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14 Sentences With "malfeasances"

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

The press has been pretty dedicated to reporting on the various malfeasances of the Trump administration.
Some still work with her; others stay in close touch, commiserating, exchanging links to stories about Trump-related outrages or malfeasances.
It is apparent that the caucus lacks the will to bring Mr. Trump's many malfeasances to light via an impeachment action.
Research shows how leaders who do this earn themselves 'group credits' that can be cashed in to cover their occasional malfeasances.
There are the obvious malfeasances and looting of the public coffers, of course, which are already approaching record-setting totals for federal venality.
He characterized it as a continuation of the committee's existing investigation into President Trump's "malfeasances" — one that would naturally consider the possibility of impeachment. Eventually. Rep.
Outside the capital, the list includes not just activists but also petitioners ( fangmin )—ordinary people from rural villages or small towns who travel to voice their grievances to high government officials about local malfeasances they have suffered from.
It might be hard work and less glamorous than pontificating about the state of the nation or the malfeasances of the current administration — they may actually have to read something — but it was what they were elected to do, what we pay them to do.
In particular, said one individual who witnessed this interactivity on the campaign trail and another who saw it in the White House, Scavino frequently supplied the litany of details in Trump's tweets about, say, claims of Crooked Hillary's various malfeasances or of the F.B.I.'s corrupt activity.
Because it might be — I'm not saying it is, but it might be — that the Republican Party becomes so one-sided, or such a cult group in effect, that no matter what the evidence is, no matter what the malfeasances are, they" — Republican senators — "would never agree to break from the president.
Although the company was accused of "malfeasances" (by Senator Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York), it appears more likely that it was a matter of nonfeasance: Equifax did not properly install a security patch to open-source software it had used, even though it was available weeks before the hackers exploited the flaw.
In other cases, the D.C.C.C. is counting districts held by controversial Republicans — Chris Collins of New York, with his aggressive advocacy of a biotech firm in which he held substantial investments; Duncan D. Hunter of California, with the possibility of a federal indictment for supposed campaign fund malfeasances hanging over his head — who nonetheless appear safe, at least for the moment.
They appealed to the King concerning a disputed sum of £800 in account between them, accusing each other, as before, of sundry enormities and malfeasances. About the same time Kildare, in accordance with a royal mandate, assembled a large force, and marched into Munster to arrest the Earl of Desmond, making a show of great eagerness, but sending private instructions to the Earl how to keep out of the way. He next turned north, and by diplomacy and force pacified the O'Neills and O'Donnells. In 1526, he was ordered to England and he took with him his married daughter Alice, Lady Slane so that she could report back on his progress.
Langendorf was shot and rendered unconscious: after the front line had rolled back and forth for several days he was found by German soldiers and taken to the field hospital. The surgeon who extracted the bullet advised him to retain it: it came from a German revolver. (It was only in much later, in 1990, that he discovered that army records of the time had reported him as dead.) By the end of 1944, after further military service, he found himself before a military court following further various malfeasances and was sentenced to a further five years in a Punishment squadron. One of his misdemeanours had been to announce to an aristocratic senior officer, during a training course for junior officers, that the Second World War would be won by Germany because Goebbels, the government propaganda minister, was the greater liar.

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