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"evenhanded" Definitions
  1. impartial; equitable: evenhanded justice.

169 Sentences With "evenhanded"

How to use evenhanded in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "evenhanded" and check conjugation/comparative form for "evenhanded". Mastering all the usages of "evenhanded" from sentence examples published by news publications.

So, is justice truly blind and evenhanded in America today?
Everyone wants a government that is fair and evenhanded toward all.
Death may be the great equalizer, but it isn't necessarily evenhanded.
It makes it almost impossible to conduct diplomacy in an evenhanded manner.
"The co-op has a duty to be evenhanded," Mr. Greenstein said.
He specializes in exquisitely awkward scenes made more so by his evenhanded sympathy.
"It's an invitation for arbitrary enforcement and enforcement that's not evenhanded," he said.
As a trial judge, she was seen as evenhanded but tough in sentencing.
Morell comes across as apolitical, evenhanded and well-credentialed on matters of national security.
What we find here instead is painstakingly evenhanded, with little accelerando, mystery or shock.
It's instead a historical and legal guide to the subject, and it's scrupulously evenhanded.
"The rule of law depends upon the evenhanded administration of justice," the memo begins.
The DNC chair should be evenhanded — but, thanks to leaked emails, Brazile's cover is blown.
Such actions endeared him to Democrats, who praised him as "evenhanded" and "magnanimous," Wineapple writes.
Mr. Porterfield's evenhanded direction doesn't try to pull the viewer's sympathies one way or another.
Generally, however, Morris is remarkably evenhanded, giving both sides of scholarly debates in deep detail.
Their independence from their agency bosses is usually thought to ensure more evenhanded decision making.
Could an Egyptian Arab who had favored a Palestinian state be evenhanded in the Middle East?
Clinton supporters also said he had supplied no specifics when he called for an "evenhanded" approach.
"The language moves between the literary and analytical, evenhanded yet passionate," Jennifer Carson writes, reviewing it.
Despite this evenhanded treatment, I found myself crediting the black characters more than the white ones.
Journalists may try to be evenhanded by saying that Trump did this while Biden did that.
To have been so, well, evenhanded in her choices could have happened only with careful calculation.
But the overwhelming number of us do our utmost to protect and serve in an evenhanded manner.
Although never less than evenhanded, and sometimes deliciously wry, Jennings writes with obvious affection for his subjects.
But we'll come out in a better place — a more moral and evenhanded place — in the end.
He knows that judging means going where text and precedent lead you, in a fair-minded, evenhanded manner.
Other US presidents in both political parties, Dems and Republicans evenhanded, have never pushed the way he's pushing.
My immediate family believes it demands a response, but I feel incapable of responding in an evenhanded way.
It would make the process of restructuring a failed bank more evenhanded and predictable, according to the Treasury.
Now, there is no credibility left, no trust that this is really about the pursuit of evenhanded justice.
Rather, we must develop an evenhanded Middle East policy which brings Israelis and Palestinians together for a lasting peace.
In "Defenders of the Unborn," a deeply researched, evenhanded, accessible and surprising history of anti-abortion activism before Roe v.
Tuesday morning, Ding published a column that read more or less like an evenhanded evisceration of Anthony as a player.
The Times has been evenhanded, though it finally declared on June 18 that it favored staying in the European Union.
And he did it in the characteristically mild and evenhanded tones he uses when he presides over the Supreme Court.
Mr. Byrne's film is a sober, evenhanded recapitulation of Sands's imprisonment and death that places him in a historical context.
Supporters of the principle have said it protects the court's credibility by avoiding politicization, and keeping the law steady and evenhanded.
He was an evenhanded interrogator, admired and feared by both the "Dees" and the "Reeps," as he used to call them.
There are some great reporters out there, struggling to be evenhanded while covering an administration that tells lies around the clock.
Commentators in the state media pretend to be evenhanded, but that's impossible, given where they sit, behind the state's protective curtain.
If Gordon has passionate feelings about Carter's work, his utterly balanced and evenhanded treatment leaves no air for them to escape.
Bernie Sanders praised President Obama as "evenhanded" during the primary season after a 2000-minute closed-door meeting at the White House.
This studiously evenhanded editing might be the most political the film gets, in the absence of grand statements about Denmark's overseas obligations.
