And yet today he faces a recall effort that could very well end his presidency two years before his term expires. |
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After Tito's death, the presidency was shared between the states in rotation. |
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The presidency of the association is a one-year position elected by the constituent members. |
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In the election of 2000, the party in effect abused the judicial power to seize the presidency for itself, and this time the attempt succeeded. |
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Coral Harbour mayor and former NAM president Johnny Ningeognan won the presidency by acclamation last Saturday. |
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The peace accords divided the province into three separate ethnic areas with a federation presidency. |
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Indeed, since the Supreme Court handed the presidency to Bush the watchwords of the Democratic Party have been bipartisanship and reconciliation. |
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Could there be a more fitting end to the Italian presidency than this bold example of jobbery? |
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His opponent for the Fifa presidency was a Jordanian who won more than a third of the vote but pulled out rather than force a second round. |
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The presidency of the council and the right to chair and set the agenda for council meetings changes hands every six months. |
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This collegial executive system would last until 1966 when economic decline and social unrest led to the readoption of a unipersonal presidency. |
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Do you detect a new aggressiveness by journalists in covering this presidency? |
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So the future is very wide open I think in terms of outcomes for this presidency. |
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The keystone of Indonesia's political system, rooted in the constitution of 1945, is a strong presidency. |
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But Republican Party bosses, fearful of his independence, managed to kick him upstairs to the vice presidency. |
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There are more than a half a dozen candidates for the presidency, so there is democracy of a kind. |
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The Guardian Council first barred the reformist candidate from running for presidency. |
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Last month, a referendum in Egypt approved constitutional changes allowing competitive elections for the presidency. |
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The British presidency should aspire not to be the relaunch of the European project but to prepare the ground for that relaunch. |
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The separate presidency armies were combined in 1895, and regiments were renumbered to produce a unified list. |
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The constitution was amended again in 1996 to set new limits on the presidency. |
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Each new revelation was the smoking gun that was going to end his presidency. |
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The major policy issues of any modem presidency cut across all those old boundary lines. |
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The signs were that the presidency could ultimately be decided in the big swing states of Ohio and Florida. |
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However, the extent to which these findings would apply to women seeking the presidency or vice presidency is unknown. |
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In 1974, when the Watergate revelations were rocking the presidency, the would-be assassin went over the edge. |
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The presidency of the Council of Ministers rotates between the member governments at six-monthly intervals. |
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The presidency of the G8 rotates between the group's member nations on an annual basis. |
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We are in favour of a rotational presidency and for an opportunity for each country to participate actively in EU foreign policy. |
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Part aristocrat and part rough-hewn soldier, Jackson represented a new kind of politics and a new conception of the presidency. |
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Though Arthur was initially shocked by his ascent to the presidency, he rose to the occasion. |
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Upon Yushchenko's assumption of the presidency he immediately arranged to visit Moscow. |
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As might be expected, he does not clearly express his stance even though he talks about the power of the presidency. |
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In Murphy's account, the mainspring of Douglas's public career was his aching, but never fulfilled, ambition for the presidency. |
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I spend much of my time in Brussels, and the British presidency is now widely regarded as a busted flush. |
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But his political analysis was on the mark, even if he falls short of the presidency. |
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He often seems to see-saw on issues, and even his advocates find this to be a very weak point in his campaign for presidency. |
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The presidency would become increasingly titular and ceremonial, relying on advisors to run the day to day affairs of government. |
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Two months into his second term, he is in one of the toughest political binds of his presidency. |
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Yet the presidency and the legislature appear bent on dealing with each other. |
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I'm not sure that's a good bet, because I think they're giving up a tool of the modern presidency, but they think it serves them better. |
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Empirically speaking, a governor's career is far better suited than a senator seat to have a tilt at the presidency. |
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According to him, during his presidency the group had shown him scant respect. |
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The report was questionable, he said, given the fact that other ministers who were also running for the presidency were not being blackballed. |
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Even she, on her fifth try for the presidency, has shyly brought her boyfriend to the fore. |
