And so being a lapdog to the United States, or as he says deputy sheriff to the United States I think is an outrageous concept. |
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I guess he wouldn't be able to work anywhere else, unless the media outlet needs a lapdog. |
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Hearing her earrings jingling, I easily pictured her nodding like a lapdog. |
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In LA, they don't tell you to reach out to your fellow humans, they tell you to spend time with your lapdog. |
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Nick's friends rag him about being Suzanne's lapdog, especially after they find out Nick has offered to drive her to the airport. |
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My dog wouldn't be some little barking lapdog, it would be a full-size, slobbery, jumps up on you and gets you muddy dog. |
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As the men got older, a woman's influence sometimes softened at least the canine profile, usually via a cute lapdog to complement hubby's Cujo. |
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I predict this is where you will get the lapdog of big business interfering. |
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Instead of an ethics watchdog, he installed a lapdog who reports in confidence to the Prime Minister. |
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No wonder the lapdog commissioner never gained the public confidence so crucial to be effective in his office. |
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With Bill C-34 the Liberals have ensured that a new ethics watchdog for ministers will be an unaccountable, government controlled lapdog. |
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It was introduced in Europe until the late 18th century to become the lapdog idéal. |
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According to this statement Canada will go back and forth like a lost puppy or maybe a lapdog. |
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Or maybe not, because he's busy living in the moment with his peaceful lapdog Maui, forging a human-canine spiritual connection that no game of fetch could afford. |
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I mused on this for a while, not noticing the gentle brush of the wind on my cheeks, the insistent yapping of a nearby rat-like lapdog, nor the rumble of the Suburban traffic. |
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His allies suspect a plot to silence an awkward figure and to turn COSATU into a lapdog of the ruling party. |
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Except for a handful of lapdog leftist parties and a relentlessly harassed gaggle of human-rights groups, opposition, in effect, is outlawed. |
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That is some lapdog who keeps the Prime Minister protected from answering the difficult questions on ethics. |
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The lapdog ethics counsellor has advised the Liberal leadership candidates that they can keep raising money in secret. |
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Prof. Mahmood rightly observes that the commission can either be a lapdog of the government of the day or the watchdog of the rights of the underprivileged. |
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In other words, the so-called ethics watchdog was clearly always a lapdog. |
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Too often he has abdicated his responsibilities, demoting the Commission from 'guardian of the treaties' to lapdog of the most dominant Member States and most influential industries. |
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When Ozzy and Sharon go to Washington for the dinner, a yippie lapdog leaves his business on elegant Ritz Carlton carpeting. |
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There are many tasty interpretations here — the punishing punctilio of McKean's Sam, the lapdog loneliness of Saxe's Joey — but Eve Best's Ruth is the most revelatory. |
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Mr. Tom Lukiwski: They want a Liberal lapdog in that position. |
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We got an ethics counsellor who became a lapdog instead of a watchdog. |
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As my colleague from Nepean-Carleton mentioned earlier, the Liberals do not trust this commissioner any longer to do their will or their bidding as a lapdog. |
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Madam Speaker, earlier, the hon. member for Joliette said that the Conservative government looks like a lapdog compared to the U. S. government, as regards the free trade agreement with Colombia. |
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It is utterly ironic that the European Union institutions are basically in the process of becoming a subservient lapdog to globalisation without restriction or conscience. |
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As Bettina Schmitt, the curator, was visiting friends in Florence, she came across an ivory lapdog in the Palazzo Pitti and immediately recognised the hand of the master. |
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He is there as a mouthpiece, as a lapdog for the ministry. |
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If this were indeed so, the p and b in lip-service, laptop, lapdog, sob-story, adoptive, etc. ought also to be pronounced labiodentally. |
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By 1868 Chins were the lapdog of choice for upper class Japanese ladies, but the breed's popularity and numbers waned, so that individuals had to be imported. |
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My friend and your caucus colleague Senator Oliver succinctly and colourfully expressed it some time ago by saying that our constitutional role is to be a watchdog, not a lapdog. |
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