Karen Blumenthal's thorough and evenhanded "Hillary Rodham Clinton: A Woman Living History," aimed at readers 14 and up, allows no such ambiguity.
Tillerson has repeatedly called for dialogue between countries on both sides of the diplomatic rift, advocating an evenhanded approach to the standoff.
It's an almost stoic presence: slower than it needs to be, evenhanded, sometimes determinedly hanging back from the rest of the band.
Under a principle known as stare decisis, the court tries to protect its credibility by avoiding politicization and keeping the law evenhanded.
Andrew D. Herman, a lawyer for Ms. Dravis, described her as "remarkably evenhanded" in answering the committee's questions about Mr. Pruitt's activities.
" A lawyer in Oslo, Helga is ostensibly the levende model —"living model"—for Astrid, the maddeningly evenhanded sibling in "Will and Testament.
The lead story about the second debate was probably the most evenhanded; the lead story about the third debate was the least.
Then, supporters of the president who affect an air of moderation debate whether this idea is true in a seemingly evenhanded manner.
Voters cited Klobuchar's performance in the confirmation hearings for Justice Brett Kavanaugh, where her evenhanded questioning of Kavanaugh raised her national profile considerably.
Justice Chun is not known for an effusive personality, and over the years he has built a reputation for being objective and evenhanded.
Part of this effectiveness comes through false equivalence: news organizations, afraid of being attacked for bias, give evenhanded treatment to lies and truth.
A major American supporter of the Israeli settlement enterprise before his appointment, Mr. Friedman has seldom been accused of being evenhanded as ambassador.
Most of us around here seldom see that network's news programs, which have been more evenhanded in their recent coverage of the president.
It bared the simmering but fierce partisanship on a House committee that prides itself on being among the most evenhanded panels in Congress.
I am truly surprised at the one-sided point of view that heretofore has been absent from his otherwise evenhanded and excellent columns.
But now, having shown my evenhanded spirit, I would point out that the G.O.P.'s local talent isn't translating well on the presidential stage.
Rather than demand evenhanded government, they back tribal leaders, knowing that they will steal and hoping they will share the spoils with their kin.
First, the government had argued that because it was censuring only "negative" (disparaging) expressions, its conduct was sufficiently evenhanded to evade the First Amendment.
Mr. Peña Nieto has struggled to portray the visit as a part of an evenhanded attempt to explain to both Mr. Trump and Mrs.
I think he and the vice president have tried to be fair and evenhanded in the process, and I expect they will continue to be.
To be evenhanded, the committee could have brought in a sex crimes victims' advocate for Dr. Blasey "that could level things out," Dr. Warren said.
One of my former women students, a Democrat, testified to this committee that I was an evenhanded professor who treats people fairly and with respect.
That said, I think the media needs to be a lot more evenhanded in its coverage of him and keep its personal opinions in check.
I was heartened to read your evenhanded article about the need to question and, if possible, replicate some of the seminal experiments in psychological science.
The Qataris were shocked at the contradiction between evenhanded statements from the State Department and Pentagon, and Mr. Trump's tweets castigating the tiny Gulf state.
It isn't easy; it's harder, in my opinion, to write an evenhanded review than a negative one — that is, one that holds the reader's attention.
To the contrary, a statute that prohibits official action undertaken for such personal purposes furthers, rather than hinders, the impartial and evenhanded administration of the law.
Like Chamberlain, these were all good and concerned people, just the sort of steady, evenhanded folks you'd like to have leading your nation in normal times.
But the thorny issue here is the dilemma between being evenhanded and objective on the one hand and trying to tell the truth on the other.
Their legacies should account for both tendencies, and the greatest feat of "Zora and Langston" perhaps lies in Taylor's loving yet evenhanded portraits of both figures.
Such a whopping undertaking could have easily turned maudlin, strident or just plain eye-glazing; instead, Pickert has produced an evenhanded, powerful and unflinching page-turner.
American administrations have tried repeatedly over decades to mediate a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinians on far more evenhanded terms than the new proposal.
These are good questions, and Miller keeps the argument more or less evenhanded, tossing in a new twist every time one man's claim threatens to dominate.
"His record clearly indicates that he applies the law in an evenhanded fashion, putting his personal beliefs aside," said John G. Malcolm of the Heritage Foundation.
Are you really trying to write one of your pretend-evenhanded, both-sides-do-it, "let's all get together and learn something" columns about this incident?
