Press
in sentence
1835 examples of Press in a sentence
According to Bush’s
press
spokesman, the growth in world demand for oil – in Asia, for example – was one of the causes of the high price of filling the tanks of gas-guzzling Sports Utility Vehicles, as well as more modest family cars, at America’s pumps.
And Kouchner himself, to the cynical amusement of the French press, has retreated radically from his insistence on an immediate intervention to protect refugees and internally displaced people in Darfur from further slaughter by the Sudanese government-backed Janjawid militia.
The only institution that can crank up the printing
press
– the European Central Bank – will never resort to monetization of fiscal deficits.
Of real significance here is the
press
service, All4Syria (www.all4syria.org),
At his afternoon briefing, White House
press
secretary Jay Carney confirmed that Obama was indeed unharmed.
The issue is not only what could be lost in the race to the bottom in which many EU national governments are now engaging, but also the manipulative anti-EU sentiment coming from many quarters of the European press, which appears intent on pushing various national leaders into another budget showdown.
While both the foreign and local
press
refer generally to “reforms,” or lump together education, labor, financial, fiscal, energy, telecommunications, and political reforms, there are significant differences among them.
When Paquim was one of the last relatively unmuzzled
press
voices in Brazil, its cartoonists were arrested, and a live bomb was found in the magazine’s offices.
It was a moment manufactured to
press
Trump on the point.
November’s much-celebrated climate agreement between Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping, and the interim “joint plan of action” between Iran and its international interlocutors on the country’s nuclear program (essentially two unilateral statements linked by a
press
release), are but two recent examples.
Moreover, Putin’s project to safeguard “great Russian statehood” from the disarray of the post-Soviet era has seen the imprisoning of “dishonest” oligarchs; the prosecution of an “irresponsible” press; and the establishment of his personal dictatorship over the rule of law.
Apostles of monetary expansion believe that all you have to do is speed up the printing
press.
Robert Rubin and Kent Conrad warned him that the
press
would not interpret his testimony as being balanced, and that Congress would interpret it as an excuse to abandon fiscal discipline.
Whatever happened between the former managing director of the International Monetary Fund and his accuser, the fact that he was arrested and paraded in front of the
press
as a criminal suspect has been much criticized in France.
But, because euro membership precludes that option, financially sound Northern European countries would once again be called upon to help with European Central Bank loan guarantees and financial transfers, while tolerating the newly added eurozone members’ self-service with the printing
press.
So its failure to
press
the United States to redress the mortgage-market vulnerabilities that precipitated the current financial crisis indicates that much remains to be done.
Since the
press
in all three countries is almost autistic in its refusal to reflect anything but the “national” point of view, these politics are never properly explained.
There was one exception to the general story of Depression-era bank runs: Italy, where Mussolini’s fascist government controlled the press, including the financial
press.
Although the major Italian banks were constructed on the same model as the German and Austrian banks whose collapse had ignited the global conflagration, and although the Italian banks were just as insolvent, the
press
never discussed these unpleasant problems.
For all his contempt for the “dishonest media,” Trump was ecstatic about the positive
press
coverage his bipartisan move received.
The IMF’s concerns are valid, but the Fund’s idea is being resisted fiercely, owing to fears of political contagion: other debt-distressed eurozone countries might
press
for equal treatment.
Given Cameron’s opposition to Juncker’s candidacy for the Commission presidency, the abuse to which Juncker has been subjected by the British press, and Hill’s lack of centrality within British politics, Cameron may be justifiably nervous when Juncker announces his appointments to the new Commission.
Hu will urge Obama to resume bilateral talks with North Korea under the Six-Party umbrella; and he may
press
China’s position that, in the long term, economic engagement is more effective than sanctions in changing North Korea’s behavior.
Politicians — like President Jacques Chirac in France, Premier Silvio Berlusconi in Italy and a number of European finance ministers -- continue to
press
for fixed, even lower, interest rates.
The US should use its political clout with Albania and Kosovo to
press
for a thorough investigation, and for criminal proceedings against anyone who is implicated.
Another option is for the US to
press
for a Trans-Pacific Partnership.
The resulting explosion of critical
press
stories then causes everything – all activity, all initiative – to stop.
That requires instituting 24-hour
press
operations centers and elevating Internet operations and other channels to the status of traditional twentieth-century
press
relations.
Magufuli’s assault on
press
freedom has been particularly troubling.
Instead of rejecting monetary theory and history, the army of Wall Street soothsayers should look beyond the Fed’s
press
releases and ask themselves: Does it make sense to throw out centuries of experience?
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