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354 Sentences With "more narrowly"

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

Maggie Hassan won even more narrowly, defeating incumbent GOP Sen.
Clinton won Virginia and Colorado handily, and Nevada more narrowly.
Will the NSC membership be expansive or more narrowly defined?
Many departments have offices more narrowly directed to handle security.
Because of that, Warren argues, more narrowly "targeted" policies are required.
The Obama administration replaced it with a more narrowly tailored rule.
More narrowly focused studies have yielded the same kinds of results.
U.S. trade barriers, on the contrary, focus more narrowly on steel.
The Freedom Act places more narrowly defined limitations on this federal surveillance.
The appeals panel ruled that presidential immunity should be interpreted more narrowly.
But sentiment is growing in Washington to interpret the law more narrowly.
The dissenters said the term legislature should have been read more narrowly.
Even so, this more narrowly defined alt-right may be a force.
State law had previously defined rape more narrowly, as non-consensual sexual intercourse.
They tilt more narrowly toward Clinton in Ohio, 48% Clinton to 44% Trump.
The Constitution, however, defined the Supreme Court's authority in such suits more narrowly.
According to Rifaat, this had only encouraged Egyptians to become more narrowly religious.
If he wins more narrowly in both, he's still in a good place.
"Iran is likely to focus more narrowly on U.S. military targets," Eurasia said.
But this coverage tends to be much more narrowly defined compared to life insurance.
Language — or, more narrowly, words themselves — is the most potent weapon in political warfare.
They more narrowly voted to restricted US support for Saudi Arabia's war in Yemen.
Democrats are favored in the governors' races in Colorado and New Mexico (more narrowly).
He gave four reasons: Digital advertising budgets are being more narrowly focused on specific companies.
The new order is much more narrowly tailored than the first one issued in January.
The president should start over, have agencies draft it more narrowly, and sign it. Yep.
Others, including middle-class women, are attracted more narrowly to his "tough on crime" message.
The more distinctive the vineyard, and the more narrowly circumscribed, the more prized the wine.
More pinpoint geo-location technologies are necessary to more narrowly identify the locations of hackers.
In their place arose more narrowly focused women's groups, most of which lacked mass memberships.
Amazon's Geek Squad-like service is more narrowly focused on getting Alexa into the home, however.
More recently, though, Mr. Trump has added a taunt more narrowly tailored to his latest audience.
She feels fully formed, yet players are offered gratifying opportunities to more narrowly define her personality.
Germany ($5,20033), Sweden ($5,447), Austria ($5,395) and Denmark ($5,299) were also above half though more narrowly.
Germany ($22004,21.5), Sweden ($223,21999), Austria ($22017,22018) and Denmark ($0003,2000) were also above half though more narrowly.
And that could make the bill's fate in the more narrowly divided Senate much more tenuous.
Democrats are more narrowly clustered in major metropolitan areas and coastal states, where they have supermajorities.
Instead, it will more narrowly focus on distributing free blockbuster titles and other classics, the company says.
There are very good histo-political reasons why, historically, Congress has construed that term much more narrowly.
While microhistorians have long zoomed in on individual case studies, Hughes pinpoints her subjects even more narrowly.
The court could also rule more narrowly against MNN in a way that does not impact the companies.
In place of the emergency, France this month got a more narrowly focused but permanent anti-terrorism law.
He has focused ever more narrowly on the features of language that he reckons are unique to humans.
The new plan signed Monday effectively replaces the voter-approved measure with one that's much more narrowly focused.
But turnout is usually low in European races, which gives advantages to motivated, more narrowly focused populist parties.
But the board's chairman, Mr. Sanger, was re-elected far more narrowly, with 56 percent of the vote.
Women voters are overwhelmingly leaning toward Clinton, a Democrat, while men much more narrowly prefer GOP nominee Trump.
Image: ScreenshotAs for computer science and the smartphones in your pocket, here AI tends to be more narrowly defined.
Other times, the nominee has won it more narrowly or finished as a strong second (Barack Obama in 2008).
But the AEA's decision is particularly apt given Mr Donaldson's focus on trade and, more narrowly, on comparative advantage.
The California bill, notably, is more narrowly tailored than legislation that has been introduced in 19 other states nationwide.
Identifying the bacteria that were causing the infection was important so that the antibiotics could be more narrowly targeted.
In some of the other jurisdictions, the charges are more narrowly focused on the import and distribution of narcotics.
Republicans in recent years have focused more narrowly around voter ID and cleaning up voter rolls to prevent fraud.
Targeting subsidies more narrowly: Pai and Republican Commissioner Michael O'Rielly both support the idea of targeting the program's subsidies.
But that is usually applied more narrowly, and it is unclear whether it can be applied to religious groups.
The House's impeachment inquiry is more narrowly focused on President Trump's actions vis-à-vis the president of Ukraine.
Other cities, such as San Francisco, where Airbnb is based, have targeted their restrictions more narrowly at commercial use.
I played the wackiness more on stage — it's possible on film to go somewhere else, to be more narrowly observant.
"These [policies] tend to be more narrowly defined," said Cameron Congdon, North American client delivery leader at Willis Towers Watson.
European sanctions, however, remain much more narrowly focused on Russia's occupation of Crimea and support for separatists in Eastern Ukraine.
One solution is for plaintiff lawyers to push for protective orders that more narrowly define what can be kept confidential.
That analysis has in turn tended to focus even more narrowly on whether the post-merger firm will raise prices.
The government will face another challenge in pursuing a wire fraud case rather than the more narrowly drawn spoofing prohibition.
Or, more narrowly, to the flatterers, courtiers and women who flitter like moths around the incandescent bulb of his personality.
Other regulators could do that sort of policing, because the Fed conceived of safety and soundness a bit more narrowly.
Collins told reporters this week that her legislation is more narrowly tailored than a competing measure sponsored by Democratic Sen.
But what was sorely lacking was the ability to more narrowly define how a child's screen time should be used.
Indeed, unlike its inaugural study last year, Hired has segmented job applicants more narrowly this time, including by age and ethnicity.
His search for his Islam, instead of enlarging his vision, led him to think more and more narrowly, Mr. Derbaix said.
Men said they back Cramer by a 22019 point margin, but support Cramer over Heitkamp more narrowly, or by 49-45.
"This decision does not foreclose more narrowly tailored regulations," he said, promising that new ones will be developed state by state.
In her opinion, she said more narrowly that the process of determining that status in the case of MetLife was problematic.
Instead, GOP leaders have stressed that they want to work with Trump to help ensure the tariffs are more narrowly targeted.
That could constrain Green New Deal–related regulations if the justices read the legislation more narrowly than the EPA staff does.
More narrowly, he is interested in Internet of Things companies that use sensors to gather useful data from the physical environment.
While aircraft and submarines are advertised as "multi-mission", when compared to surface ships, their roles seem much more narrowly focused.
Republicans are more narrowly divided there, with 51% favoring a focus on alternative energy compared to 41% favoring fossil fuel production.
