Pundits
in sentence
238 examples of Pundits in a sentence
Left-leaning
pundits
claim that the dictator’s daughter has the same autocratic vision as her father, though Park invariably prefers incremental change to radical measures, and cut her political teeth in the tough-minded politics of the GNP.
A “Merkel Plan” for EuropeLONDON – Ever since Europe’s economic crisis erupted more than four years ago, politicians and
pundits
have clamored for a grand solution, often invoking the example of America’s postwar Marshall Plan, which, starting in 1948, helped to rebuild Western Europe’s shattered, debt-ridden economies.
Pundits
will say that May lost the election because she performed robotically on the campaign trail, failed to answer journalists’ questions with conviction, and refused to debate Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who campaigned with more panache than anyone expected.
Pundits
decry a “double-dip” recession, but in some countries the first dip never ended: Greek GDP has been dipping for three years.
Today, many
pundits
argue that other countries’ rising power and the loss of American influence in a revolutionary Middle East point to the decline of “American hegemony.”
Nor did he mean the newspaper and television commentators and
pundits
whose writings provide the background music to politics.
There is nothing like a little economic growth to get pundits’ juices flowing.
Latin America’s time has finally come, too many
pundits
will keep saying.
Russia’s historical relationship with Ukraine is far more complex and nuanced than many Western
pundits
suggest.
Brazil’s Political ImpasseSANTIAGO – It was the kind of politics Brazilians thought they had left behind: One day the sitting president appoints a popular former president to her cabinet in order to save him from prosecution, and
pundits
are quick to conclude that he is in charge.
Many
pundits
regard this massive explosion of data as the new oil, even a new asset class.
Pundits
claim that Arabs cannot manage democracy.
Many
pundits
would have one believe that Ireland would have pulled through unscathed absent Germany’s blundering statements.
As much as
pundits
like to predict the collapse of the Saudi Arabian monarchy, they are likely to be disappointed once again.
This is a manmade threat to the world order that Atlantic-hugging policymakers and pundits, buffered by a continent and a large ocean to their west, may not fully appreciate.
Numerous
pundits
say that the FBI announcement will help Republicans down-ballot, but that’s pure speculation.
Trump’s War Psyche and World PeaceNEW YORK – When Donald Trump took office early last year, many
pundits
believed that he would settle into his presidency and pivot to normality.
Western politicians will cheer, and many
pundits
will express relief that less money will be flowing to undemocratic countries in the developing world.
If you agree with the many
pundits
who say stock prices have gone too high, and are much more likely to fall than to rise further, you may be right—but not if macroeconomic risk continues to drain from the system.
Not too long ago, many
pundits
doubted that China could make the shift from an economy dominated by labor-intensive manufacturing, exports, infrastructure investment, and heavy industry to a service economy underpinned by domestic demand.
In the months preceding the election, the mainstream media, pundits, and pollsters kept repeating that Trump had an extremely narrow path to victory.
Whether criticism of Israeli policies is right or wrong,
pundits
and politicians who speak out on the issue should not be lumped together with those who say that Hitler should have finished the job.
From Bill Clinton to Robert Redford, countless
pundits
blamed Sandy on climate change.
Pundits
have been saying last rites for the dollar’s global dominance since the 1960s – that is, for more than a half-century now.
And it’s not just
pundits
who think so.
Flummoxed by the clobbering from all sides,
pundits
who could not get the Trump election right prophesied that declining sales, falling readership, and flagging credibility heralded the demise of the newspaper, as we have known it.
All along Trump’s march to becoming the Republican Party’s presidential nominee, partisan commentators spun and re-spun his countless outrageous statements, sometimes with just a tut-tut of disapproval, while other on-air
pundits
all too often treated his malignant demagoguery as worthy of serious analysis.
To avoid future increases in this appetite, policymakers and
pundits
have focused on the so-called “moral hazard problem”: the “bad guys” must pay for their mistakes, lest they make them again.
The only parallel that could be drawn was limited to Asia:
pundits
wondered whether China was gradually becoming the modern equivalent of Germany under Kaiser Wilhelm II, with mounting regional tensions over China’s territorial claims resembling, to some extent, the situation in the Balkans on the eve of WWI.
On the one hand,
pundits
criticize it for not solving all the world’s ills.
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