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349 Sentences With "precedent to"

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

There is a legal precedent to what constitutes "viability" here.
"It's a very dangerous precedent to allow doctored videos," Rep.
There were decades of legal precedent to support the claim.
There was an ironic precedent to the toppling of Sessions.
He overturned decades of precedent to recognise Jerusalem as Israel's capital.
But that will establish the precedent to get a higher salary.
This is a terrible precedent to set on an international level.
They cited a surprising precedent to support their argument: Clinton v.
If so, he'll have a precedent to extend his own tenure.
Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) — will need to overcome historical precedent to win.
Society has long given precedent to the male orgasm over the female.
There is little precedent to help estimate the impact of trade war.
"We must not allow this dangerous precedent to be set," Koum wrote.
There's plenty of precedent to trimming the focus or removing it altogether.
It's a pretty dangerous precedent to set, copyrighting law in a democracy.
There's already precedent to disencumber us from dangerous regulations during the pandemic.
"We must not allow this dangerous precedent to be set," Mr. Koum wrote.
Shareholders have no precedent to forecast revenue from the Tesla Auto insurance offering.
Judge Bybee blamed his 9th Circuit colleagues for allowing the precedent to stand.
It's a bad precedent to set for anybody else that would produce documents.
There is slim precedent to establish the conduct necessary to sustain an impeachment.
Neria, seeking a precedent to point to, said that not even the Sept.
Those hoping Trump will change his mind have recent precedent to back them up.
"This is a scary precedent to set," he wrote in an email to Mashable.
Precedent to protect security, but also possibly to force Congress to ruin American encryption.
Booker testified against Sessions, breaking precedent to criticize one of his own Senate colleagues.
Now Matter of A-B- has cast decades of court precedent to the wind.
And in this regard as well, there is positive historical precedent to draw upon.
"It's a helpless position, and I hope this sets a precedent to Uber," Iovine said.
Virginia was used as a precedent to strike down the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).
"There's not a lot of precedent to deal with this kind of situation," Schwartzman says.
And although this is impossible, there&aposs no constitutional precedent to ever even consider this.
But the important precedent to FISC's policing of exclusive means is another upstream collection problem.
Is there any historical precedent to guide us when wealthy inventors try to reinvent society?
With respect to late-term nominations, both sides invoke historical precedent to buttress their case.
There was no direct precedent to address this issue so I started with the fundamentals.
And there is precedent to suggest the mythology about the Targaryens is just that — myth.
Quinn (2014) The court declined to extend the Abood precedent to Illinois home-healthcare workers.
They also, however, said Judge Buchwald had misread U.S. Supreme Court precedent to reach her conclusion.
But some worry it could set a precedent to criminalize future acts of national-security journalism.
"It's an interesting precedent to set, and I hope that it matters, going forward," they said.
Last week, a federal judge, Frederic Block, may have established legal precedent to the unwritten code.
I don't think it's a great precedent to be releasing calls with heads of foreign countries.
Lawyers for the ACLU urged the court to step in and extend its precedent to Rhines' case.
Google's legal team had sought to use the Microsoft ruling as precedent to challenge the warrant's scope.
Netflix said it would be a "dangerous precedent" to start taxing websites using laws intended for utilities.
To repatriate any spoils of colonial war might establish a precedent to empty out the British Museum.
Berman says the Supreme Court sometimes votes to overrule a previous precedent to keep up with national progress.
Grid operators also have a precedent to work with: Back in 2015, a similar event happened in Europe.
" Enforcing a total ban is "a nearly impossible precedent to uphold," he said, and "impossible to enforce consistently.
Given the rarity of rioting cases, lawyers on both sides acknowledged there was limited precedent to draw on.
Several Democrats have used that precedent to raise legality concerns about Trump's threat to declare a national emergency.
The essay labeled the reporting of no new cases "propaganda" and said it's a dangerous precedent to set.
Kagan leaned on precedent to push back against an assertion that admitting privileges served an important credentialing function.
The report sets a precedent to Friday's nonfarm payrolls data, which includes hiring in both private and public sectors.
Nowadays, when production committees set the budget for shows, there is a long-established precedent to keep costs low.
Though the industry is growing, start-ups in the virtual reality sector have very little precedent to learn from.
Finance Minister Nelson Barbosa had warned that the ruling would create a dangerous precedent to sharply reduce interest payments.
Breaking decades of precedent to hurt their own overs voters seems like a difficult place for Republicans to be.
This is a dangerous precedent to set, potentially legally implicating American allies without cause, and damaging U.S. relations abroad.
Some critics have actually cited Johnson as precedent to show that impeachment can be done on purely political grounds.
The pair have pointed out there is precedent to holding a royal title and also earning a living externally.