While Dye wanted to seize control of a network, another media entrepreneur was more narrowly targeting the world of TV news.
But this time, prosecutors kept Mr. Rechnitz's testimony more narrowly focused on his business dealings and the payment to Mr. Seabrook.
"I think things that worked investors are going to gravitate towards as they're looking for more narrowly focused strategies," he said.
The outcome of TC Heartland was that patent cases must now be brought in a more narrowly-defined set of courts.
An app more narrowly focused on highlighting new destinations and encouraging check-ins makes it easier for Foursquare to collect location data.
Using the stock market model, which leans heavily on, well, the stock market, Trump wins far more narrowly, with 289 electoral votes.
This is both cheaper than a commitment to making four-year public universities free and more narrowly targeted at lower-income students.
Sales teams, which have seen the brunt of job cuts, are focused more narrowly on 55 locations, compared with a previous 66.
Facebook is purposefully trying to focus Community Actions to be more narrowly concentrated on spurring government action than just any random cause.
Researchers are turning to smaller, more narrowly targeted clinical trials to test the next generation of medicines, The Wall Street Journal reports.
The 301-121 vote cleared the way for the House to debate an immigration measure more narrowly targeted at addressing family separations.
"While microhistorians have long zoomed in on individual case studies, Hughes pinpoints her subjects even more narrowly," our reviewer, Leah Price, writes.
Ms. Lee discarded an earlier, more narrowly focused version of the novel, which she wrote in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
Even more narrowly, some originalists insist on consulting only documents that convey the "public understanding" of the writings of these great men.
A White House official said the new policy was more narrowly targeted than its precursor, which was swiftly blocked by the courts.
An appeals court might decide that the judge in Honolulu erred in his assessment of the new, more narrowly drawn travel ban.
But three members of the court—Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor and John Roberts, the chief—opted to read "scandalous" more narrowly.
Correction: This story has been updated to more narrowly reflect the nature of the work that Wheels Up has hired advisors to do.
She sees the AK government drifting away from a pro-growth agenda towards a programme that more narrowly serves the party's own interests.
Mr. McCoy also applies 15-year-old evaluation criteria in areas like basic training that are more narrowly defined in current credit recommendations.
This stands in contrast to many national AI strategies, which have tended to focus more narrowly on topics relating to traditional R&D.
Dunford has warned about the potential for a humanitarian catastrophe in Idlib and instead has recommended more narrowly tailored operations against militants there.
And Democrats may be more willing to impose broader regulations on the industry while Republicans tend to favor a more narrowly defined approach.
Support for that idea so far is limited even more narrowly to Democrats who hold the party's safest House seats, the analysis found.
American military aid to Tajikistan is more narrowly focused on fighting terrorism and narcotics, because the country is a close ally of Russia.
But Owens wrote that the Legislature's administrative offices do not qualify as "agencies," so the open records law applies more narrowly to them.
What if we're to frame the question more narrowly, and ask how China's government thinks about how it should engage with the US?
It also urges informing potential students on how to respond to requests about a criminal history, and making questions about it more narrowly focused.
It also urges informing potential students on how to respond to requests about a criminal history and making questions about it more narrowly focused.
Instead of using more narrowly configured, mechanized or towed mine detection systems, ALMDS massively expands the surface area from which mine detection takes place.
She feels I need to eliminate some activities and sort of focus more narrowly but somehow this is the way I have been made.
The widespread presumption is that the revised version will be cast more narrowly in an effort to make it less vulnerable to legal challenge.
In Berlin, you had a smaller Jewish population and a simpler problem: the choice seemed more narrowly poised between being Jewish and being German.
And to speak of either massacre more narrowly than that is to miss the greater message, the more pervasive danger and the truest stakes.
The unilateral action was blocked by a federal appeals court, causing the president to sign a new, more narrowly tailored travel ban on Monday.
The phone representatives at these servicers, however, may have been defining that term more narrowly — namely, that he was merely making on-time payments.
But drawing the identity lines a bit more narrowly, Clinton — a white professional woman — did very well with white women who had college degrees.
On Monday night, it was defeated more narrowly after the opposition Labour Party said it would whip its lawmakers to vote for the amendment.
During the second trial, prosecutors kept Mr. Rechnitz's testimony more narrowly focused on his shady business dealings and on the payment to Mr. Seabrook.
Telehealth groups were hoping for a provision that would waive restrictions during all national emergencies, but this appears more narrowly tailored to the coronavirus.
Unfortunately, the teacher pay conversation has been more narrowly framed by the problematic assertion that America's teachers are systematically underpaid relative to similar workers.
Those measurements will allow the NASA team to refine the models it had created and more narrowly track erosion going forward, Dr. Garvin said.
New York's original bill would have emulated the Massachusetts law but was later tailored more narrowly to satisfy the State Senate, Ms. Paulin said.
Biden barely registered with voters under 2900, but seems to have won those 220006 and older, albeit more narrowly than Sanders led among the youngest.
That is a national tax on carbon or, more narrowly, a booster tax on oil or gasoline — all of which have been opposed by Congress.
"Vibrator Nation" focuses more narrowly on women-owned vendors, wrestling with how their activist mission bumped up against the demands and constraints of the marketplace.
Looking at a broader set of innovation industries, or more narrowly at just software, a different set of cities join the ranks of the successful.
Administration officials told the news wire that the penalties would likely target the state's oil sector, and even more narrowly Venezuela's state-owned petroleum company.
A separate proposal by Rooney that focused more narrowly on Army Corps of Engineer projects appeared that it had the votes to pass, several lawmakers said.
Those voters represent a vexing challenge for a president who has been more narrowly focused on his base than any of his predecessors in modern history.
Morris's novel became the central literary testament of the Arts and Crafts movement, which had sprung out of the more narrowly easel-bound Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
Under the Senate bill, patients with "a life-threatening disease or condition" could obtain unapproved drugs, but eligibility under the House bill was more narrowly defined.
Texas is crucial to any Republican's path to the White House, and the state House is more narrowly divided than it has been in recent years.
Still, in Havana, expectations were limited and often more narrowly focused, on economic survival, and on how little would really change when the mourning was done.
Another big contributing factor is how the rule defines more narrowly how the EPA can regulate emissions, offering states more specific ways to improve individual plant efficiency.
The activity on Facebook was less expansive than that on Twitter and it appeared to be more narrowly focused, said Facebook head of cybersecurity policy Nathaniel Gleicher.
Should they go all in for Medicare-for-all and a Green New Deal, or more narrowly seek a public option and some funding for clean energy?
Trump, asked after last month's mosque shootings in New Zealand whether he saw white nationalism as a global rising threat, said he viewed the issue more narrowly.
What it offers, instead, is a much more narrowly tailored and thoughtfully considered version of the ban — one that's much more likely to stand up in court.
A separate proposal by Rooney that focused more narrowly on Army Corps of Engineers projects appeared to have the votes to pass on Wednesday, several lawmakers said.
But Washington also maintains a separate, far more narrowly-focused list of companies and people who face sanctions over Iran's missile program, unrelated to the nuclear sanctions.