Mr. McConnell rejected Democrats' demands to call White House officials as witnesses and said he had no obligation to be evenhanded or impartial during the proceedings.
US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has repeatedly called for dialogue between countries on both sides of the diplomatic rift, advocating an evenhanded approach to the standoff.
Richard B. Roper III, a Dallas-area lawyer, said Judge O'Connor's high-profile rulings do not fully encapsulate his reputation on the bench as fair and evenhanded.
Conventional in structure — by which I mean classically plotted and accessible — "Sweat" explored with evenhanded compassion the race and class tensions laid bare during the tumultuous election.
Responding to this last caller, Moore strove to sound evenhanded: he said that some churches were indeed bedevilled by "lax" membership policies, but he warned against authoritarianism.
SHARON G. FORMANSCARSDALE, N.Y. To the Editor: Susan Chira's article tries the "evenhanded" approach that The New York Times and other media adopted during the 2016 campaign.
His victory is "a popular call to be more evenhanded with his anticorruption campaign," said Dr. Sadeeque Abba, a political-science professor at the University of Abuja.
Ideally, we would let markets decide the winners on their own, but so long as government is intervening in markets, it should do so in an evenhanded way.
At first glance, these edits gave the new order a more evenhanded veneer: three new countries on three different continents, only one of which (Chad) is Muslim-majority.
Why it matters: Silicon Valley's political donations at the corporate level tend to be evenhanded because of the big issues — like taxes and trade — that companies care about.
"Judges regarded their decisions involving freedom of contract as evenhanded, striking down any effort to prevent people from following their calling, no matter whose ox was gored," White explains.
Making everyone pay the same sticker price is evenhanded on the surface, but only if you ignore the consequences of a fine on the life of the person paying.
The truth is, Check Your Fact has a two-year track record of fair, evenhanded articles that hold figures on both sides of the political aisle accountable, including Trump.
But Mark Brokaw's staging on a simple set by Riccardo Hernandez, sensitively lit by Scott Zielinski, is otherwise evenhanded and clean, as if not wanting to leave any fingerprints.
In this way, the "evenhanded" view of Trump that emerges from traditional reporting is that he's a dangerous maniac — Democrats say it, and so too do many top Republicans.
Well, he'll show you: He'll act so that no one can have the slightest justification for claiming that he has been anything but scrupulously, meticulously evenhanded in his official behavior.
Senator Bernie Sanders praised President Obama on Wednesday for being "evenhanded" in the Democratic primary campaign after the two men met for more than 45 minutes in the Oval Office.
His evenhanded pace of four small panels on each page keeps the tone understated, and he gets a lot of comedic mileage out of rendering biblical dialogue into modern vernacular.
But with a little soul-searching, editors may find that they can come up with a new, more evenhanded approach to covering a problem that, sadly, is not going away.
Clinton to be more critical of Israel's past military actions in Gaza and insistently argued that the United States must take a more "evenhanded" approach to Israel and the Palestinians.
Men tend to gravitate toward an aggressive, "top-down Machiavellian" understanding of power, but the more collaborative, evenhanded style of leadership associated with women has been gaining momentum, he said.
Mr. Goodman's account is sorrowful but pointedly evenhanded, avoiding blame and giving credit to the controversial, publicity-friendly right-wing figure Bo Gritz for his role in resolving the conflict.
Until we can find a way to enforce the law in an evenhanded fashion, and temper justice with mercy for all, America will inevitably fall short of its promised greatness.
Now 51, he has an educated and evenhanded approach that echoes his father's, and has found his voice on gun control, national anthem protests, presidential politics and Middle East policy.
"What the president has tried to do, what Vice President Biden has tried to do, is to be as evenhanded as they could be," he said, dismissing the idea of tension.
It was an unusually strong denial from a career military man who is widely regarded as among the most apolitical and evenhanded officials in Mr. Trump's small circle of top advisers.
Mr. Trump portrayed his plan as an evenhanded approach that would help both businesses and working people, suggesting that his call for scrapping deductions would harm wealthy people such as himself.
Meanwhile, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and others swooped in to defend Burr, touting the perception of his evenhanded leadership of the Intelligence Committee amid its two-year probe into Russian interference.
