The executive wing have no intention of going back to the old days of social democracy and welfarism. |
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The company's executive vice president said the sale was pivotal to its reorganization. |
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This elegant chief executive has the business acumen of the Americans and the undeniable style of the Italians in her origins. |
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The team of four executive chefs also assists with cross training, consistency and quality assurance. |
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The author had a long career in journalism and his final post was that of executive editor of the European. |
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Regan's daughter, Courtney, is an account executive for an advertising agency in San Diego. |
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Like some libertarian Pontius Pilate, he washed his hands of any responsibility, skillfully uncoupling the role of the executive from execution. |
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Agency actions must adequately consider environmental justice issues, pursuant to the executive order. |
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The whole course of this area of jurisprudence is that similar functions can be discharged both on an executive basis and a judicial basis. |
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Every client should have their own account executive from the web developer who will look after the customer's interests. |
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Mary, who never received any domestic training from her mother at home, marries Jack, a business executive with a quick temper. |
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The plan reads like something a junior account executive cooked up during the first 10 minutes of a brainstorming session with the ad agency. |
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In almost every university also, the executive head was once upon a time a research fellow or ordinary lecturer. |
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Steiner will undoubtedly exercise his executive powers and quash any nascent independence declaration, yet the damage is already done. |
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The new account executive conceded that there were problems and promised to work with Continental to solve them. |
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The only thing that stands between us and the deep abyss of arbitrary executive power is the Rule of Law. |
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Main motions must be prepared in quadruplicate so the President, Secretary, executive assistant, and author of the motion have copies. |
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The Scottish executive plans to legislate to change the law, extending rights of adoption. |
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The executive administrator of the Rabbit Board admits that initial attempts to replace their founder have not been encouraging. |
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Plans for an official policy are expected to go to the executive committee in June or July. |
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The legislature has made such designations, and has been uncomfortable with the executive branch taking an activist role. |
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The ACTU executive and the national leaderships of a lot of unions have moved heaven and earth to brush the case under the carpet. |
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Jack joined the company in 1989 as a junior account executive and is now director for Scotland. |
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Terry Prendergast, chief executive of Marriage Care, which counsels couples on coping with the strains of wedlock, agrees. |
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Sentence was adjourned to June 7 for the executive to produce his companies' accounts. |
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He brings a wealth of executive experience from previous roles in both the public and private sector to the mutual, non-profit friendly society. |
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After 15 years, the executive as the source of political leadership ought to seek the actualisation of these outputs of democratic governance. |
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The entire executive would welcome the opportunity to make her acquaintance. |
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A measure that passed Congress and was signed by the executive might still be held in abeyance on constitutional grounds by a court. |
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Soon afterward, he began working as an account executive in the corporate sponsorship department of NBA Properties. |
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Sandy Needham, chief executive of Bradford Chamber of Commerce, said absenteeism tended to be higher in the public sector. |
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The main motions must be prepared in quadruplicate so that the President, Secretary, executive assistant, and author of the motion have copies. |
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As an executive who is responsible for financial affairs, he should not be washing his hands of the matter in such a way. |
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A radio executive said the Bush White House told them explicitly who they were expected to blackball from their airwaves. |
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Yet Morales has managed to harness his popularity to rewrite the national constitution, broadening executive powers. |
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Jocelyn Cooper was an Ar executive at Universal Records before joining her pArtner Matthew Morgan in producing AfroPunk. |
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Michael Solomon is the executive editor of byliner and the former features director of The Daily Beast. |
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An executive dashboard, for example, enables a CEO to see bank balances, a ranking of the top 10 sales reps, the top five customers, accounts receivable, and accounts payable. |
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So, for a month, I was an account executive with the Clippers. |
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He previously served as executive chef of Fiamma Osteria, Convivio, and alto. |
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Ten, twenty years ago a chief executive officer in an American company maybe made fifty to seventy times more than the lowest ranking employee in his firm. |
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Doran has no judicial experience and is the former executive director of the North Carolina Institute for constitutional law. |
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Alex Macedo, the boyish-looking president of Burger King North America used to be an executive at Brahma beer. |