While both parties view land as an economic resource, the Republican platform defines its value more narrowly as what can be taken from or below its surface.
The Senate and agricultural commissioner races are now headed to hand reviews of overvotes and undervotes, a more narrowly circumscribed but also potentially volatile pool of votes.
I should also note that in many regions around the world, such as Barolo, Montalcino and Sonoma, efforts are underway to better and more narrowly define appellations.
More narrowly, the $145 million that the 2011 royal wedding is estimated to have generated in retail spending more than covered taxpayers' cost of securing the event.
An emphasis on women's empowerment and digital inclusion — in addition to more narrowly defined U.S. economic and military interests — will positively distinguish America's digital engagement from China's.
Whether Define proves smart to focus more narrowly on digital health will take time to know, but certainly, there's growing interest in virtual healthcare across the board.
The surge, detailed in a new report from insurance shopping site The Zebra, outpaced both inflation (by far) and the increase in average car prices (more narrowly).
Franks, the Hartzler amendment supporter, told POLITICO that his push was more narrowly tailored to the medical procedures issue — not an all-out ban on transgender people.
There is no shame to limiting your user base geographically, or to a more narrowly focused market, but make sure you explain that as part of your presentation.
"Tesla needs to slow down and more narrowly focus its vision and come up for a breath of fresh air," Cowen and Co analysts said in a note.
"If the Justice Department had filed an indictment focused more narrowly on the alleged hacking, none of this would warrant much comment," ACLU Director Ben Wizner wrote Monday.
Others, such as CrowdPac and Brigade, a site promoting social engagement around campaign and policy issues backed by Sean Parker, are more narrowly focused on the political realm.
Both the Senate and agricultural commissioner races are now headed to hand review of overvotes and undervotes, a more narrowly circumscribed but also potentially volatile pool of votes.
But opponents argue that injunctions should be applied more narrowly to groups that are directly impacted, saying the more liberal use of injunctions is hurting the judicial system.
Rose said his bill is more narrowly focused on terrorist content because most efforts to address online hate speech in the U.S. run directly into First Amendment issues.
A religious freedom bill was rejected by the West Virginia Senate on Wednesday, and there are some similar but more narrowly written measures floating around other state legislatures.
David Koch was a later addition to the network founded by his older brother and focused his energies more narrowly on Americans For Prosperity, the network's political arm.
Relaxing "minimum essential health benefit" requirements, which specify that all policies must cover certain types of care, may lead to more narrowly tailored insurance products for particular consumers.
Another study, from the American Political Science Review, zoomed in more narrowly, looking just at similar counties on the borders between states that expanded and those that didn't.
" Defending the institution of segregation on more narrowly theological grounds, he argued that "it does not mean God loves one race less than another when he separates them.
Allies of the president, meanwhile, insist that the legal moves against Cohen are signs of overreach in a probe that they contend should be much more narrowly focused.
If one means more narrowly death by the same physiological mechanism that is involved in opioid overdose (suppressed respiration, etc.), then no, that is not how cannabinoids work.
They will only show up on feeds when the advertiser puts ad dollars behind the ad, allowing it to be more narrowly geared towards a specific type of person.
Now the Republican Party is in the hands of a much smaller and more narrowly focused outlet, one that appeals not just to the right but the alt-right.
The studio has clearly realized there are plenty of possibilities surrounding its Bat brand, especially when producers have the latitude to target shows more narrowly to passionate niche audiences.
Obama over the years made a few efforts to address criticism from immigration activists on these scores, issuing new rounds of memos and trying to focus enforcement more narrowly.
An overzealous prosecutor could, of course, stretch the words of the accordion like statute to target a political enemy, or read it more narrowly to favor a political friend.
He believes it's far too expansive and should be more narrowly written to include what he sees as the real threats, like the countries where the September 11 attackers originated.
ING said the yuan has been moving much more narrowly in the past two months as the People's Bank of China, the central bank, has emphasized "stability" in currency policy.
" At the same time, Kelchen said, "If you try to target more narrowly, you run the risk of needy students not thinking they're eligible, or not hearing about the program.
To illustrate, take a state with five districts: two won easily by Democrats, 76 percent to 24 percent, and three won more narrowly by Republicans, 59 percent to 41 percent.
Romine is not the hitter Sanchez is, but his role as a backup catcher is more narrowly defined, and he was thrilled to hear about Gray's unqualified faith in him.
And of course this whole mess could have been avoided if the executive order had gone through proper interagency review in the first place, as well as being more narrowly tailored.
NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The new, more narrowly tailored temporary travel ban President Donald Trump signed on Monday will be more difficult to challenge successfully in court, legal experts said.
Karlyn Bowman, a senior fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute, agreed that Democrats have reason to be enthusiastic but predicted the party will more narrowly win back the House.
SmileDirectClub is more narrowly focused and changes its messaging frequently, which it can do the same day but which would take days or weeks for an agency to do, he said.
More narrowly focused on health care, the survey found that only 45% of Republicans say they back the last version of the Republican health care plan to repeal and replace Obamacare.
Jennifer Popik, director of federal legislation for the anti-abortion National Right to Life Committee, said her group hopes Kavanaugh and Gorsuch will "interpret the Constitution more narrowly" on abortion rights.
" West Virginia's Amendment 1, which passed more narrowly with 52% of votes, states that "Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to abortion or requires the funding of abortion.
Indeed, in times of major financial distress — see 2008 — a vicious cycle of redemptions and forced sales of bond holdings can cause huge losses, though usually at smaller, more narrowly focused funds.
The court could more narrowly hold that the president must make the entire record available so it can judge whether the national security rationale provides a mere pretext for violating constitutional rights.
Their stories were no longer about milestones and stumbling blocks in every young child's life but took a more narrowly targeted approach that left some out even as it pulled others in.
Some state laws apply to any and all goods and services sold during a state of emergency, while other states apply the law a bit more narrowly to "essential" goods and services.
Though some red- and purple-state Democrats up for reelection in states Trump won in 2016 have praised his decision, others have urged him to make the financial penalties more narrowly targeted.
Brazil's government has openly pushed for a partnership between the two companies focused more narrowly on commercial aviation, rather than an outright acquisition, due to concerns about the independence of Brazilian defense programs.
The path forward is not clear, but a leading option is for the Senate to pass a much more narrowly drawn bill simply to get the issue into a House-Senate conference committee.
The more narrowly tailored the no-fly list is to plane-based threats, the less likely it is to be effective at catching people who want to use guns to commit terrorist attacks.
Third, one might think, more narrowly, that the Idaho Supreme Court meant to challenge the U.S. Supreme Court's power to issue binding rulings on judicial discretion in the context of federal statutory regimes.
One possibility, according to Vanessa Sciarra, vice president of legal affairs and trade policy at the National Foreign Trade Council, would be for Congress to define the interests of national security more narrowly.
Paige's approach uses much larger data sets than are typically employed in AI-based diagnostics, but without the tight curation that focuses other efforts much more narrowly on specific types of cancer diagnostics.
