Roosevelt acquired the reputation of a trustbuster, but, in fact, he was not anti-big-business. |
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In 1902, Roosevelt made newspaper headlines as a trustbuster when he ordered the Justice Department to sue the Northern Securities Company. |
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After years of being portrayed as a toothless watchdog by the domestic and foreign press, the trustbuster has finally begun to show some teeth. |
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As Australia's chief trustbuster, Graeme Samuel, noted after the trial, Cartels are theft usually by well-dressed thieves. |
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At any rate, her successful tenure as Europe's chief trustbuster could end on some jarring notes. |
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He has created an autonomous trustbuster to challenge the dominance of Telmex, controlled by Carlos Slim, the world's richest man, and Televisa, a big television company. |
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His sure touch could serve his countrymen well, but if he uses it to resurrect his party's former political monopoly, he will lose his glowing new reputation as a trustbuster. |
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Mr Takeshima has made a good name for himself as a trustbuster. |
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Rockefeller in this construction, and Assistant Attorney General Joel Klein reprises the role of a Progressive-era trustbuster. |
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Perhaps what we really need is another trustbuster like Teddy Roosevelt to take on both the criminal and the corporate cartels. |
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