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Already, party members are coming to blows, picking candidates not just for the presidency, but for parliament. |
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Or was his presidency just a series of transient, small-bore initiatives overshadowed by his impeachment? |
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Only Bosniaks, Serbs, and Croats are allowed to run for the presidency or for the House of Peoples. |
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Welcome to a nationally televised debate between the leading contenders for the presidency of the United States. |
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The presidency has identified the summit as the beginning of a social compact between the government, business, civil society and labour. |
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Jimmy Carter's presidency was in trouble and the whole world seemed to be close to the brink. |
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Sophie, who has been a Brownie herself, takes over the presidency following the death of Princess Margaret in February last year. |
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These new commitments were all the more remarkable for their achievement under the presidency of one the EU's four non-aligned member states. |
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The vested interests believe they have a much better chance of having the new legislation killed under a Greek presidency. |
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By 1981, when he won the presidency, it was a thing of the past, and the Party a spent force. |
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Already a string of former generals and right-wing politicians are lining up for the vice presidency. |
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She retains the vice presidency and would take over the presidency if Estrada were to resign or be forced out of office. |
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His was a conception of the presidency in which there was little room for the bully pulpit. |
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He said that they got lots of complaints that they were papering over his faults and mistakes and glorifying his presidency. |
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As Reagan's vice president Bush learned to live with voodoo economics and suffered the consequences in a one-term presidency. |
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Before it fades away entirely, though, Hitchens does a number on the Kennedy presidency. |
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Rosalynn saw the first ladyship as a position that, like the presidency, makes its occupant accountable to all the people. |
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In November, she convincingly won the presidency in a runoff against her soccer-star opponent. |
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After all it was thanks to US and European financial and political backing that he occupies the presidency. |
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The Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center also features research materials on the Hayes presidency and local Ohioan history. |
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They played their cards right and now expect to either get the presidency or bring some Arab areas under their control. |
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The youth, the loyal family, the carefreeness, the beauty, the presidency itself are lost illusions. |
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His threshold challenge tonight is to convince the American people that he is prepared to be a heartbeat away from the presidency. |
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But officials are loath to discuss the mysterious osmosis that seems to exist between the presidency and government. |
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The presidency has on a number of occasions played a crucial role in favouring one or other side. |
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Britain must use its position as chair of the G8 and its presidency of the EU in 2005 to push real reform through those bodies. |
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The institution responsible for initiatives, chairing meetings, and implementing decisions was the presidency, rotating between member states. |
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First, both leaders overcame their opponents by a small margin and assumed presidency at a relatively young age. |
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In 1960, he successfully managed his brother John F. Kennedy's campaign for the presidency. |
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The chief justice of the supreme court has stepped into the presidency, as stipulated in the constitution. |
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Ralph Nader announced his latest run for the presidency, amid press hoopla. |
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A last-minute story has surfaced, designed apparently to damage the Bush effort for the presidency. |
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With the controversial outcome of the closely victorious election, his party gained control of the presidency. |
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Then came the latest of the many myths that constitute the fable of the modern American presidency. |
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Almost every other Illinoisan who ran for the presidency was nominated at a convention in Chicago. |
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His losing bid for the presidency in the war election of 1864 would see much more impassioned rhetoric. |
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The veteran phonetist, Alexander Melville Bell, has accepted the presidency of the newly formed section. |
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It is a cruel twist of fate, especially with a new presidency that few expect to benefit the poorest of Americans. |
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The independent counsel's unprecedented challenge to the presidency evoked the most feeble and cowardly response from these quarters. |
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Exploring situations when the presidency is in extremis will allow me to consider whether there is an irreducible minimum of presidential power. |
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It's an examination of Roosevelt's years after he left the presidency at the age of fifty. |
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During his presidency, Taylor continued to battle insurgents who opposed his rule. |
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Carter had to cling by his fingertips to victories in Ohio and Mississippi to claim the presidency. |
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Stacy is running for the presidency and needless to say his wife and daughters don't know about his little playmate. |
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Well, I think his father had a certain contempt for the public relations factor in the presidency. |