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All seemingly performed by an executive which thinks itself above the law. |
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He mentions advertising sales executive Jim Norton, who followed Armstrong from Google and now is running aol. |
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Michael Rosen, executive vice president of communications at Autism Speaks, acknowledges that no one on the board has autism. |
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While King has shepherded The Good Wife, Commander in Chief was championed by ABC executive Anne Sweeney. |
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Article updated to include additional comments from executive director of the Montana Republican Party, Bowen Greenwood. |
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The two leaders met on the south lawn of the executive mansion, with a color guard, lawmakers and cabinet members looking on. |
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The closings continued for three more days, ending only when the executive director, Patrick Foye, belatedly stepped in. |
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One day, an executive from Madison Square Garden came by, had a ball, and offered to have beacher host his act at The Paramount. |
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Shortly after being laid-off as an account executive for Coca-Cola, Harris and his two fraternity brothers, Shaw and Smith, came together to further develop the idea. |
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One of these critics was William Borden, executive director of the congressional joint committee on atomic energy. |
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Her preparation sounds like normal due diligence by a conscientious executive for the task in hand. |
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Ms Gold started in her father's business as a junior at the age of 21 and rose through the ranks to become chief executive trying to take the business upmarket along the way. |
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During the convention, debates about the executive were shaped by the belief that Washington would be its first office-holder. |
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The Constitution clearly describes three coequal branches of government, not an executive branch and two lesser ones. |
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The executive director recently announced a staff reorganization. |
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As an account executive for JD Edwards, it is in my best interest to provide a real expectation level of the scope of a project, and determine if the client is a good fit. |
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The constituency most clamoring for executive action has already shown they expect little and will settle for nothing. |
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The company's chief executive has been denied a visa, in a move that surely means the already delayed October 21 start of the trial will be put back still further. |
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Todd Kincannon, a former executive director of the South Carolina GOP, says he wishes the Iraqis had killed an antiwar veteran. |
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Five of the seven SFSS executive positions, the jobs that come with the most responsibility and the highest stipends, have already been won by acclamation. |
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When an account executive scores a client engagement, consulting managers waste no time calling around to find out who's qualified and who's available for the job. |
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Chief executive David Atkinson and acting assistant director of education Murray Rose were travelling to Croydon with Mr Edwards to receive the award today. |
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Thinking and cognition can be inhibited, with executive function demonstrating particularly notable challenges. |
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We landed an executive room with a proper wet room for a bathroom. |
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Gary Cohen is executive vice president at bd and the founder of Together for Girls. |
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These orders must be specifically linked to his executive authority and must not contradict a statute passed by Congress. |
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In the U.S., the President is the head of the executive branch of government. |
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Instead, the executive enforces the law as written by the legislature and interpreted by the judiciary. |
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Truman was county judge of Jackson County, Missouri in the 1930s, an executive position rather than a judicial post. |
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Franz Janker has assumed a new position as executive vice president, Corporate Account Management. |
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Alessandro Anfossi, chief executive officer, QTS Italy, and Dr Amer Al Rawas, chairman of Dhofar Global, signed the agreement in Italy. |
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This was motivated in part by concerns about the historical admixture of legislative, judicial, and executive power. |
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The executive branch is headed by the mayor and includes other citywide elected and appointed officials as well as the civil service. |
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The plenary, formed by the 41 city councillors, has advisory, planning, regulatory, and fiscal executive functions. |
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Historically, the British sovereign held and directly exercised all executive authority. |
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The municipal executive is referred to collectively as the College van Burgemeester en Wethouders. |
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The Administrator has all the executive and legislative authority of a governor of an overseas territory. |
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The Mayor proposes policy and the GLA's budget, and makes appointments to the capital's strategic executive such as Transport for London. |
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The government of the City of Chicago is divided into executive and legislative branches. |
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The executive branch is led by a Chief Municipal Executive Officer which answers to the Mayor. |
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Geertman was the executive director of Alay Bayan Inc, a disaster relief group. |
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Peter MacLean, executive regional director of the school, says Angola is coming out of a civil war and wants to improve its economic development. |
