Executive
in sentence
908 examples of Executive in a sentence
During the campaign, he did not try to hide his preference for a strong
executive
presidency and unabashedly supported the AKP – violating the neutral stance that Turkey’s constitution requires the president to maintain.
The plum post of Head of Cabinet to the European Commission’s Luxembourger president, Jean-Claude Juncker, is a German, as was his predecessor when Portugal’s José Manuel Barroso ran the EU
executive.
As any corporate
executive
will tell you, brands can be consequential drivers of behavior.
As a result, his administration has been using
executive
orders to roll back many of the regulations that former US President Barack Obama introduced.
As a result, the NTC and the cabinet that it appointed, known as the
executive
committee, merely want to pass the baton of authority.
You must speak with the
executive
(committee).”
In the United States, as a matter of domestic law, it is an
executive
agreement, binding only on President Barack Obama’s administration.
An
executive
agreement made by one administration is not necessarily binding on its successor, but it would have to be explicitly repudiated.
The United States and Europe's mature democracies may function well enough with the "checks and balances" of divided government (though the Republicans' bid to impeach President Clinton a few years ago might suggest otherwise), but in Asia the failure to bestow
executive
and legislative powers on a single institution is usually a terrible drawback.
Cohabitation could very soon become a problem even in the quasi-democracy of Hong Kong, if voters there on September 12 elect a legislature hostile to Tung Chee-hwa, the territory's Beijing-anointed chief executive, later this month.
The spell was broken when Putin reasserted his grip on
executive
power.
There should be a highly professional
executive
team coordinating the international support efforts.
It should work closely with a professional
executive
team made up of native and diaspora Haitian professionals with relevant expertise.
They believe in a strong state with robust
executive
powers, but one used in defense of established interests, with little attention to market principles.
That attitude can be seen in the statement of a former Chinese foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, now a member of the State Council (the central government’s
executive
organ).
Voters would thus play a more direct role in choosing a new European chief
executive.
But the most important factor supporting America’s currency dominance is the institutionalized system of checks and balances that operates among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of its government.
The US legal system – independent from the
executive
and legislative branches of government – further supports the dollar’s global role.
Even the joint declaration signed by the British and Chinese governments in 1984, which set the stage for the 1997 handover, offered the somewhat imprecise promise that the chief
executive
would be appointed by China “on the basis of the results of elections or consultations to be held locally.”
As Jon Hilsenrath of the Wall Street Journal points out, William Dudley, then the
executive
vice president of the New York Fed’s Markets Group, presented staff research that sought, politely and compellingly, to turn the principals’ attention to where it needed to be focused.
Trump has also signed
executive
orders to bar nationals from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the US and to build a wall on the border with Mexico, among other things.
And his team has drafted additional
executive
orders that will reduce or even terminate funding for international organizations and withdraw the US from multilateral treaties.
On the US side, Trump’s draft
executive
orders are not as draconian as their titles suggest.
What the
executive
branch has relinquished, or been forced to give up, vested interests have seized.
The contempt conviction in May left the legislature and the government’s
executive
branch with very little room for maneuver.
Under the constitution’s 18th amendment, signed into law by Zardari in the fall of 2010, the president was required to give up almost all
executive
authority to the prime minister who, along with his cabinet, is accountable to the parliament.
The announcement by President Donald Trump’s administration that it is ending the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which President Barack Obama established by
executive
order in 2012, threatens to upend the lives of an entire generation.
What we saw on September 5, of course, is that an initiative begun by
executive
order can be dismantled through a counter-order by the executive’s successor.
Why We Need Political IslamMADRID – US President Donald Trump has put on the back burner an
executive
order that would designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist group.
If a country’s domestic politics are weak – no
executive
accountability, no genuine legislative oversight, and a poor relationship between citizen and state – its negotiator has a large win-set.
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