But that was a more narrowly targeted law aimed at safeguarding domestic industries harmed by imports (the Trump administration has used that provision to impose tariffs on imported solar panels and washing machines).
So they are bolstering their efforts in Wisconsin and elsewhere with more narrowly tailored operations to turn out specific groups, like conservatives who find Mr. Trump's agenda appealing but do not regularly vote.
The latest Iowa results show Sanders winning the initial vote tally by a few percentage points, winning the final vote tally more narrowly, and very barely losing the delegate tally to Pete Buttigieg.
And just six days before the Texas bill was approved by the House, a similar but more narrowly focused bill that did not cover publicly funded agencies was signed into law in Alabama.
And by being specifically tied to a school, Trump was able to take in proposals during Wednesday's listening session that were more narrowly focused than potential proposals to prevent attacks like those in 2017.
Where it differs from a service like Mint is that it's more narrowly focused on offering financial advice and encouraging you to make changes, while also helping you track your everyday spending and budget.
More narrowly, there's another reason that I don't always take pains to highlight the views of women who take that side in this conversation: I don't think that doing so is an urgent necessity.
What's next: Huawei and Google can seek U.S. Commerce Department permission to continue their work together, either broadly on phones or perhaps more narrowly to ensure existing customers maintain direct access to security updates.
The judge ruled more narrowly, finding that Texas lacked legal standing to enforce the Refugee Act's requirement on advance consultation with states and failed to prove sufficient facts to establish a breach of contract.
Hargan, in which he opposed a ruling that allowed an undocumented teenage immigrant to leave federal custody to obtain an abortion, already indicated a willingness to interpret existing precedent more narrowly than his colleagues.
It is different than the Equal Rights Amendment, which focuses more narrowly on gender equality and was approved by Congress in 1972; state ratification failed in 1982, although supporters have recently revived that effort.
America's current crisis of fracture and extremism can't be clearly explored through the lens of pop culture — especially if that lens is focused even more narrowly on superhero, fantasy, science fiction and apocalyptic horror.
The FCC had announced before the incident in Hawaii that it would vote this month on a proposal to overhaul the Wireless Emergency Alert system by allowing authorities to more narrowly target warnings geographically.
More narrowly, the new version also provides Rosenthal with an opportunity to offer an "apology," as he termed it, by admitting two women, Susan Rothenberg and Maria Lassnig, into the New Spirit boys' club.
Should it write a new order, it would be more narrowly tailored than the one issued two weeks ago, the source said, such as explicitly stating that it does not apply to legal permanent residents.
While the new contenders are young, the amount of backing they are getting shows investors believe new social apps more narrowly focused on photo- and video-sharing, where WeChat is less dominant, could pay off.
It's obviously not unusual for a country to align itself with other nations based on shared values, but Trump appears to be reorienting American relationships based on ideological affinity that is much more narrowly partisan.
" He added that the court "made the wrong decision and ignored the evidence that the Muslim ban, even the more narrowly tailored version, is a xenophobic policy that makes our country no safer than before.
Funds who placed a broad array of bets produced some of the strongest gains, beating star managers like Bill Ackman, David Einhorn and Larry Robbins who invested more narrowly and ended 2015 with steep losses.
The New York Times analysis of caucus results, with 74 percent of precincts reporting, showed Clinton winning "More Hispanic" precincts in the state (if narrowly), while Sanders (even more narrowly) was winning "Less Hispanic" precincts.
Recode hasn't seen earlier versions of the story Masters pitched to previous publications, but both Masters and The Information CEO Jessica Lessin say the version The Information published was considerably shorter and more narrowly focused.
In the Charlotte court, Ana's lawyer focused more narrowly on her political opinion, arguing that she was at risk of persecution for her opposition to gangs in her position on the parent-teacher association board.
Michael Banerian, 22, who was a Trump elector in the Electoral College, and is the youth vice chairman of the Michigan Republican Party, said he saw the president's more narrowly tailored order as common sense.
Those include states in which the president won big such as Indiana, North Dakota, West Virginia, Missouri and Montana, as well as areas he won more narrowly such as Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Since The Bell Curve, Murray has moved on to other topics, most notably his 22007 book Coming Apart, which focused more narrowly on white Americans, and explained class stratification in cultural rather than genetic terms.
Afterward, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) worked with the Portland Bureau of Planning and Sustainability (BPS) to develop a CBEI more narrowly targeted at Multnomah County, where Portland is located, using local input data.
Since then, Facebook and Twitter have both announced new policies to curb misleading or fabricated videos — though Facebook's is much more narrowly tailored to curb images and videos that have been technically manipulated using artificial intelligence.
We have learned the hard way that, despite the clear aims of the Anti-Terrorism Act and its 2016 amendment, federal courts have been interpreting it much more narrowly than Congress and the executive branch intended.
Though it was decisively defeated (on the same day as an initiative to ban the dehorning of cows and goats was more narrowly fended off), such events make relations between Switzerland and the EU endlessly twitchy.
Unlike other online streaming services, which also cater to those who still subscribe traditional television, Pluto TV from the start has more narrowly focused on acquiring consumers who are abandoning their cable and satellite TV subscriptions.
Mailey said the company realized from Jonah's insights that it needed to be more narrowly focused in recruitment letters, differentiating between divisions like software engineers and product managers instead of sending email blasts for all engineers.
In either event, Republicans suggested, the episode spoke to Democrats' inability to accept the results of the 2016 election — and, more narrowly, to adhere to the rules of a body where decorum has often fallen away.
Giuliani, though, pushed for a statement more narrowly focused on Burisma — the Ukrainian energy firm on whose board Hunter Biden sat — and a possible Ukrainian role in the 2016 U.S. election, a near obsession with Trump.
The Department of Homeland Security says it intends to more narrowly define who can qualify for a high-skilled visa and remove work authorizations for those immigrants' spouses, though officials stress nothing has been finalized yet.
But the SWIFT Institute said that a central third party role would still exist, albeit more narrowly, as a mean of confirming identity and existence of an asset, as well as dispute resolution and enforcing legal obligations.
While the Pentagon was making those preparations, American intelligence agencies developed a separate, far more narrowly focused cyberplan to disable the Fordo nuclear enrichment site, which Iran built deep inside a mountain near the city of Qum.
More narrowly, the net metering payments paid to power consumers installing solar PV systems have to be financed by other power consumers; no other outcome is possible in a world in which there are no free lunches.
During a lively session that lasted just over an hour, the justices asked an array of questions, some that broadly sought to explore the President's motives, some that looked more narrowly at how the travel restrictions worked.
Whether it will be ended "one way or the other" is also debatable: A constitutional amendment has little hope of ratification, and the Supreme Court would likely reject an effort to re-interpret the clause more narrowly.
Lucy McBathLucia (Lucy) Kay McBathGOP Georgia congressional candidate withdraws after calling himself a 'white nationalist' House Democrats request sit-down with McConnell to talk guns Assault weapons ban picks up steam in Congress MORE narrowly beat Rep.