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Importantly, there was no central executive power, and therefore laws were enforced only by the people. |
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Nasdaq OMX executive vice-president of corporate strategy Adena Friedman will also join the board. |
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Cheryl Whiskey Jack, executive director with Bent Arrow Traditional Healing Society, attended that symposium. |
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In Commonwealth realms, letters patent are issued under the prerogative powers of the head of state, as an executive or royal prerogative. |
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To find camps that are looking for year-round staff, talk to your local ACA executive director or visit www. |
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Former New York Water Taxi executive has been charged with selling the New York Wheel to the world. |
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He is also a member of the executive committee of the Texas Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association and a member of All American Wildcatters. |
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Ronda Pick is promoted to account executive in the agency's public relations group. |
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Signature Flight Support are present on the south side of the airfield serving executive aircraft that visit the Airport. |
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Since 2002, she has served as senior account executive with a consistent record of exceeding sales goals. |
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She will lead the film as heroine Kelsea Glynn as well as being an executive producer. |
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Screenwriter Paul Abbott, creator of Shameless, and television producer and executive Peter Salmon were also born here. |
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The Tofflers have also recruited as executive partners TV producer Al Burton and the tech-savvy film producer and entrepreneur Jeff Apple. |
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The League Council acted as a type of executive body directing the Assembly's business. |
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She was most recently an account executive at Fifth Third Bank's Wholesale Lending unit. |
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The parliament is primarily responsible for the formation of the executive branch and the Cabinet of Ministers, headed by the Prime Minister. |
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The governor was invested with general executive powers and authorized to call a locally elected assembly. |
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A management team including chief executive Peter Wheeler and senior players Martin Johnson and Neil Backare in temporary charge. |
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The government's powers include general executive and statutory powers, delegated legislation, and numerous powers of appointment and patronage. |
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The executive is referred to in the legislation as the Executive Committee of the Assembly and is an example of a consociationalist government. |
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The administrative head and chief executive of the university is its Principal and Vice Chancellor. |
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One of these is the Walloon Region, which is governed by the Parliament of Wallonia and the executive Walloon Government. |
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Weidman, chairman and chief executive officer of Celanese, is the 2009 chairman of the board of the American Chemistry Council. |
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In late May, the executive of the National Liberal Federation convened to plan the agenda for the following month's conference. |
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Under the British constitution, sweeping executive powers, known as the royal prerogative, are nominally vested in the monarch. |
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Historic Scotland is the executive agency of the Scottish Government, responsible for historic monuments in Scotland, such as Stirling Castle. |
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According to the Constitution, executive power is exercised by the President of the Republic and the Government. |
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For the names of the institutions, see List of legislative and executive councils of the Cantons of Switzerland. |
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An Interloc executive was subsequently indicted on an illegal wiretapping charge. |
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In addition to the administrative or executive duties in organizations, the chairman has the duties of presiding over meetings. |
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The Act creates a system of government with a separate executive drawn from and accountable to the legislature. |
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The pattern of executive functions within a Westminster System is quite complex. |
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Bradbury, president and chief executive officer of Amylin Pharmaceuticals, will provide a corporate overview. |
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Lastly, the head of state is in turn required to effectuate his executive power only through these responsible ministers. |
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Madagascar was again suspended by the African Union in March 2009 following the unconstitutional transfer of executive power to Rajoelina. |
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The first book, with 62 articles, establishes councils, courts, various executive officers and the powers assigned to them. |
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These simple executive tasks naturally gave the Prime Minister ascendancy over his Cabinet colleagues. |
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The sovereign exercises executive authority by making Orders in Council upon the advice of the Privy Council. |
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The Judiciary of the Bahamas is independent of the executive and the legislature. |
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The executive is the organ exercising authority in and holding responsibility for the governance of a state. |
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Under that act, the executive was to be headed by a governor appointed by the Secretary of State, who could consult the Governor General. |
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In April 2014 Nexus became an executive body of the new North East Combined Authority. |
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In 2009, the TV Series The Good Wife premiered with Ridley and his brother Tony credited as executive producers. |