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Its fifth volume, on Washington's presidency, was so contentiously Federalist that Jefferson considered writing a rebuttal. |
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Why should the oldest coot in the majority party be the one who is in line for the presidency? |
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Back when he was first campaigning for the presidency, he seemed to epitomize his country's isolationist tendencies. |
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The view that this was to be an isolationist presidency was fundamentally mistaken from the outset. |
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Clearly, no amount of planning guarantees a flourishing institution or a successful presidency. |
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But we are concerned because there is a strong presidency without countervailing institutions. |
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It was one of the keys to his having two full terms in the presidency, a kind of thumbs-up demeanor. |
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During Jefferson's presidency a friend observed him on his way to church, carrying a large prayer book. |
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The Danes hold the presidency of the EU and Denmark is one of its largest fishing nations. |
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The image we see is of an aloof presidency, presiding over dysfunctional government agencies. |
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They are constitutionally excluded from holding the presidency or the premiership. |
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Losing the presidency is losing the presidency whether or not the election is close. |
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All presidents on assuming the presidency receive the same formal constitutional powers. |
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We've heard the presidency called the loneliest job in the world, a splendid misery, whatever. |
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Most supporters of the candidates believe their machinery will do the job to win the presidency. |
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In 1941 Maloney defeated the Communist candidate in a crucial election for the Labor Council presidency. |
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In effect, Congress delegated the war power to the presidency but reserved the right to force removal of the troops. |
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And I like to say that I knew right then and there that he'd be vice president and would be a candidate for the presidency. |
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I think we all know that the presidency is tremendously hard work, even for a president like this one who keeps notoriously light hours. |
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While seeking the presidency and while in office, Mr. Reagan was attacked by plenty of Republicans. |
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Unlike any other elected office, the American presidency first and foremost is charged with keeping us safe and secure. |
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What is the White House doing differently now to react to what is obviously a terrible political period for this presidency? |
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President Polk during his presidency lusted for more land than the country had ever before controlled. |
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In domestic policies his presidency coincided with a period of considerable economic prosperity. |
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Well, I don't think when you're talking about the history of a presidency the job simply is to unify the country. |
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And it, also, comes on the first day of the U.S. presidency of the Security Council. |
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That man owes her big time, both for his presidency and now the chance to shape the supreme court for a generation. |
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Yet he never solicited money for his presidential library during his presidency. |
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Glenn served as a policy analyst in the White House Office of Domestic Policy during the presidency of George H.W. Bush. |
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Yet this does not mean that some critical observations cannot be made about the role of Eucharistic presidency as it has evolved. |
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It was self-evident that the presidency at the Eucharist should be given to those commissioned by ordination for this work. |
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Senegal is a moderately decentralized republic dominated by a strong presidency. |
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Election defeats are being interpreted by some as a referendum on the presidency. |
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He established himself as the champion of the working people and that helped propel him to the presidency. |
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The history of Charles Taylor's grab for the presidency is one full of controversy and question. |
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He also demonstrated the limits of the government and the presidency to produce social change and to pursue an activist foreign policy. |
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They rejected a proposal that would have augmented the powers of the already dictatorial presidency. |
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Apart from Yusril, several cabinet ministers and the vice president are currently eying the presidency. |
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Many Americans saw her as a calculating, cold egomaniac who was hell-bent on taking the presidency for herself. |
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The conclusion they drew was that the president was grooming his son for the presidency and setting the scene for his succession. |
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Of course there have been interesting disclosures about the man and his presidency. |
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To the last minute of my holding the presidency, I will responsibly do my duty. |
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Hayes asserted executive power through his appointments and in general upheld the authority of the presidency. |
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The run for the presidency is no joke, rife with political chicanery, espionage and blackmail. |
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After he won the presidency in 1990, the opposition joined with the Army to overthrow him and expel him from the country. |
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Thanks to the grudging support of voters like Rashed, Morsi won the presidency with 51.7 percent of the vote. |