The research conducted there showed that an Asian person looking at a video of a fish tank is likely to scan the entire scene, while a Westerner will tend to focus more narrowly on the dominant fish.
It is similar to the Feinstein amendment but drawn more narrowly to bar people on the no-fly list and what's called the "selectee list," which requires designees to undergo additional screening at airports, from buying firearms.
The FCC does not send those loud updates, but it does write the technical rules for them — and regulators have sought to ensure that first responders can send more narrowly tailored, multimedia-friendly updates in times of crisis.
Hillary Clinton handily won the vote of those who feel things have improved, by a 263% to 21% margin, and more narrowly among those who think the situation is about the same, by a 46% to 44% split.
Steel and aluminum represent only 2 percent of United States imports, and so far Mr. Trump's proposal bears less resemblance to the sweeping Smoot-Hawley tariffs than to the more narrowly targeted Fordney-McCumber tariffs that preceded it.
In the letter, the association says that more narrowly targeted tariffs on Chinese production — which would be more akin to what previous administrations have done — and exemptions for trading partners like Canada and the E.U. would be better.
A serious jobs agenda would focus more narrowly on the problems of people who are currently not working but would like a job without being as constrained as the Center for American Progress plan about the available tools.
Moderates in Washington, especially in the Treasury Department, have been trying to put forward more narrowly tailored requests for China to buy more American products (like natural gas), while reining in Chinese practices that violate intellectual property rights.
More narrowly drawn than one of the measures that failed Monday, it would only have blocked gun purchases by people on the terrorist no-fly list and the so-called selectee list, who require additional screening at airports.
The census is essential in this effort; more accurate data reveal who is attending schools and universities, open the door for a better understanding of student needs, and aid in more narrowly focusing attention on supporting those needs.
Trump sought to enact tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum — a broader tariff policy than other modern presidents, who have generally imposed much more narrowly targeted taxes on select products from individual nations.
The state inquiry was more narrowly focused on whether the mayor or his aides violated state election law in 2014 by directing campaign donations to county committees to evade limits on contributions to five individual State Senate candidates.
Its ruling in February (upholding a lower-court judge) that kept the executive order on hold ultimately inspired the administration to go back to the drawing board and work out a more narrowly tailored version of the ban.
The bill's Patient and State Stability Fund, which would give the states more than $100 billion over 10 years, would be targeted more narrowly to be spent on high-risk pools, as Jonathan Swan and I reported last night.
Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE narrowly leads Sen.
Unlike the proposed federal measure, which would give conditional green cards to undocumented immigrants who were brought to the United States as children, New York's version is more narrowly focused on another battleground in the immigration debate: college tuition.
ATHENS (Reuters) - The top U.S. military officer warned on Tuesday that a major Syrian military assault on the rebel-held enclave of Idlib would lead to a "humanitarian catastrophe" and instead recommended more narrowly tailored operations against militants there.
The natural end result of this particular trend, after all, is that designers and the brands they work for become so worried about offending that they cease to look at the world outside, defining their aesthetic ever more narrowly.
In addition, Democratic leaders may wish to reserve the ability to keep the "impeachment umbrella" as wide as possible — perhaps to include material from the Mueller investigation — and avoid defining it more narrowly in the text of a resolution.
So in practice it does not that mean a court order issued in one EU country will get universally applied in all jurisdictions as there's no international agreement on what constitutes unlawful speech or even more narrowly defamatory speech.
This partnership is just a study for now, but it could become something more later on, especially as automakers focus more on the broader issue of transportation and moving around cities, instead of focusing more narrowly on cars and vehicles themselves.
"The fact that we can now focus a little bit more narrowly on hand-and-body protection in both industrial and medical settings will give us a stronger platform, if you will, from which to lead the industry," he said.
A prior set of guidelines for acceptable paid editing, proposed in 2010, had failed to gain approval, though this new discussion focused more narrowly on editors' failure to disclose their conflicts of interest and the best way of investigating them.
This may sound like just another layer of government regulation, but done correctly, it can reduce the role of government by getting them out of writing and enforcing detailed rules and more narrowly focused on determining the appropriate goals for regulation.
After Democrats picked up seats in the state legislature in this year's midterm elections, Inslee said he planned an aggressive climate change agenda this year, one that has eluded him in previous years, when the legislature was more narrowly divided.
After a week of silence, Apple has finally given its side of the story, saying the attack was more "narrowly focused" than the researchers implied, was not a "mass exploitation," and that it had been fixed months ago in a patch.
The trade office has not said whether the inquiry will include the blocking of products that rely on American intellectual property, or whether it will focus more narrowly on cases in which China has allegedly purloined or otherwise copied it.
The trade office has not said whether the inquiry will include the blocking of products that rely on American intellectual property, or whether it will focus more narrowly on cases in which China has allegedly purloined or otherwise copied it.
"There's a sense among the lawyers I've spoken to that this time the travel ban is crafted more narrowly and has some chance at being upheld at the end of the day," New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof told CNN's Don Lemon.
"Unlike the broad based pick-up in PPI last year, the recent rebound has been more narrowly driven by oil prices and so is less supportive of corporate profits," Julian Evans-Pritchard, Senior China Economist at Capital Economics, wrote in a note.
"You have to define security and admissibility more narrowly because the impact is that people are denied access to the refugee definition, and they're forced to put up with this very inadequate process, which is the pre-removal risk assessment," said Dench.
Indeed, because Lifeline is more narrowly targeted than the FCC's other universal service programs, if properly structured and operated, it should be the most efficient in bridging any remaining digital divide that separates those who cannot afford service from those who can.
While Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg debate the dangers of artificial general intelligence, startups applying AI to more narrowly defined problems such as accelerating the performance of sales teams and improving the operating efficiency of manufacturing lines are building billion-dollar businesses.
Police could also improve how they target crime — to focus more narrowly on certain hot spots, groups of people, or individuals instead of taking broad police actions on whole neighborhoods in a way that can feel like harassment for the people living there.
But the demonstrations have also drawn fuel from more narrowly French laments: The traditionally generous social welfare system is increasingly neglecting key slices of the populace, especially young people, tripping deep-seated notions about fairness that date back to the French Revolution.
Ted CruzRafael (Ted) Edward CruzTed Cruz clarifies after Lev Parnas's lawyer calls senator's tweet 'fake news' John Roberts blocks Rand Paul's question on whistleblower Dershowitz: If President does something to win election, it's OK unless it's illegal MORE narrowly defeated Democrat Rep.
When getting a big trade deal seemed an impossibility, the US and China started working on a "Phase One" deal that was more narrowly focused and which reportedly includes getting the Chinese to agree to a numerical amount of US agricultural purchases.
Two other Democrats among the group are from states won more narrowly in 2016 by Mr. Trump — Bill Nelson of Florida, who is also up for re-election this year, and Gary Peters of Michigan, who does not face voters again until 2020.