Democratic strategists see O'Malley Dillon as an organized and evenhanded counterbalance to O'Rourke, who is known for his spontaneity and rejection of traditional campaign tactics, like the use of consultants and pollsters.
China believes any new agreement will need to be evenhanded, while U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer told his Chinese counterparts that balance won't happen, according to a person familiar with the matter.
The broadcaster has "been designated by the city to administer a public forum", Justice Kagan added, and must be evenhanded in airing content submitted to it by all members of the public.
Both musicians bring a pretty evenhanded outlook to the issue, Pharell saying that music will always be pushing forward and people will inevitably think things are getting worse when they're just changing.
The justices are generally reluctant to overturn precedent, citing a legal doctrine - known as stare decisis - that counsels against it in order to help the court stay evenhanded and appear less politicized.
At the height of the Kushner-Bannon spat last month, Mr. Trump instructed both men to "stop it" or face the boot, and delegated to Mr. Priebus the role of evenhanded mediator.
"The firing of Preet, who did an extraordinarily evenhanded job is not remarkable — it's just more the way it happened after he was told that he would stay on," Mr. Burstein said.
" Even before the release of Democratic National Committee emails showing that the supposedly evenhanded DNC was aiding your campaign, "Clinton had about a third of Sanders supporters left to try to win over.
These are less evenhanded appraisals than buoyant travel guides to new resorts, museums, and shopping districts—the flows of creative capital, broadly speaking, that one might experience while doing business in such places.
" Ms. Bell sings both sides of the conversation, including the sun's evenhanded assessment of her work (in a close approximation of O'Hara's language): "You're maybe not the greatest, but you're good/You're different.
Mr. Shavit's book was seen as a passionate but evenhanded explanation of his country to the world, at once celebrating its unlikely success in building a nation while lamenting its treatment of Palestinians.
WASHINGTON — Before he was confirmed last month as deputy attorney general, the nation's No. 2 law enforcement official, Rod J. Rosenstein was cast as an evenhanded career prosecutor who had transcended partisan politics.
Explicitly stating that the Texas senator is stating falsehoods marks a "break-the-glass" escalation of its reporting — a sort of nuclear option for a network committed to maintaining its reputation for evenhanded journalism.
But his brother, Josh, was there the day before on behalf of his investment firm, David Kirkpatrick of the NYT reports — raising questions about whether Jared could be evenhanded in dealing with the kingdom.
In both those works, despite Davis's efforts to be evenhanded, he could not help but bring his natural proclivities toward the defense's side to bear; and in those books, that proclivity was entirely appropriate.
Despite blaming the West for geopolitical woes, many Russian companies and even government ministries prefer to settle commercial disputes in European courts, which are perceived to be more evenhanded than those in former Soviet countries.
They've already shown their hand: Beset by conspiracy theories and riven with paranoia, Republicans will perhaps never again be fair and evenhanded governmental partners, and the Democrats have no obligation to treat them as such.
"I think there are some judges that believe that in being evenhanded, they should give the winner a hard time, too," said James Trusty, a former federal prosecutor now with the law firm Ifrah Law.
As shown in a forthcoming study of how Chevron is applied on lower courts, Judge Kavanaugh is quite evenhanded, applying the same approach whether evaluating agency actions that could be characterized as liberal or conservative.
Later, in a strikingly public rejection of the oath senators take during an impeachment trial to "do impartial justice," Mr. McConnell insisted he had no obligation to be evenhanded in his handling of the proceeding.
Later, in a strikingly public rejection of the oath senators take during an impeachment trial to "do impartial justice," Mr. McConnell insisted he had no obligation to be evenhanded in his handling of the proceeding.
Although Trump's performance in the first 25 minutes was more evenhanded than it has been, the final hour saw him reverting to the reactive, red-faced, literal finger-pointing of earlier debates, a bear easily provoked.
A person familiar with the matter told CNBC that China believes any new agreement reached at the G-20 will need to be evenhanded, and two sources said Huawei is a major priority for the meeting.
"What the president has tried to do, what Vice President Biden has tried to do, is to be as evenhanded as they could be," Mr. Sanders said at a brief news conference outside the West Wing.
For people who don't share your politics and feel alienated by what they see in TV comedy — who wish we could go back to a more evenhanded era of Johnny Carson — do they have a point?
Rusch, the author of many nonfiction books for young readers, including the picture book "Mario and the Hole in the Sky: How a Chemist Saved Our Planet," occasionally stretches credulity in her attempts to appear evenhanded.