Johnson said Republicans could use the "Reid precedent" to make further changes to the rules without any Democratic support.
"To the extent there's any precedent to this, and there's not a lot, that's what we got," Vladeck said.
It's easy to see why companies like Reddit and Twitter didn't want this kind of dangerous precedent to move forward.
Some talk of using this precedent to justify pursuing a legal case against Brexit all the way to the ECJ.
"It would be a really dangerous precedent to break here," he told a news conference in Connecticut, his home state.
Until Sessions' order in June, it was precedent to consider domestic violence survivors as members of a particular social group.
There is no precedent to support this claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy.
"There's Supreme Court precedent to say that we really don't have the authority to deny him being seated," he said.
Others argue that authoritarian regimes will look to mimic these laws and use Germany's precedent to validate their restrictive rules.
Trump is urging the GOP majority to slide down that slope by expanding the precedent to include Supreme Court nominations.
Faced with such a filibuster, Republicans will be sorely tempted to extend the Democrats' precedent to include Supreme Court nominations.
That will simply return us to Senate precedent, to do what was de facto prior to 2003, which nobody ever did.
Baldwin, shrewdly used Supreme Court precedent to show why workplace bias against gays and lesbians is a form of sex discrimination.
"We don't have any precedent to figuring out what the cumulative affect is going to be on someone's health," Horney said.
It shouldn't take a genocide to get someone removed from Facebook, but it still feels like an important precedent to set.
Russia itself may use the Kosovo precedent to agitate for recognition of other disputed territories, including Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Crimea.
Complying would also give the FBI a precedent to ask for greater assistance in similar cases around the country, he added.
It's true that there is little precedent to suggest that national arts movements alone are capable of bringing about political change.
Surrealism is an art of non sequiturs, and several of the Imagists recognized her work as a precedent to their own.
In 2017, we took the Reid precedent to its logical conclusion, covering all nominations up to and including the Supreme Court.
Therefore, the subsequent conclusions that the general court took could work as a precedent to further probes into tax state aid.
But there is no controlling precedent to settle the matter, in part because no such confrontation has come to a head.
Allowing this obstruction to stand, Republicans said, would have caused more damage than overriding Senate precedent to turn back the filibuster.
Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said there was no precedent to the dual challenge of unusually heavy snowfall and unnerving seismic activity.
And I'm puzzled at the notion that "creating a financially dependent relationship" is a "bad precedent" to set for your daughter.
The 5th Circuit looked at basically the same facts and Supreme Court precedent to hold FHFA's structure to violate the Constitution.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads Archaeologists in southern Turkey have dug up an ancient precedent to the Kool-Aid Man.
In 2018, the en banc 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals broke with previous 9th Circuit precedent to hold in Rizo v.
Yes, it showed I was ambitious, but I had also unwillingly set a precedent to always be available to take on more.
And if I put on my '80s hat, there's plenty of precedent to explain why that may have been the perceived direction.
Zuckerberg said the ruling was a "very troubling precedent to set," given that different countries have different laws on freedom of speech.
Collins, who supports abortion rights, says she talked "at great length" with Kavanaugh about the application of established precedent to abortion cases.
He was even forced to submit to a humiliating primary election — also without precedentto decide who would be the party's candidate.
"There is no precedent to support his claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy," the judges wrote.
"There is no precedent to support this claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy," the court said.
Last month John Bolton, Mr Trump's national security adviser, enraged China by breaking with decades of precedent to meet his Taiwanese opposite number.
Abortion-rights activists argue that rolling back 45 years of legal precedent to criminalize abortion would endanger women who seek dangerous illegal abortions.
Several writers fretted that Democrats will quickly use this emerging precedent to aggressively pursue their own priorities once they retake the White House.
That means the only people left to prevent horrendous precedent, to make any attempt at presidential accountability, are the Democrats in the Congress.
The dissenters used that precedent to try to impugn the majority's reasoning in the present case, indeed the very morality of its decision.
Critics argued it would set a dangerous precedent to hack into countless number of computers on a single warrant from a friendly judge.
It's a tough precedent to match, but this all-star band should be up to the task of bringing late-1960s counterculture current.
We don't feel social media is the right place to engage over this, and it's a bad precedent to set for future generations.
It would have the choice between using existing precedent to restore Trump's travel ban or overriding the older cases by striking them down.
And so they reversed precedent to further weaken the voice of working people and further weaken labor unions, which is part of the problem.
After concerns over cybersecurity, the US instituted a federal ban on software from Russia-based Kaspersky Lab, a clear precedent to the Huawei order.
Powell has been heavily criticized by U.S. President Donald Trump, who has broken with decades of precedent to weigh in often on Fed policy.
"There is no precedent to support this claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy," the judicial panel ruled.