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He has to either compromise with the opposition parties, or else use the bully pulpit of the presidency to sway public opinion which in turn would affect opposition policy. |
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Mangena said the understanding of the presidency was that it was possible for the president to appoint a non-member of Parliament to become a member of the Cabinet. |
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But I hardly mounted my high horse and made some kind of argument that this incident disqualified him from the presidency. |
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The test of his life will be how dextrously and how ethically he is able both to make and withhold the kinds of concession that might bring him the presidency. |
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The job of the modern presidency is so complex, so taxing, so intense that one's disposition even more than one's mental bandwidth may be the key to handling the job. |
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The president has a narrow window to turn his presidency around before people conclude he is a lame duck and no longer relevant. |
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We know that there have been 2.5 million jobs lost in his presidency. |
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It would put the presidency right back on the auction block. |
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The most vital moment in this revival, according to Knott, was when Hamiltonianism melded with the Progressive movement in the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt. |
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And when you work in the White House, stuff happens, like a Gulf oil spill that, fairly or unfairly, tarred his presidency. |
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With three years left to his presidency, we are reduced to the lowly ambition of executive orders. |
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Together with other scientists Boyle formed the Royal Society in London in 1660, but refused the presidency, as well as the provostship of Eton, and a peerage. |
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When tr again pursued the presidency in 1912 as leader of the Progressive Party, FDR identified with his cause. |
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Even before the presidency series began, there were two single-day conferences during the bicentennial of the U.S. Constitution on the legislative and judicial branches. |
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The presidency subjects American incumbents to perennial gut checks, testing their mettle. |
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When the presidency was an unbroken string of white men, there were no calls for him to run for the White House. |
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Together, the Council presidency, High Representative, and Commissioner for External Affairs form a troika which represents the EU as a whole in international diplomacy. |
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George Washington, as we all know, advised strongly, as he departed his presidency, that we should avoid all entangling alliances with foreign nations. |
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Moreover, a number of journalists have been imprisoned during your presidency. |
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Ortega has dismissed the allegations of autocracy and fraud that have afflicted his presidency as politically motivated. |
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Roosevelt won the presidency and his opponent, the forgettable Alton Parker, was said to have lost the election by a landslide. |
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But as his own presidency has amply demonstrated, only on the odd occasion does hope translate into reality. |
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Under Zambian electoral law Scott, 70, is barred from standing for the presidency himself. |
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But the Camelot image as applied to the Kennedy presidency had some unfortunate and unforeseen consequences. |
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In the his presidency, geopolitics trumped economic politics. |
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They will also elect three multi-ethnic state presidency members, a Serb Republic president and assemblies for 10 cantons in the Muslim-Croat federation. |
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Mutharika is seen as the odds-on favourite to win the presidency, mainly because the opposition has been unable to unite behind a single candidate. |
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Thirty years ago this week, Ronald Reagan made perhaps the most momentous decision of his presidency. |
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In 224 Antigonus marched south, organized his allies into a Hellenic League under Macedonian presidency, restored Achaean influence in Arcadia and in 222 invaded Laconia. |
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We ignore the comparatively free elections held in Iran, elections that bring the likes of a Hassan Rouhani to the presidency. |
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Abraham Lincoln grew his whiskers in the months between his election and inauguration, making full beards ubiquitous during the Civil War that dominated his presidency. |
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Winning the presidency needs political rather than physical courage. |
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At the moment, presidency rotates among the 15 members every six months. |
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He was a Rorschach test, vaulted into the presidency by positive perceptions and unrealistic expectations. |
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This North Star approach to the presidency is classic and deeply pragmatic. |
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As for Watergate, I learned so much more about it doing this book that it actually colors my view of the Nixon presidency. |
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His speech was dotted by a vocal, slight minority of students who were chanting slogans and rhymes in protest to his performance over seven years of presidency. |
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The Great Depression with its accompanying economic crisis led to a civilian coup in the early 1930s, which returned the country to a unipersonal presidency. |
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During his presidency education expanded and the government made efforts to diversify the economy to release Zambia from its dependence on copper. |
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Caving on the debt limit in 2011 was the political low point of his presidency. |
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Watergate did nothing to change the plebiscitary nature of the presidency, in which the public's unrealistic expectations create tremendous pressures on presidents to deliver. |