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Renault is administered through a board of directors, an executive committee and a management committee. |
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Uruguay is divided into 19 departments whose local administrations replicate the division of the executive and legislative powers. |
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The school was found to be failing and was placed in Special Measures, with the headmaster and chief executive being immediately replaced. |
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Any crisis, whether it is a plant explosion or an executive caught with his hand in the cookie jar, takes on a life of its own. |
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Smith earned an executive producer credit, and the album marked his final official contribution to the band's discography. |
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The cabinet exercises most executive powers, and originates most of the bills that the parliament then debates and votes on. |
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It can be contrasted with the fusion of powers in some parliamentary systems where the executive and legislature are unified. |
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In September 2007, Charles Saumarez Smith became secretary and chief executive of the Royal Academy, a newly created post. |
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Burke took a leading role in the debate regarding the constitutional limits to the executive authority of the king. |
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In North by Northwest, Cary Grant portrays Roger Thornhill, a Madison Avenue advertising executive who is mistaken for a government secret agent. |
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The Mayor of Moscow is the leading official in the executive, leading the Government of Moscow, which is the highest organ of executive power. |
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The Roman senate appeared to possess the sovereign authority, and devolved on the emperors all the executive powers of government. |
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The executive power is formed by the Council of Ministers, the deliberative council of the Dutch cabinet. |
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An office of profit is a term used in a number of national constitutions to refer to executive appointments. |
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Asquith wanted to think it over, and at the December 1925 Federation executive he left the meeting before the topic came up. |
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Since antiquity, monarchy has contrasted with forms of democracy, where executive power is wielded by assemblies of free citizens. |
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The status can be cleared only by a successful appeal or executive clemency. |
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Constitution also prohibits an executive officer from being a Member of Congress. |
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Zellweger ended up becoming an executive producer on the film because she was dissatisfied with the script and wanted to get more involved. |
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The Colombian Municipalities are subdivided into boroughs with a local executive and an administrative board for local government. |
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The mayor is elected by direct popular vote to serve as the chief executive of the city. |
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The APA applies to both the federal executive departments and the independent agencies. |
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The head of government is the prime minister who, together with the cabinet, is responsible for executive government. |
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These common rooms are run by an executive committee, usually headed by a President. |
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All police forces are the responsibility of the executive branch of any of the federal or state powers. |
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The Transitional Military Council that came to power granted executive powers to King Moshoeshoe II, who was until then a ceremonial monarch. |
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If the executive and the majority of the legislature are from different political parties, then stalemate can occur. |
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The Government of the Czech Republic's exercise of executive power derives from the Constitution. |
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He also thought that to do so would erode states' rights by increasing federal executive power. |
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Historically, the British monarch was the sole source of executive powers in the government. |
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The chief executive of a central bank is usually known as the Governor, President or Chair. |
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Under the constitution of 1868, executive power is exercised by the Grand Duke and the cabinet, which consists of several other ministers. |
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The President exercises their executive power assisted by their appointee, the Prime Minister, currently Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed. |
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It is the legislative and executive government of the parish, and is elected by the voters. |
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As such, it was governed directly by the central or federal government and the president of Mexico appointed its governor or executive regent. |
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Thus the executive might not be able to implement its legislative proposals. |
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The devolution of the executive power was not granted until 1997 when the first head government was elected by popular vote. |
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In a presidential system, the executive is often chosen independently from the legislature. |
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Still, limited control by the executive and legislative bodies usually exists. |
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Some of the government's executive authority is theoretically and nominally vested in the Sovereign and is known as the royal prerogative. |
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The regional chambers were abolished between 2008 and 2010 with their executive functions transferring to the regional development agencies. |
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At issue was the extent to which Parliament has, by the United Nations Act 1946, delegated to the executive the power to legislate. |
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It comprises an elected assembly, the London Assembly, and an executive head, the Mayor of London. |