"Disney captured lightning in a bottle with ['Frozen'], which is a hard precedent to live up to," said Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at Boxoffice.com.
But they are confronting a US administration that has vowed to take the gloves off -- and has plenty of historical precedent to do so.
Specifically, they have expressed concern about language where Kavanaugh wrote "the unlawful immigrant minor is assumed to have a right under precedent to an abortion."
Democrats have also openly suggested that Trump is now giving them precedent to use emergency powers in the future to advance their own policy goals.
I think it's good that Google pulled the research and that there's kind of widespread questioning of whether we actually want this precedent to hold.
However, there is no clear precedent to support that theory and, despite good-faith arguments, no president has been impeached on such uncontested legal grounds.
Now the Trump Justice Department is trying to use that precedent to invalidate California state laws that afford additional due process protections to undocumented persons.
Several district attorneys have also said they would use an FBI victory as precedent to try and crack hundreds of locked phones that were seized.
But Justice Kennedy's opinion interprets existing precedent to set a high bar for those who would allow discrimination in the name of the First Amendment.
That is because Puerto Rico's debt is extremely complex, the hierarchy of creditors is unclear, and the situation has no legal precedent to draw on.
Breaking from this ironclad precedent to protect President Trump, Mr. McConnell's rules provide no assurance that the Senate will hear from witnesses or collect evidence.
" Andreessen's Haun told CNBC recently that it would be a "dangerous thing, and frankly a dangerous precedent to start shutting down technology before it's built.
But in writing the opinion for the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals, Chief Judge Robert Katzmann used Supreme Court precedent to reject Trump's claim.
Out of all of those policy recommendations, Muth said that a sugary drink excise tax has the greatest "evidence and precedent" to be most impactful.
The case presents the opportunity to establish a precedent to preserve national heritage sites, which is especially important in a city experiencing a construction boom.
Our allies are likely too mature (and concerned with precedent) to express their views on 2020 candidates, but they expect Trump to meddle in their affairs.
The decision by McConnell to alter Senate precedent to confirm Gorsuch fundamentally changed American jurisprudence for a generation and potentially presented Trump with his greatest legacy.
Dismissing a game with obvious artistic merit as porn is an especially poor precedent to set within a medium that has long struggled for artistic recognition.
Had McConnell not established Senate precedent to lower the bar to overcome filibusters of Supreme Court justices, Justice Neil Gorsuch and Kavanaugh likely would be toast.
FEC decision, a 5-85033 Supreme Court overturned decades of precedent to rule that corporations and unions can spend unlimited amounts to influence our elections. Sen.
There is no precedent to draw upon, but it is clear that this would have an enormous impact in a politically volatile and economically straitened country.
Senate Republicans have encouraged Grassley to do away with the blue slip, arguing that Democrats have used the longstanding precedent to inappropriately obstruct Trump's judicial nominees.
"Investors have no precedent to go off of, so a lot of them are just going to the sidelines," said Craig Callahan, founder of Icon Advisers.
He went line by line through the "stand your ground law" and court precedent to explain that it largely takes the arrest out of police hands.
"It's a dangerous precedent to start taxing internet apps and websites using laws intended for utilities like water and electricity," said Netflix spokeswoman Anne Marie Squeo.
Consumer advocates say mandatory individual arbitration makes it prohibitively expensive to take legal action and does not set a legal precedent to help other affected individuals.
This is what Dilg does so well and, in some profound sense, modestly: he brings together every sort of precedent to make something that is uniquely his.
I think it's a dangerous precedent to tell future cam models that you are somehow less deserving of being a model, unless you're putting yourself at risk.
To be clear: There are legitimate reasons, including legal precedent, to restrict medical misinformation, but it's also important to balance those restrictions with respect for free speech.
In January, the economist noted that one precedent to consider is Japan, which saw its yield curve flatten without inverting before each of its last four recessions.
"We're not faulting the rule, but we think it's a bad precedent to establish and these funds are desperately needed in the public health system," Harvey said.
Certainly senators are free to vote for or against a nominee, but it sets a dangerous and irresponsible precedent to refuse to consider any nominee at all.
Then came Citizens United, which reversed precedent to make it okay for corporations to spend unlimited amounts on independent expenditures, concerns about equality and distortion be damned.
If the judge were to side with Johnson & Johnson, it would provide the pharmaceutical industry with a precedent to defend in cases around the country, observers said.
"There's not a lot of precedent to draw on; in fact, there's none in which you've had an incapacitated nominee," said Rutgers political science professor Ross Baker.
There's not much historical precedent to go on here: the S&P fell 25 percent during the Watergate scandal, but it rose during President Bill Clinton's troubles.
It is extremely difficult to defend anyone in a system whose rules are not fully formed and where there is little to no precedent to rely on.