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Until his announcement of his bid for the presidency, the 2004 presidential election was looking more like a game of musical chairs for the same existing players. |
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The doddering quality of the entire Reagan presidency certainly gave rise to that notion. |
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If he wins the presidency, will Romney drag his party toward the center or become a doormat for the arch-conservative wing? |
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The coming two months are a critical period because it will lay the groundwork for the next presidency and possibly have an effect on determining its success. |
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But it serves his purpose though, which is to get people riled up, freaked out, amped up on adrenaline to fight tribal wars, which is the foundation of his whole presidency. |
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Any resolution to the war requires the repudiation of the Sri Lankan constitution, which entrenches communalism and the autocratic executive presidency. |
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In the election of 1860 in which Lincoln won the presidency, 80 percent of eligible voters went to the polls. |
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Soon after that, in September, Ilyumzhinov stepped down from the presidency of Kalmykia. |
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This is too long a gap for collective expertise to be retained because staff have moved on, so the learning has to begin anew with every turn at the presidency. |
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If a Republican wins the presidency in 2016, the payback from Democrats will be vicious. |
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Strauss-Kahn, remember, was supposed to win them the presidency before that Manhattan perp walk. |
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Adams's Federalist presidency was more bitter still, and the 1800 rematch produced charges of atheism and libertinism against Jefferson, and of monarchism against Adams. |
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It has been more than a decade since he lost the Nicaraguan presidency. |
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As vice president, Bush flopped in Iowa in 1988, but recovered and captured the presidency. |
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During his presidency, Federalists lit bonfires and held balls in his honor, carrying over earlier British practices of honoring the birthday of the sovereign. |
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What started as a website to promote his run for presidency in hours became a free-for-all for negative commentary. |
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We did it through the presidency, the presidency of the United States. |
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Even Yeltsin's drive to create a Russian presidency in 1991 envisioned using the new office not to displace the Soviet president but to force Gorbachev to follow his lead. |
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But the presidency is an office of great responsibility and consequence. |
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The rotund and lawyerlike Taft did not enjoy a happy presidency. |
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Some mention has been made of the election of 1888 when Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote to Grover Cleveland but took the presidency in the Electoral College. |
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As the genially malevolent talking head considers a bid for the presidency, a lot of people are asking themselves that question. |
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For example, some parties are not fielding candidates for the presidency by way of protest, but they can give their members the green light to vote anyway. |
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Five are in the race for the presidency, and because that means a split vote, it's likely the winner won't be decided before a run-off election in late September. |
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Lee succeeded to the presidency and remained in office for 12 years. |
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What has hurt grimes throughout is who won the presidency and how Kentucky views him. |
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These candidates embodied the factional difficulties that beset Davy's presidency and which eventually defeated him. |
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The twenty-second Amendment introduced term limits for the presidency. |
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Mr Lloyd-Hughes said that he will now start preparing an official manifesto for the vice presidency in a bid to gain the most votes. |
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Given those odds, the ridicule to which the vice presidency often is subjected is as undeserved as it is long-running. |
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Because of the president's lame duck status, the presidency was often hampered by congressional actions. |
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For Baker the year 1980 is crucial because it marked the triumph of the Reagan presidency, that is, Reaganism. |
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He was one of the many Islamists who resorted to militancy after being released from prison at the beginning of Anwar El-Sadat's presidency. |
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In Yemen, a general strike has been called by protesters to protest the presidency of that country. |
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After the DPJ overthrew the LDP in 2009, Tanigaki had vowed to restore the LDP to power during his presidency. |
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I know, I know, the mere thought of a right-wing Dallas billionaire buying the presidency gives you the hot fantods. |
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When he won the presidency they left the union to escape the 'ultimate extension' of slavery. |
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In addition, Penang, one of the states in Malaya, became the fourth most important settlement, a presidency, of the Company's Indian territories. |
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Lukashenko won the presidency in a run-off vote the next year. |
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Mr. Mulgrew needs to win a unionwide election next spring to secure the presidency. |
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Lieutenant General Ziaur Rahman took over the presidency in 1977 when Justice Sayem resigned. |
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For example, they may not be elected to a range of high political positions including the presidency. |
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Elected to the presidency in October 1999, Wahid is the first elected president in the history of Indonesia. |