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All members of the executive and legislative branches are directly elected. |
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Legislative entities are the main source of statutes, although in certain matters judiciary and executive bodies may enact legal norms. |
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The chief executive of the Corporation holds the ancient office of Town Clerk of London. |
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High specification luxury coaches are often chartered by companies for executive or VIP transport. |
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Since the head of state was the tsar of Russia, it was not clear who the chief executive of Finland was after the revolution. |
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Most of the content of this appendix consists of routine executive decrees, such as approval for a new set of postage stamps. |
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There is also a Rural District Council, which appoints a chief executive officer. |
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The Cabinet Leader then picks their deputy and up to 8 other councillors to form the executive cabinet. |
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Since the reign of King George I the Cabinet has been the principal executive group of British government. |
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The executive secretary, who is appointed by the council, is the executive, administrative and financial head of the council. |
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The most important magistrates were the two consuls, who together exercised executive authority such as imperium, or military command. |
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The director is the head of LSE and its chief executive officer, responsible for executive management and leadership on academic issues. |
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In 1525 More became Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, with executive and judicial responsibilities over much of northern England. |
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The National Palace continues to be the official seat of the executive authority, though it is no longer the official residence of the President. |
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The full council of 72 elects a council leader, who in turn appoints up to 9 more councillors to form the executive cabinet. |
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He joined the Fabian Society's executive under the sponsorship of Sidney Webb. |
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In 1993, he began a relationship with David Furnish, a former advertising executive and now filmmaker originally from Toronto, Ontario, Canada. |
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Rowling's agent, Neil Blair acted as producer, through his independent production company and with Rick Senat serving as executive producer. |
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Rowling collaborated on the adaptation, serving as an executive producer for the series. |
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Finally, the European Commission, the executive body of the EU, is accountable to Parliament. |
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The Louisiana Register is the official journal of regulations and legal notices issued by the executive branch. |
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After serving as managing director for 21 years, Clive Gillinson left to become chief executive of Carnegie Hall, New York. |
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He had worked on every production since The Spy Who Loved Me, and had been executive producer on Moonraker, For Your Eyes Only and Octopussy. |
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On 6 July 2010, YouTube announced the launch of Life in a Day, an experimental documentary executive produced by Scott. |
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One scientist fell in the sea and was rescued by Commander Douglas Bromley, Campania's executive officer. |
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The actions of executive agencies and independent agencies are the main focus of American administrative law. |
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The Prime Minister, Tom Thabane, is head of government and has executive authority. |
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Zellweger also served as an executive producer as she was dissatisfied with the script and wanted to get more involved in the production. |
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Marketing executive Arch West, born to Scottish immigrant parents, developed Doritos. |
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The consuls were invested with the executive power of the state and headed the government of the Republic. |
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On 7 October 2008 a Renault executive said the company was interested in acquiring or partnering with Chrysler. |
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The Council does not have executive powers but meets biannually to discuss issues of mutual importance. |
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There is also a clear separation between governance and executive administration. |
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But cooperation within the Committee of Public Prosperity, since April 1793 the de facto executive government, started to break down. |
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They renamed the area Manchukuo, and on 9 March 1932 set up a puppet government, with Pu Yi, the former emperor of China, as its executive head. |
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Local authorities were organized likewise into party committees, local Soviets and executive committees. |
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The executive authority of the Government is subject to certain limitations. |
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So it is used to express the territorial or other limits of ecclesiastical, executive or legislative authority. |
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Though the sultan was the supreme monarch, the sultan's political and executive authority was delegated. |
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The Sun used the same printing presses, and the two papers were managed together at senior executive levels. |
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The Constitution explicitly vests executive authority in the Government, not the President. |
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The President, who does not have an executive or policy role, exercises them on the advice of the Government. |
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Ministerial powers can be conferred by an Act of the Assembly and ministers can also exercise executive powers which are vested in the Crown. |