The shifting electoral tide suggests a gradual transformation of India's underlying sense of national destiny, from being a pluralist country enriched by diversity to becoming a more narrowly defined Hindu rashtra, or state, in much the same way that secular Pakistan became an "Islamic" state.
As far as permissions go, Google also notes that in 2019, it'll introduce new mechanisms and more narrowly scoped APIs that will reduce the need for broader permissions and that will give users more control over the access that they grant to their extensions.
Kicking off on Thursday, this year's four-day Comic-Con gathering of nerd and pop culture fans will see fewer films being marketed by movie studios, which are instead focusing more narrowly on projects that tie directly into the interests of the convention's fandom.
Democrat Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham Clinton2020 Democrats make play for veterans' votes The Memo: Democrats confront prospect of long primary Manafort sought to hurt Clinton 2016 campaign efforts in key states: NYT MORE narrowly defeated Trump in the state in the 2016 general election.
She also represents an emerging swing state that Democratic nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 16253 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly won in 2016.
You didn't hear any of that at the convention on Wednesday night, when the theme was in fact "Make America First Again," a nod to Trump's call for trade agreements with better terms for America and a foreign policy more narrowly tailored to American interests.
Advisers have been bitterly divided over how to proceed on the tariffs, including whether to impose them broadly on all steel and aluminum imports, which would ensnare allies like the European Union and Canada, or whether to tailor them more narrowly to target specific countries.
The number of unauthorized immigrants detained far from the border — on the job, at home, in public spaces — more than tripled, to nearly 350,000 from 2007 to 2011, after which Mr. Obama changed tack to focus more narrowly on unauthorized immigrants with criminal records.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpAs Biden surges, GOP Ukraine probe moves to the forefront Republicans, rooting for Sanders, see Biden wins as setback Trump says Biden Ukraine dealings will be a 'major' campaign issue MORE narrowly won the state by just over 85033,000 votes in 2016.
When people are incredulous that women could vote Republican because "it's against their own interests," they fail to recognize that these women, often white, are prioritizing not themselves or other women, but prioritizing their whiteness, or more narrowly, upholding the economic interests of their households.
I think you need more conviction in this environment, and you go in this environment from sort of buying everything, let's say five or six years ago, where you could be more comfortable, to be much more narrowly focused in where you'll deploy capital.
Two 16mm shorts, for example — Janie's Janie (1971) by Geri Ashur and Joyce at 343 (1972) by Joyce Chopra and Claudia Weill — are more straightforward, more narrowly glimpsed accounts of women trying to preserve balance and sanity amid the pressures and the social seclusion of domestic work.
And that raises a crucial question: If Democrats in the even more narrowly divided Senate embrace the filibuster to block what could be a flood of legislation, would Republicans respond by eliminating the 60-vote threshold in order to push their priorities through on simple majority votes?
The Trump administration wants the court to rule more narrowly by chucking the removal clause while allowing the CFPB to "continue the critical work of implementing the consumer financial protection laws" without throwing existing regulations into uncertainty, according to a Justice Department brief filed last month.
The recent round of discussions in Beijing was more narrowly focused on potential Chinese purchases of American products, a goal that has angered some China critics who fear that Mr. Ross and Mr. Mnuchin are sacrificing the bigger concessions by China that many feel are needed.
The investigation, which led to the interviews of about 20 mostly senior police officials, is more narrowly focused on the conduct of Mr. Rechnitz and Mr. Reichberg and how they may have tried to use their influence in City Hall, people briefed on the inquiry have said.
" He also drew a sharp distinction between society's larger objectives — of "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being" for humankind — and the role of doctors, which he defined more narrowly as "the relief of pain, the prevention of disability and the postponement of death.
The findings also showed Americans diverging on what constitutes "fake news," with 65 percent saying it applies broadly to the editorial decisions outlets make over what topics to cover and 53 percent more narrowly defining it to apply only to the spread of factually incorrect information.
Yoder is running for his fifth term in Kansas's 3rd District, where Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly defeated Trump in 85033.
Obama and Biden carried the state in 2008 and 85033, and Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly won the state in 2016.
Seeking to reassure athletes and other constituencies on Friday, the I.O.C. emphasized that its continuing reanalysis of past doping samples — which the organization has the ability to do for up to 10 years after competition — was initially more narrowly focused on keeping drugged athletes out of this summer's Games.
Sherwin Sheik, the chief executive of CareLinx, a smaller service that focuses more narrowly on providing in-home care to older adults and patients with chronic conditions, applauded the move and said his company was also considering ways to bring more benefits to the caregivers on its platforms.
While there is a chance that Donald J. Trump will win the White House and Republicans will hold the House and Senate, current polling suggests it is more likely that Hillary Clinton will win the presidency and Republicans will more narrowly control one or both chambers of Congress.
But the main election apps currently used on the left — such as MiniVAN, built by NGP VAN, a leading technology provider to Democrats — are geared more narrowly for campaign volunteers engaging in door-to-door canvassing, an activity where they can woo and record details on individual voters.
He and other House Democrats favor creating two new agencies to replace ICE as it is currently constituted: one that would aggressively police acts like human and drug trafficking and illegal gang violence, and another that could deal more narrowly with asylum seekers and other immigrants inside the country.
A Polish court on Wednesday cleared the way for the right-wing government in Poland, which took power in 2015, to seize control of the institution and merge it with a smaller, not-yet-built institution that would focus more narrowly on the German Nazi invasion of 1939.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The most powerful member of the U.S. House of Representatives said on Tuesday that President Donald Trump's planned tariffs on steel and aluminum imports are too broad and open the country to possible retaliation, adding that he encouraged the White House to more narrowly focus its approach.
Rohrabacher said he took that action not because he was picking sides in the Russia matter but rather because the legislation was designed to be far larger than Russia and using the Russian lawyer's name sent the wrong signal that the bill was more narrowly focused on Moscow.
Oddie: I think we both have a wider range of interests, in terms of types of music, and a more broader range of things we're interested in, as opposed to when we were teenagers, and we were a bit more narrowly focused and maybe a little bit more overly critical.
In 2012 they voted at a higher rate than whites—a showing that could not prevent Mitt Romney narrowly winning back the state for the Republicans, after Barack Obama scraped it, even more narrowly, in 2008 (by a handful of votes per precinct, as Mrs Obama reminded her acolytes in Charlotte).
But some of the argument crumbled under scrutiny, as supervisors were pressed on whether the measure as written would unintentionally tax all stock-based compensation of all San Francisco-based companies — rather than more narrowly just taxing employers when they have an IPO and their employees exercise their stock options.
The first request, which, sources say, named Trump, was denied back in June, but the second was drawn more narrowly and was granted in October after evidence was presented of a server, possibly related to the Trump campaign, and its alleged links to two banks; SVB Bank and Russia's Alfa Bank.
Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly won the state in November, winning 47.9 percent of the vote compared to Trump's 45.5 percent.
The company declined to discuss the allegations involving Mr. Cruz, which were dropped from the lawsuit as it became more narrowly focused on charges that Mannatech permitted sales associates to make false health claims, such as promising that its products could treat and cure medical conditions like autism and cancer.