Liberal voters and racial minorities tend to be clustered in major cities and their suburbs, concentrating the Democratic base in a smaller number of congressional districts, even when the districts are drawn in an evenhanded way.
It only asks that he "sell[s] customers whatever expression may be inherent in a wedding cake" in an evenhanded way, without turning away "African Americans, women, gays, interracial couples, persons of Irish descent, and so on".
They certainly don't seem to be listening to the online advertisers and everyone in our lengthy supply chain explaining the need for technology neutral and evenhanded regulation to protect consumers and keep the digital economy chugging along.
With an educated and evenhanded approach, he steps into discussions that most others in his position purposely avoid or know little about, chewing through the gray areas in a world that increasingly paints itself in bold contrasts.
And his evenhanded hearings of cases in which mere pocket change was at stake let millions of viewers know that no matter how seemingly insignificant their legal disputes, they, too, were entitled to their day in court.
I loved the script straight away, because I appreciated that she was trying to write an evenhanded debate between two people, where it's not black and white and the interest of it lies in its gray borders.
"I was looking for someone who is tenacious, who is used to looking at sensitive material involving government activities, who has a reputation for being fair and evenhanded," Barr told the Wall Street Journal earlier this month.
Mr. Manning take pains to show the many sides of an issue and can't be accused of hardened didacticism, but his efforts to be evenhanded can err on the side of safety and often sap the show's energy.
Starter episode: "Struck by Lightning" Amid hundreds of testosterone-fueled fitness podcasts promising to get you shredded and rewire your microbiome — but only if you follow a specific, restrictive regime to the letter — Shawn Stevenson's evenhanded offering stands out.
Here's one email from Mithra Busler of Atlantic Highlands, N.J. The opinion piece by Neal Katyal, "Why Liberals Should Back Neil Gorsuch," fails to disclose the many conflicts of interest that plague Mr. Katyal's credibility as an evenhanded commentator.
In recent weeks both The Times of London and — intriguingly — the more rightward-leaning Telegraph, the favored paper of the deeply divided Conservative Party, have taken a pretty evenhanded approach to the debate, giving weight to the arguments of both sides.
Now, more than ever, the police need to build trust with minority communities by demonstrating respect for the rights of all French citizens, whatever their faith or color, and that an evenhanded application of justice makes no exceptions for the police.
Then attached to that data was a larger discussion from the Review Board's members, which managed to be reasonably evenhanded about subjects (priestly celibacy and homosexuality, above all) that lend themselves to culture-war hysteria both inside and outside the church.
Bess Williamson, a professor of art history, theory and criticism at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, said Mr. Abloh's showing at the MCA is not so much a risk as an evenhanded credibility exchange between artist and venue.
Trump officials argued in the commission report that the Obama administration employed a "dubious" reading of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act to assert that the civil rights law extended to evenhanded policies that may unintentionally harm certain groups.
"Many of the nominees are well known in the conservative legal movement and have shown commitment to principled and evenhanded application of the law throughout their careers," Carrie Severino, chief counsel of the Judicial Crisis Network, said in a statement.
Mr. Rosenstein, who has spent more than two decades at the Justice Department and has long had a reputation as an evenhanded prosecutor who shies away from the spotlight, has seen his reputation for impartiality tested, most recently on Wednesday.
With ethical and scholarly discipline, Moore, a political columnist of a decidedly right-wing cast for The Daily Telegraph and The Spectator (and formerly the editor of both conservative publications, as well as The Sunday Telegraph), has produced a scrupulously evenhanded work.
In New York, where candidates traditionally compete with one another to align themselves with Israel's interests, it was startling to see a major Democratic candidate, Mr. Sanders, unapologetically challenge the actions of the Israeli government and call for evenhanded treatment of Palestinians.
Go back to the 2016 election cycle, which began in Cleveland with Fox unflinchingly questioning Donald Trump and 16 other Republicans, and ended in Las Vegas, with Chris Wallace setting the gold standard with his probing, evenhanded questioning of the Republican and Democratic nominees.
Kirkman, mild-mannered but firm, evenhanded but paternalistic to the women and children in his life, is a perfect role for Mr. Sutherland, and tuning in to see him save the country each week may be one of the new TV season's prime guilty pleasures.