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The executive branch of government is the Council of Ministers, which is composed of members of Tynwald. |
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In almost all cases, executive and legislative officials are elected by a plurality vote of citizens by district. |
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However, amendments passed in 1999 reduced his powers somewhat and the President now shares executive authority with the Prime Minister. |
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The Clerk of the House is both the House's chief adviser on matters of procedure and chief executive of the House of Commons. |
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One of the most prominent roles of the chief executive is to hire and dismiss Scotland national football team managers. |
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The royal governor was able to appoint and remove at will all judges, sheriffs, and other executive officials, and restrict town meetings. |
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It concerns both the relationship between the individual and the state, and the functioning of the legislature, the executive and judiciary. |
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Parliament also has the power to remove or regulate the executive powers of the Monarch. |
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States, most of the heads of major executive departments are elected by the citizens of Mississippi rather than appointed by the governor. |
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Companies with both an executive chairman and a CEO include Ford, HSBC, Google, HP, and Apple. |
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In the first two terms of the Scottish Parliament, the executive was formed by a coalition of Labour and Liberal Democrats. |
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They were to share some of the institutions of the ECSC but have separate executive structures. |
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With the abolition of the monarchy, Privy Council and the House of Lords, it had unchecked executive and legislative power. |
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The goal of the Roundhead party was to give the Parliament supreme control over executive administration. |
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The Leader of the Council has no executive or administrative powers designated by statute, but the position is salaried. |
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The system is often used to elect members of a legislative assembly or executive officers. |
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It issued executive orders known as Orders in Council and also had judicial functions. |
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On the basis of Article 78 of the 1994 Ethiopian Constitution, the Judiciary is completely independent of the executive and the legislature. |
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Over time, arrangement continued to exercise executive authority on the sovereign's behalf. |
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Governors can exercise complete legislative and executive authority if they wish through blanket powers reserved to them in the constitution. |
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The English Council of State, which replaced the Privy Council, took over many of the executive functions of the monarchy. |
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In directorial systems, the executive responsibilities of the head of government are spread among a group of people. |
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In practice, such a figure does not actively exercise executive powers, even though executive authority may be exercised in their name. |
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Young was appointed executive director of the Writers Guild of America, west, after nearly a yearlong search, the guild announced Thursday. |
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Mission Council, the executive body of the General Assembly, meets twice a year. |
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In South Africa, the sheriffs are officers of the court and function as the executive arm of the court. |
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With the 2011 constitutional reforms, the King of Morocco retains less executive powers whereas those of the prime minister have been enlarged. |
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The King of Morocco holds vast executive and legislative powers, especially over the military, foreign policy and religious affairs. |
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In each state, the chief executive is called the governor, who serves as both head of state and head of government. |
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An account executive is responsible for visiting department and specialty stores with counter sales of cosmetics. |
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Law enforcement executive managers must be interfacers who communicate with all segments of the agency, from chief deputy to patrol officer. |
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With the Prime Minister as its leader, the Cabinet forms the executive branch of government. |
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The executive body of the IFRC is a secretariat, led by a secretary general. |
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In those states with an administrative county court, the body acts as the executive agency for the local government. |
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The executive brief for Sublimus Dei was withdrawn by the Pope after protests by the Spanish monarchy. |
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The South African government appointed the SWA administrator, who had extensive executive powers. |
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Precedent has since established that the courts could exercise judicial review over the actions of Congress or the executive branch. |
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The mayor is a member of the municipal executive board, but also has individual responsibilies in maintaining public order. |
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The executive can be the source of certain types of law, such as a decree or executive order. |
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In a presidential system, the leader of the executive is both the head of state and head of government. |
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It did so by asserting the jurisdiction of the courts as superior to the executive powers of the king. |
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The executive committee is chaired jointly by the Deputy Secretaries of Defense and Transportation. |
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Up to a point, the rules and regulations of the many federal executive agencies have a similar effect. |