His seat was already high on national Democrats' target list after Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly carried the district in 2628.
"While we believe a better approach would be to focus on a more narrowly-tailored effort to target those tax transactions that are actually abusive, we urge you to—at a minimum—address the concerns raised in this letter should Treasury insist on finalizing the proposed regulations," the GOP Senators said.
He dominated in Minnesota, the state that Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly won and one on which the Trump campaign has set its sights.
Biden is arguing that the US needs to cut down its troop presence and focus more narrowly on fighting potential terrorist threats to the US homeland rather than the overall Taliban insurgency — a defensible position that, as Biden's notes, he's been advocating since the Obama administration: But here's the point.
The top U.S. military officer warned on Tuesday that a major Syrian military assault on Idlib would lead to a "humanitarian catastrophe" and instead recommended more narrowly tailored operations against militants there "There is indeed intense humanitarian and political diplomacy now surrounding Idlib," said Jan Egeland, de Mistura's humanitarian adviser.
Virtual reality and augmented reality are also attracting investments, but those applications are seen as more narrowly tailored for specific uses, as opposed to the mass adoption potential seen for AI. There were 99 deals worth a total of $1.485 billion in this area in 2016, up from 23 deals in 2007.
McBath won a suburban Atlanta district President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE narrowly carried in 22019.
Tom Latham (R) held the Des Moines-area seat for decades, but voters there backed Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaDick Cheney to attend fundraiser supporting Trump reelection: report Forget conventional wisdom — Bernie Sanders is electable 2020 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care MORE narrowly in the last two presidential elections.
The race is a top priority for Democrats since Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly won Culberson's district in the 2016 presidential election.
Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly won Culberson's district in 2016, and the nonpartisan Cook Political Report rates the race a toss-up.
Its most controversial elements, passed much more narrowly, are Article 11, a "link tax" requiring social networks and news aggregators to pay publishers to display snippets of their output, and most of all Article 13, an "upload filter" making larger online publishers like YouTube responsible for copyright infringements in material uploaded by their users.
Trump presented a world view in which the interests of the United States were much more narrowly defined; in which only enemies that attack us directly, such as ISIS , merited a military response; and in which international agreements had to show more tangible benefits if the U.S. was to remain a party to them.
That embrace is a risky move in a state that Democratic presidential nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly carried in 2016 and one where Trump remains largely unpopular.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE narrowly won the swing state by just 1 point in 2016.
He's represented the Houston-area seat since 2001, but Democrats are targeting his district after Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly won it in 2016.
John FlemingJohn Calvin FlemingThe Hill's 12:30 Report: Dems aim to end anti-Semitism controversy with vote today Former congressmen, RNC members appointed to Trump administration roles Overnight Energy: Watchdog opens investigation into Interior chief | Judge halts Pruitt truck pollution rule decision | Winners, losers in EPA, Interior spending bill amendments MORE narrowly trailed Boustany, respectively.
Republicans are keen to unseat Peters after President TrumpDonald John TrumpPence: Intelligence shows Iran directing militias not to attack U.S. targets Mnuchin aims to wait until end of 2020 to disclose Secret Service costs for Trump's travel: report Pressure building on Pelosi over articles of impeachment MORE narrowly won the Wolverine State in 2016.
The state has been won by a Republican presidential candidate going back to the 1950s, with the exception of the 1996 election when Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonCentrist Democrats fret over impeachment gamble Donald Trump, Boris Johnson and the markets Cindy McCain: I can see Arizona 'going Democrat' in 85033 MORE narrowly won the state.
The most recent example came in 2000, when Democrat Al GoreAlbert (Al) Arnold Gore2020 Democrats release joint statement ahead of Trump's New Hampshire rally Deregulated energy markets made Texas a clean energy giant Gun safety is actually a consensus issue MORE narrowly won the popular vote but lost the presidency by five electoral votes to George W. Bush.
Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE narrowly won the district, by about 2.5 percentage points, and even in the wave year of 2014 he only lost to Hardy by about 3,500 votes.
A Democratic presidential candidate has not won Georgia in a general election since 1992, when Bill ClintonWilliam (Bill) Jefferson ClintonGOP senators balk at lengthy impeachment trial Biden, Sanders, Warren, Buttigieg, Harris lead Trump in Georgia: Poll Keep your eye on essential facts in the unfolding impeachment circus MORE narrowly beat then-President George H.W. Bush in the state.
In 28503, these polls had President Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaDick Cheney to attend fundraiser supporting Trump reelection: report Forget conventional wisdom — Bernie Sanders is electable 22019 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care MORE narrowly edging out Mitt Romney by 0.7% heading into election night, casting tremendous doubt over the state of the race.
Republican Ron DeSantisRonald Dion DeSantisFlorida first lady to miss Women for Trump event due to planned execution Florida governor orders criminal investigation into handling of Jeffrey Epstein case Groups ask court to block ex-felon voting law in Florida MORE narrowly beat Democrat Andrew Gillum in Florida's gubernatorial race last fall, while Scott edged out Democratic Sen.
In October 2016, Kavanaugh claimed that the head of the agency, which was founded in the aftermath of the 2008 global financial crisis, had more power than any government official besides the president, and struck down its structure on constitutional grounds even as a dissenting judge said the same result could have been reached more narrowly.
Snips, which had been developing dedicated smart device assistants that can operate primarily locally, instead of relying on consistently round-tripping voice data to the cloud, could help Sonos set up a voice control option for its customers that has "privacy in mind" and is focused more narrowly on music control than on being a general-purpose smart assistant.
But what got the kids and their coach out of the cave was a different model: a slower, more methodical, more narrowly specialized approach to problems, one that has turned many risky enterprises into safe endeavors — commercial airline travel, for example, or rock climbing, both of which have extensive protocols and safety procedures that have taken years to develop.
It all started with an idea Trump floated during the campaign, when in December 2015 he called for "a total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the United States until our country's representatives can figure out what the hell is going on," and proceeded through three different executive orders (each one more narrowly tailored than the last).
President TrumpDonald John TrumpRepublican group targets Graham in ad calling for fair Senate trial Democratic presidential candidates react to Trump impeachment: 'No one is above the law' Trump attacks Schumer at fiery rally in Michigan MORE narrowly trails the top Democratic presidential contenders ahead of next year's 2023 general election and is tied with South Bend, Ind.
Issue advertisers won't be able to drill down to narrow geographies — in the case of the U.S., that means they can't geographically target ads more narrowly than the state level — and they won't be allowed to target users by political keywords that come up in their data-driven Twitter marketing profiles, such as "liberal" or conservative.
Evan JenkinsEvan Hollin JenkinsWest Virginia New Members 28503 Republican Carol Miller holds off Democrat in West Virginia House race Trump to fundraise for 22019 Republicans running for open seats: report MORE narrowly leads state Attorney General Patrick Morrisey in a new poll of the state's GOP Senate primary race, which shows former coal executive Don Blankenship in third place.
