President
in sentence
4412 examples of President in a sentence
A weak emperor (the
president
of the French Football Federation) chose an incompetent general (the coach Raymond Domenech), who failed to inspire mercenaries (the players) or to instill in them a sense of collective sacrifice and duty.
It was in Yugoslavia that Vojislav Kostunica was elected president, but his mandate comes solely from support in Serbia.
The time to do so is at the Zagreb Conference on November 24 called by France as the current EU
president.
They breathed life back into a civic tradition of Umuganda, where one day a month, citizens, including the president, gather together to weed their fields, clean their streets, and build homes for the poorest among them.
Why Talk to Iran?WASHINGTON, DC – June 12 marks the first anniversary of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s disputed re-election as Iran’s
president.
Germany’s
president
stepped down soon after the decisions – some say because of them.
French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde, who often complained about trade imbalances in Europe, should applaud these market reactions, which were unintentionally strengthened by her
president.
Putin’s ChoiceBRUSSELS – Vladimir Putin’s return to the Kremlin as Russia’s
president
was always a foregone conclusion.
A new president’s first task will be to return America’s economic competitiveness and self-confidence.
A new American
president
would do well to remember the disastrous consequences of protectionism in the 1920’s and 1930’s.
We all look to the next US
president
to re-engage with the world community and international organizations, accepting that even a superpower should accept the rules that apply to others.
We want a new
president
who will aim to make a success of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Renewal Conference in 2010 by scrapping more weapons, abandoning research into them, and challenging others to do the same.
Ahead of that, a new
president
should unleash America’s creative potential in boosting energy efficiency and developing clean technologies.
In the Middle East, Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert offered wise advice to the next US
president
upon his retirement.
In his first six months as president, Trump has wrought far more damage than any single CEO could.
Yet, as with the appalling comments he made before becoming president, Trump has recently gotten away with insulting an Irish reporter (by interrupting a call with Ireland’s prime minister to discuss her appearance) and the wife of France’s president, on whose physique he commented.
If the CEO of American Apparel couldn’t get away with such harassment, why should the
president
of the United States?
By contrast, Trump remains safe in his position as president, partly owing to the seemingly bottomless loyalty of many of his supporters.
One strong possibility is that the
president
would be charged with obstructing justice – both an impeachable offense and a crime.
Whether a
president
can actually be indicted is an unsettled question; but if Mueller believes that the
president
shouldn’t be indicted, he would submit his charges to the House, which would then decide whether to proceed with impeachment.
To be sure, America’s ties with Thailand and the Philippines have deteriorated somewhat during Obama’s second term, owing to the US president’s criticism of violations of democratic norms and human rights in both countries.
To be sure, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines may prefer a US
president
who does not trouble himself to criticize their governments’ human-rights abuses, corruption, or constitutional shenanigans.
That is what the country’s president, Dilma Rousseff, keeps telling Brazilians.
Biden did not point to a specific region of the world, but mentioned the Middle East, the Indian sub-continent, and Russia as the likeliest sources of trouble for the new
president.
Macron is the most pro-German French
president
imaginable, and he has boosted his credibility by pursuing difficult labor-market reforms and unveiling a Teutonically prudent budget.
America's Crisis ElectionCAMBRIDGE – On November 4, Americans will elect their 44th
president
amidst the worst financial turmoil the country has known since the onset of the Great Depression in 1929.
If elected, he would be the oldest incoming
president.
On the other hand, in a September poll that asked Americans to rate a series of foreign-policy goals for the next president, 83% ranked “improving America’s standing in the world” as most important.
And certainly the election of the first African-American as
president
would do wonders to restore the soft power that the Bush administration squandered over the past eight years.
Under US law, the
president
is required to certify to Congress every 90 days that Iran has not breached the agreement, and that the continued suspension of sanctions is “vital to the national security interests” of the US.
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