Some of our concerns stem from the recognition that there is a widespread misconception that the federal death penalty is some sort of "gold standard" with a rigorous, careful process producing evenhanded justice for crimes affecting our national interests, such as terrorism and espionage.
Senator Charles E. Grassley, the Iowa Republican who leads the Senate Judiciary Committee, expressed confidence that Mr. Sessions would be a "fair and evenhanded" attorney general and would make good on his pledges to enforce even the laws he voted against in the Senate.
While he has a relatively liberal record and would likely side with the liberals on the Court, conservatives have previously praised his cautious, evenhanded opinions, improving the chances that a hostile Republican Senate will confirm Garland less than a year before voters elect a new president.
In an effort to be evenhanded and to consider all sides in the conflict (and perhaps because of her own expertise), Stern devotes more space than may be warranted to the question of the influence of fundamentalist jihadis on the (traditionally quite secular) Bosnian Muslim population.
One of the few prisons where the disciplinary process appears evenhanded is Sing Sing Correctional Facility in Ossining, which is less than an hour from New York City and the lone men's prison in the state where African-Americans account for a majority of the uniformed staff.
Unlike the rest of us, who simply reported who said what, trying to be evenhanded, Maureen saw in real time the big story unfolding: how ill-equipped and cowed the white men in power were to conduct a hearing into sexual harassment and the treatment of women in the workplace.
You can find hints of what such a moderate approach might look like in intellectual projects like Jonathan Haidt's Heterodox Academy, or in the probing, evenhanded culture-war reportage of the magazine writer Jesse Singal (whom I hesitate to even praise because it will do him no favors on the internet).
In a hearing that began in the morning, stretched into the night, and seesawed between intense grilling by Democrats and fawning praise by Republicans, Judge Kavanaugh sought to present himself as an evenhanded arbiter of the law rather than a partisan ideologue driven by a desire to carry out a Republican policy agenda.
At the same time, "post-truth politics" have confronted us with a possibility we have long tried to obscure: that, as Nietzsche put it, there are no facts, only interpretations, and furthermore, those interpretations thrive not because they are evenhanded or fair, but because they have the brute strength of a consensus behind them.
"It was such a nice, friendly atmosphere, because the movie was so evenhanded," said the longtime anti-Indian Point activist Marilyn Elie, who, with her husband, Roger Witherspoon, a veteran environmental journalist, and Brian Vangor, the senior control-room operator of the plant, are principal characters in the film and have appeared together at festival screenings.
In evident frustration with a lack of progress on these fronts, Mr. Peterson again tackled tax reform and government entitlements in 2004 by writing "Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It," a best-selling, politically evenhanded indictment of Democrats for overspending and Republicans for excessive tax-cutting.
Jones's account is evenhanded to a fault: He fails to emphasize the villainous role of Hoover as the chief reason that Robert "Dynamite Bob" Chambliss and his two thuggish accomplices, Tommy Blanton and Bobby Frank Cherry, were all old men before Baxley and Jones were able to put them behind bars in a series of three dramatic trials conducted in 1977, 2001 and 240.
"Christopher Wray's firm's legal work for the Trump family, his history of partisan activity, as well as his history of defending Trump's transition director during a criminal scandal makes us question his ability to lead the F.B.I. with the independence, evenhanded judgment, and commitment to the rule of law that the agency deserves," said Faiz Shakir, the national political director of the American Civil Liberties Union, referring to Mr. Christie and the Bridgegate case.
It was followed by "The Fall of Paris: The Siege and the Commune, 1870-71" (1965) and "To Lose a Battle: France 1940" (1969), on the collapse of the French Army at the beginning of World War II. His history of the Algerian struggle for independence, "A Savage War of Peace: Algeria 1954–1962" (20093), written at the suggestion of Harold Macmillan, the former British prime minister, won the Wolfson Prize and critical acclaim for its evenhanded treatment of a politically charged conflict.
Comey could undo a great deal of the damage he's already done by coming forward one more time, without further delay, to dispel the "misleading impression" he helped create—to clarify that Clinton isn't again the subject of an FBI criminal investigation; that the content of these emails is unknown; that they may well be duplicates or otherwise irrelevant to their investigation; and to atone for the fact that his effort to be evenhanded failed in ways that unnecessarily undermined Clinton's campaign, and thus, possibly, the integrity of the election.

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