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The commodore took over the powers of the presidency and dissolved the parliament, paving the way for the military to continue the takeover. |
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Under the Samaranch presidency, the office was accused of both nepotism and corruption. |
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Elected to the IOC presidency in the first round of voting on 16 July 1980 at the 83rd Session, he succeeded Lord Killanin on 3 August that year. |
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He acceded to the IOC presidency during the troubled political period of the Games of the XXII Olympiad in Moscow. |
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The long cloths and fine pullicats are produced in the presidency of Madras. |
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Italian Prime Minister, Romano Prodi, who shares the presidency with Portugal, is outraged at their intransigence. |
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On 16 July 2001, he left the seat of the IOC presidency to Jacques Rogge and became Honorary President for Life. |
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These were the final Olympic Games under the IOC presidency of Jacques Rogge. |
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Here he will be welcomed by the post Cold War hawks, who will deify him and hold him in great esteem because he is after Putin's presidency. |
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Putin returned to the presidency following the 2012 presidential elections, and Medvedev was appointed Prime Minister. |
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The member country holding the G7 presidency is responsible for organizing and hosting the year's summit. |
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Johnson was succeeded in the presidency by Myles Cooper, a graduate of The Queen's College, Oxford, and an ardent Tory. |
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On 19 August, the merger of the presidency with the chancellorship was approved by 90 percent of the electorate in a plebiscite. |
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The Portuguese presidency was appointed to the job of organising the programme for a signing ceremony. |
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However, the presidency imposes on people different behavior than the one they adopted when navigating pettier political byways. |
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Under Iwan's presidency the party formally adopted a policy of independence for Wales within Europe. |
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The unity of NATO was breached early in its history, with a crisis occurring during Charles de Gaulle's presidency of France from 1958 onwards. |
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Jasper laments the downfall of the Peruvian presidency of Alberto Fujimori and describes those who facilitated his downfall. |
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It is normal for the presidency to be held for one year, but on some occasions it has been held for longer. |
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But despite gaining the support of Nigeria's securocrats, it is ordinary citizens who will ultimately judge Buhari's presidency. |
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From that decision, invisibly, the presidency began to change. |
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Thus prepared, he ordered them to meet in special sessions under the presidency of a cardinal appointed by him. |
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In Nicosia, Glafkos Clerides assumed the presidency and constitutional order was restored, removing the pretext for the Turkish invasion. |
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During the second half of 2013, Lithuania assumed the role of the presidency of the European Union. |
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But since then, the ANC and Jacob Zuma's presidency in particular has lurched from crisis to crisis. |
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An ardent Federalist, Marbury was active in Maryland politics and a vigorous supporter of the Adams presidency. |
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He turned the powers that had been vested in the presidency over to Yeltsin. |
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Russia accepted presidency of the BRICS group, taking over from Brazil earlier this month. |
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It is unique for the presidency to stay within one club, and is a tribute to the dedication and hard work of MASC members. |
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All this has been an act of revenge for Sir Stanley Rous having lost the FIFA presidency in 1974 to Joao Havelange. |
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The historical edifice of the Palace of San Telmo is now the seat of the presidency of the Andalusian Autonomous Government. |
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He called that pliant decision the biggest mistake of his presidency. |
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The planter elite dominated the southern Congressional delegations and the United States presidency for nearly 50 years. |
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Since January 2014 the Republic of Angola holds the presidency of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region. |
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After many years as a party leader, she finally ascended to the presidency. |
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The year is 1940, and Lindbergh runs an anti-war campaign for the presidency, and win. |
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General concern for Romney's presidency is that, like his Republican predecessor, he could turn out to be a warmonger and a unilateralist. |
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And we're going to award the presidency to a woman who's enabled the depredations and exploitation of women by that cornpone husband of hers? |
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Although during Ulate's presidency Costa Rica had only the Guardia Civil, the Treaty had the Costa Rican government's support. |
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At the session, Austria handed over the 6-month rotating presidency of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe to Azerbaijan. |
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The Governor of each presidency or province represented the Crown in his capacity, and was assisted by a ministers appointed from the members of each provincial legislature. |
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He was the first Republican Party candidate to win the presidency. |
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The Kennedy Compound in Hyannis Port was President Kennedy's summer White House during his presidency, and the Kennedy family continues to maintain residences on the compound. |