These numbers are a far cry from those found in the 2016 House exit poll, when independents voted with Republicans (51 percent to 45 percent), moderates favored Democrats more narrowly (2023 percent to 46 percent), and the margins favoring Democrats among women and voters under age 45 were 10 percentage points (21625 percent to 2900 percent) — not 220006 and 2202 percentage points, respectively.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE narrowly won Florida in 2016 and Republicans are eyeing a takeover of Nelson's seat as they seek to defend and expand their narrow majority in the Senate.
While voice-recognition-powered virtual assistants like Siri, Cortana, Google Now and Amazon's Echo continue to get more useful and reliable on the march to platform-dom, there is a parallel wave of development underway that has captured the public eye, where machine learning, artificial intelligence and natural language processing are getting corralled for more narrowly purposed means — by way of bots.
But after the designer Rei Kawakubo announced that she was ready for her retrospective last year, he postponed the project, and later decided to more narrowly define his topic, in part because he found that the majority of Western designers (and there are only three non-European or American-based names in the exhibition) were engaged in a dialogue with Catholicism.
It concluded by saying "Barr has spoken and acted in a manner communicating an impression that he views himself as serving as the Attorney General not for the entire nation, but more narrowly for certain segments of society—whether defined in terms of religion, ideology (his own &aposside,&apos to borrow the language of Mr. Barr&aposs Federalist Society speech) or party affiliation."
It depended on defining the successful novel in an extremely narrow way (it had to be a Balzac-style "social tableau" about status-striving in a big city); on characterizing contemporary fiction even more narrowly, so that he could dismiss it entirely; and on insisting that nonfiction writers could achieve greatness only by adopting a set of techniques taken from nineteenth-century fiction.
His announcement comes as the GOP is gearing up for war in Minnesota, a state where Republicans are keen on gaining ground after President TrumpDonald John TrumpOur justice system must reward success Former Biden economic adviser: 'I really like a lot of' Warren's tax proposals Roy Moore calls for Omar to go back from 'whence she came' MORE narrowly lost there by roughly 1.5 points in 2016.
Sonos acquires voice assistant startup Snips, potentially to build out on-device voice control Snips, which had been developing dedicated smart device assistants that can operate locally (instead of relying on consistently round-tripping voice data to the cloud) could help Sonos set up a voice control option for its customers that has better privacy and is focused more narrowly on music control. 7.
REVRY debuted a year ago as just one of several new services aiming to give an online home to queer content: It joined Dekkoo, which launched in October 2015 and is more narrowly focused on content for gay men, and other, older queer media brands that are making the transition to streaming, like HereTV, which began as a pay-per-view service and is now available through platforms like Amazon Prime.
Wisconsin Republicans have been cautiously eyeing the tone of the campaign in hopes that the rough battle doesn't jeopardize the party's chances of taking down Baldwin in November in a state that President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE narrowly won in 2016.
Last year, the 31-year-old investigative filmmaker came close to delivering a major upset in a district where President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE narrowly won in the presidential election.
The efforts came after other public attempts to push back on the mayor earlier this summer that were more narrowly focused on issues of disagreement with City Hall: a string of ads from the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, the union that represents New York City police officers, knocking Mr. de Blasio over a contract dispute; and others from the Rent Stabilization Association, a landlord group, complaining over the mayor's support for a rent freeze.
Democratic presidential nominee Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly lost Arizona in November and Flake has roiled his relationship with the party's base after he released a book that blasted President Trump and questioned the direction the president is taking the Republican Party.
The big picture: The Trump administration has been determining how to more narrowly define gender as a "biological, immutable condition determined by genitalia at birth" since at least 2018, by considering changes to the federal civil rights law Title IX. "The new definition would essentially eradicate federal recognition of the estimated 1.4 million Americans who have opted to recognize themselves — surgically or otherwise — as a gender other than the one they were born into," the NYT reported in 2018.
While Republicans will likely have better prospects in a neighboring Nevada district — an open seat in a district that President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE narrowly won last year — the GOP is feeling emboldened about taking back Kihuen's district following the allegations.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE narrowly trails former Democratic Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHarry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Warren offers plan to repeal 1994 crime law authored by Biden Panel: Jill Biden's campaign message MORE and Sen.
President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE narrowly won the state over Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThe exhaustion of Democrats' anti-Trump delusions Poll: Trump trails three Democrats by 10 points in Colorado Soft levels of support mark this year's Democratic primary MORE in the 2016 election, the first Republican win there since 1984.
In a 2017 special election primary in South Carolina, Freedom-backed candidate Ralph NormanRalph Warren NormanConservatives call on Pelosi to cancel August recess Conservatives ask Barr to lay out Trump's rationale for census question Hillicon Valley: White House to host social media summit amid Trump attacks | Pelosi says Congress to get election security briefing in July | Senate GOP blocks election security bill | Pro-Trump forum 'quarantined' by Reddit | Democrats press Zuckerberg MORE narrowly defeated Chamber of Commerce-backed candidate Tommy Pope in the race to replace former Rep.
His victory is likely to bolster his argument that he is the candidate best equipped to win in a state that President TrumpDonald John TrumpDe Blasio calls on Trump to deploy military to set up hospitals in New York Hillicon Valley: Facebook launches portal for coronavirus information | EU sees spike in Russian misinformation on outbreak | Senate Dem bill would encourage mail-in voting | Lawmakers question safety of Google virus website Trump signs coronavirus aid package with paid sick leave, free testing MORE narrowly won in the 2016 general election.
Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly won Meehan's district, while President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE carried Dent's seat in the 2016 presidential election.
Culberson has represented his Houston-area district since 2001, but has become a top Democratic target after Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonTop Sanders adviser: Warren isn't competing for 'same pool of voters' Anti-Trump vets join Steyer group in pressing Democrats to impeach Trump Republicans plot comeback in New Jersey MORE narrowly carried it by just more than a point over President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE in 2016.
The Senate race will take place in a crucial battleground state that will be heavily fought-over in the 2020 presidential election after President TrumpDonald John TrumpStates slashed 4,21625 environmental agency jobs in past decade: study Biden hammers Trump over video of world leaders mocking him Iran building hidden arsenal of short-range ballistic missiles in Iraq: report MORE narrowly edged out Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonThree legal scholars say Trump should be impeached; one thinks otherwise Report: Barr attorney can't provide evidence Trump was set up by DOJ Jayapal pushes back on Gaetz's questioning of impeachment witness donations to Democrats MORE in the previous contest.
His descriptions of deploying spray paint are particularly poetic: You have to use your whole body to make your letters proportionate and stylistically coherent, your pointer finger maintaining the perfect pressure to avoid an inconsistent flow of paint, the arm opposite your writing hand extended as counterbalance, your legs spread slightly more narrowly than shoulder width for stability, your knees bent just enough to allow you to move vertically through each letter, and your weight over the balls of your feet to allow you to move smoothly along the wall horizontally, all while relying on your hearing and peripheral vision as you watch out for possible gangsters, cops, or heroes who want to stop you, jail you, kill you.

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