He issued an executive order directing the Secretary of Commerce to seize and operate several steel mills. |
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President Hoover signed an executive order setting aside the lands around the Hoover Dam and Lake Mead as a recreation area and wildlife refuge. |
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Well, if the judge determines that the law is unconstitutional, then the executive order issued pursuant to that law is not a lawful order. |
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Agency actions must adequately consider environmental justice issues, pursuant to the executive order. |
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By executive order, President Truman outlawed the separation of races in the armed services. |
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How can it be free to seek the truth when its mandate is spelled out in the executive order that the president signed? |
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That has not been addressed by the Supreme Court, and that is what the new executive order and legislation attempt to answer. |
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And they would be subject to a military tribunal, under the executive order that the President signed. |
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Late in the month, he met Randolph halfway, with an executive order prohibiting discrimination among defense contractors, but not in the military. |
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This executive order would get the attention of major corporations, most of which receive federal contracts. |
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The President croaked a response as he wrote out an executive order. |
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The National Security Adviser joined the President at the ranch to discuss enacting recommendations that could be implemented immediately by executive order. |
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President Bush had issued an executive order to hold everyone captured on the battlefield. |
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The chapter on the use of force by the police has been further elaborated in an executive order from the Ministry of Justice. |
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The suit comes after his attempt to overturn the standards via executive order was rejected by a judge in state court last week. |
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Approval is given through an executive order, such as an order in council or a ministerial order. |
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Most changes could be brought about by an executive order from the president. |
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In the case of an agency or other body, the executive order is usually a resolution or other document, depending on its decision-making process. |
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Executive orders, they said, are trumped by federal law and certain court rulings suggest the executive order would have no real teeth. |
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I fail to understand why the member cannot wait to see what that executive order will do and wait for the review of that case by the American authorities. |
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Rogozin then criticized the executive order as not being serious. |
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A civilian agency whose mandate is spelled out in law rather than by executive order, with clear political and judicial control, and with independent review. |
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Regulations that are subject to the administrative prepublication policy are submitted to the Regulations Section together with an order in council or other executive order. |
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Governor Mike Easley has signed an executive order declaring that email messages are considered public records and therefore should be saved and that state officials buy a new archive system to preserve messages. |
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But executive order is another possibility. |
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There was the executive order on immigration. |
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It is important to be clear on the facts of the relevant executive order. |
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More than half of all U. S. states have enacted at least one piece of climate legislation or passed at least one executive order that sets formal requirements for reducing greenhouse gases. |
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In 2002, a new national mineral policy was implemented by executive order. |
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California is a strong potential market for us and the executive order that's set to take effect in 2010 presents a potential barrier to oil sands crude. |
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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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John Taylor, and the death row was disestablished in 2008, under executive order from Governor Paterson. |
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Recently, Houston's Mayor Bob Lanier signed an executive order that increased the goals of the city's affirmative-action program. |
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The gutting of the executive order, in February 2005, is a blow to immigrant communities in Maine and nationally. |
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On 19 February 1942, Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, interning about 100,000 Japanese living on the West Coast. |
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As is usual with the governor, he brought a bipartisan group of lawmakers together to discuss the Executive Order before it was issued, and I was part of that discussion. |
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