee pension fund. |
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A code of ethics was adopted for the executive branch. |
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In the U.S., the President is the head of the executive branch of government. |
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The extent of independence of the Federal Reserve Board from the executive branch has been a topic of ongoing study by economists and political scientists. |
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Lacking an economic division to give it ammunition to fight with Millis deliberately made the NLRB dependent on Congress and the executive branch for its survival. |
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As the executive branch, the Cabinet is responsible for proposing bills and a budget, executing the laws, and guiding the foreign and internal policies of Denmark. |
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Because of this coupling to the executive branch, German legal doctrine does not treat the Bundesrat as the second chamber of a bicameral system formally. |
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Many statutes give executive branch agencies the power to create regulations, which are published in the Federal Register and codified into the Code of Federal Regulations. |
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In many countries with a presidential system of government a person is forbidden to be a legislator and an official of the executive branch at the same time. |
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The Parliament of Ireland had control over only legislation, while the executive branch of government, under the Lord Lieutenant, answered to the British government in London. |
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Al-Kharafi told reporters that in the current session, the executive branch has around 60 priorities that need to be attained, while the legislative branch has 41 priorities. |
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Such additional elected officials serve as members of the executive branch, but are not beholden to the governor and the governor cannot dismiss them. |
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One revision to the version of the executive branch is the itemization of exemption case from the tax, including the obtaining of realty via urban renewal projects. |
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The traditionally strong executive branch tends to overshadow the Congress, whose role is generally limited to debating and approving legislation initiated by the executive. |
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The executive branch consists of the President and the Presidential Cabinet, which consists of ten ministers appointed by the President with the approval of the Nitijela. |
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In 1998, a constitutional reform, led by the government of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, introduced regulatory agencies as a part of the executive branch. |
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In the United States, many government agencies are organized under the executive branch of government, although a few are part of the judicial or legislative branches. |
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