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John Tyler was expelled from the Whig Party in September 1841, and remained effectively an independent for the remainder of his presidency, later returning to the Democrats. |
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Therefore, any territory or province that was added by conquest or treaty to a presidency came under the existing regulations of the corresponding presidency. |
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Early in his presidency, Marcos initiated numerous infrastructure projects but was accused of massive corruption and embezzling billions of dollars in public funds. |
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Ernest was a historian specializing in the presidency of Herbert Hoover. |
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These gatherings, subject to presidency by higher ranking bishops, usually make important decisions, though the synod or council may also be purely advisory. |
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Each bishop is selected from resident members of the ward by the stake presidency with approval of the First Presidency, and chooses two counselors to form a bishopric. |
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Walker usurped the presidency of the Republic of Nicaragua in 1856 and ruled until 1857, when he was defeated by a coalition of Central American armies. |
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Although they only held the presidency for 30 of those 43 years, they were the power behind the other presidents of the time through their control of the National Guard. |
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Once a General Election has been announced by the king, political parties nominate their candidates to stand for the presidency of the government. |
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Davy was only 41, and reformers were fearful of another long presidency. |
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The next rotating EU presidency, Lithuania, will propose the discussion of Bulgaria's accession to the Schengen area despite opposition from some Member States. |
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His presidency has been characterised by constant about-turns and retreats as soon as it encounters a small difficulty or mild protests against a decision. |
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On his part, Greek Minister of Shipping and the Aegean, Miltiades Varvitsiotis said the EU sea maritime policy is one of the main priorities of the Greek presidency. |
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Lili Young, Marni Hugo and Scarlett Owen, all eight, joined a small group of snorkellers at a special event marking the handover of the British Sub-Aqua Club presidency. |
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As of this Saturday the chairmanship of the party and the prime ministership have become fully dependent and subservient positions to the presidency. |
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The ANC fully supports Zuma to run for the presidency, Duart said at the launch of the party's Western Cape manifesto at Delft township on the outskirts of Cape Town. |
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A file picture taken on December 13, 2010 shows then security chief of ousted strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Ali Seriati, at the presidency hall at the airport in Tunis. |
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A functional analysis comes next, to uncover the numerous ways in which ideology and ideologues might be expected to influence the modern presidency. |
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Republicans who like the idea of a Christie presidency should ask themselves whether they can trust him to fill those seats with true constitutionalists. |
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Long an antinuke party, the DPP publicly called for scrapping the plan to build the fourth plant, which the Legislative Yuan approved before Chen's election to the presidency. |
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A cover note asks the Belgian Embassy in Cairo to transmit the letter and the draft to Belgian FM Steven Vanackere, who now holds the rotating EU presidency. |
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The principal institutions of the Republic of Madagascar are a presidency, a parliament, a prime ministry and cabinet, and an independent judiciary. |
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Hariri's endorsement of Aoun for the presidency on Thursday is a dramatic and expedient marriage of opposing political camps that have been at each other's throats for years. |
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He expounded often on the dangers of the imperial presidency. |
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It officially became part of the royal council machinery under the presidency of John de la Pole, Earl of Lincoln in April 1484, based at Sandal Castle in Wakefield. |
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Napoleon also significantly aided the United States when he agreed to sell the territory of Louisiana for 15 million dollars during the presidency of Thomas Jefferson. |
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Following the Civil War and particularly during and after the presidency of Theodore Roosevelt, direct intervention in Latin America and elsewhere expanded. |
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Lebanon has shown once again that it is a land of dazzling deals and mercurial personalities, including in the realm of the national presidency itself. |
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In 1893, the club's initial reorganisation was completed and was finalised after Ellison died in 1898 and Hawke assumed the club presidency as well as captaincy. |
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Finally, it was under his presidency that the Summer and Winter Games were organised every two years, instead of in the same year, still respecting the gap of four years. |
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On 23 June 1993, the inauguration of the Olympic Museum, representing the memory and spirit of modern Olympism, the work of his career, crowned his presidency. |
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The presidency of the Security Council rotates alphabetically each month. |
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The presidency of the Council is held by each of the members in turn for one month, following the English alphabetical order of the Member States names. |
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In 1989 Dafydd Wigley once again assumed the presidency of the party. |
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Until that the presidency was held by socialists or agrarian party. |
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After the First World War, further changes in the presidency are apparent. |
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The midterm elections in the US was the low point of Reagan's presidency. |
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