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The autonomous communities have wide legislative and executive autonomy, with their own parliaments and regional governments. |
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It governs the relationships between the judiciary, the legislature and the executive with the bodies under its authority. |
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The Michigan State Capitol was dedicated in 1879 and has hosted the executive and legislative branches of the state ever since. |
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The Executive Directory was a body of five Directors that held executive power in France following the Convention and preceding the Consulate. |
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It is governed by a directly elected municipal council, a municipal executive board and a mayor. |
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Legislatures will sometime delegate their legislative power to administrative or executive agencies. |
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The President is head of the executive branch of the federal government, as well as the nation's head of state and head of government. |
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He explained that there was no way an executive could learn all the details of running a huge and unwieldy company. |
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The Governor is the State's chief executive and is assisted by the Lieutenant Governor. |
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Most executive branch agencies in the United States federal government have some adjudicatory authority. |
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Although the House of Lords may scrutinise the executive through Question Time and through its committees, it cannot bring down the Government. |
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The ataman had executive powers, and at time of war, he was the supreme commander in the field. |
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Unlike the regional councils, the Corsican Assembly has executive powers over the island. |
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Executive producer Peter Urie also left, while Jocelyn Stevenson remained in her role as executive producer. |
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The next week Bainimarama said he would ask the Great Council of Chiefs to restore executive powers to the president, Ratu Josefa Iloilo. |
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The state government is headed by an elected governor who controls the executive branch of government. |
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South Carolina has historically had a weak executive branch and a strong legislature. |
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Put a business executive up for senator as a Democrat, and you've got a Businesscrat. Maybe also an endangered species. |
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The Xunta de Galicia is a collective entity with executive and administrative power. |
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A first step in a company's defense against executive kidnapping is to develop a policy and obtain approval of an antikidnap plan. |
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The Rump Parliament was recalled and there was a second period where the executive power lay with the Council of state. |
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One drongo executive can do harm enough, but things get worse when they start recruiting people like themselves. |
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In addition to its legislative functions, the Council also exercises executive functions in relations to the Common Foreign and Security Policy. |
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In the well adjusted person the ego is the executive of the personality and is governed by the reality principle. |
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The same executive also boasted that the Nigerian government had forgotten about the extent of Shell's infiltration. |
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It took many years to get that tough and I'm not letting my armor down for some floofy executive from the top who sends in his teams of experts. |
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The executive at the gun line is responsible for the drill and fire discipline of the battery. |
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On 13 March 2008 the executive agreed on proposals to create 11 new councils and replace the present system. |
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Together they make up the Scottish Government, the executive arm of the devolved government. |
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The councils implement their mandate through an executive committee and regional sectoral bureaus. |
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The Kingdom of Ireland was governed by an executive under the control of a Lord Deputy or viceroy. |
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The House of Lords was abolished by the Rump Commons, and executive power was assumed by a Council of State. |
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Don Murphy and Susan Montford are the producers, and Guillermo del Toro is the film's executive producer. |
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The current chair of the council is Professor Terence Stephenson and current chief executive and registrar is Charlie Massey. |
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The PM organises the executive government and exercises its power as vested by the Constitution. |
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Shell subsequently published an unequivocal commitment to sustainable development, supported by executive speeches reinforcing this commitment. |
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Northern Ireland is a part of the United Kingdom with a local executive and assembly which exercise devolved powers. |
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In its judicial reviews, it monitors the legislative and executive branches to ensure that they comply with provisions of enacted legislation. |
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It also added six additional members to the governor general's executive committee. |
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He joined the society's executive committee in January 1885, and later that year recruited Webb and also Annie Besant, a fine orator. |
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During 2006, Barry was the executive producer on an album entitled Here's to the Heroes by the Australian ensemble The Ten Tenors. |
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Under the act, for the first time the legislative and executive powers of the governor general's council were separated. |
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The Prime Minister and the Council of Ministers constitute the executive government. |
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