The charges raised questions about press freedom, and critics have expressed concern that the case could set a precedent to criminalize future acts of national security journalism.
There is some precedent to this; During the game's first season, IO released "bonus missions", taking players back to previous locations albeit radically altered both visually and mechanically.
Apple has moved quickly to fix the phone-breaking bug, breaking usual precedent to release iOS 11.2 on Saturday (three days earlier than its regular Tuesday release schedule).
Facebook's decision to allow elected officials and aspiring ones to lie with impunity in ads was seen as either a gutsy call or a dangerous precedent to set.
"This is a tremendously dangerous precedent to set," Safer said, arguing that it could be applied to other grant programs to pressure cities to alter other local policies.
All parties have assumed for purposes of this case, moreover, that Jane Doe has a right under Supreme Court precedent to obtain an abortion in the United States.
The Center will take on similar cases, advocating for policy and precedent to make sure we have the laws and regulations in place to best serve our guests.
Alice marked a big change, but the Federal Circuit is still trying to decide how to apply this new Supreme Court precedent to a vast range of cases.
The Supreme Court found such arrangements to be unconstitutional in 2015, and the FTC should use this precedent to bring additional enforcement actions against other state licensing boards.
The Muslim couple referred to the temple ruling, which angered conservative Hindus, as a precedent to support their call for women to be allowed to pray at mosques.
Brett Giroir to coordinate coronavirus testing efforts among public health agencies as a precedent to help address a shortfall in the U.S. efforts to respond to the pandemic.
Wednesday's decision marks the first time in 18 years that the European Commission has decided to implement interim measures, opening a precedent to ongoing and future competition probes.
At best, this ruling may simply obligate the president to be more cautious with his blocking button, but it sets an even larger precedent to public officials nationwide.
They have given Cardi B, Offset, and all celebrities a license to assault people who say things they don't like; and that is a dangerous precedent to set.
She said that they may compromise on amendments to the language in the bill over the next week, but that it sets an unsettling precedent to the lawmaking process.
U. states — including Iceland, Israel, Norway, Switzerland and Tunisia — have successfully negotiated participation in Horizon 2020, so there's precedent to think that a U.K. outside the E.U. could too.
It's a bad precedent to start creating exceptions to the privacy law for people with mental illness, who are responsible for about 4 percent of incidents of gun violence.
Kenyatta said last week the ruling by the Supreme Court threatened to thrust the country into "judicial chaos", as lower courts use the precedent to invalidate other elected positions.
Mac and cheese is actually served up at Universal Orlando's Three Broomsticks — albeit on the kids' menu — so there is some precedent to the Potterverse's penchant for the dish.
The Supreme Court decision gives abortion rights supporters a new and very important piece of precedent to challenge dozens of other laws that are similar to Texas's unconstitutional restrictions.
"We are eagerly awaiting the Commission's decision and we are confident that it will set an important precedent to the benefit of European athletes in numerous sports," he said.
The draft rule indicates the government would override that precedent to allow for deportation of some permanent residents who have used certain public benefits within five years of admission.
But shareholders warned the Delaware justices of the policy implications of allowing corporations to bypass congressional intent and Supreme Court precedent to bar Securities Act suits in state court.
"For months now, investors have been guessing about what's going to happen and there is no precedent to go by," said Craig Callahan, president at ICON Funds in Denver.
I personally find it reassuring that, if I say anything that I characterize as "zany humor," there is legal precedent to protect me from people who take it seriously.
Background reading: • According to President Trump's lawyers, Mr. Mueller's investigators said that they would abide by the Justice Department's legal and historical precedent to refrain from prosecuting sitting presidents.
Critics have argued that the report shows the FBI was more interested in establishing a legal precedent to get companies to bypass encryption than in actually unlocking the phone.
"Someone who has a penchant for recklessness, for escalatory foreign policies, to retain the capability to enrich, I believe would be an incredibly dangerous precedent to set," Rubio said.
These previous cases were settled out of court, so there is very little legal precedent to support the vertical theories of harm that might be raised by the government.
"Our view is that it is a dangerous precedent to start taxing Internet apps and websites using laws intended for utilities like water and electricity," said spokesman Jonathan Friedland.
Remember that today's use of the criminal law against a president you don't like may become a precedent to using a criminal law against a president you do like.
Charles Sumner pointed out to his colleagues during the impeachment trial, the president's behavior "is without example," and Congress had a "duty [to] make a precedent" to "counteract" its effect.
In the report, Mueller said explicitly that there were limits on Article II powers and cited Supreme Court decisions and other legal precedent to justify his probe of the President.
"There is no precedent to support this claimed unreviewability, which runs contrary to the fundamental structure of our constitutional democracy," the three-judge panel — which included one Republican appointee — wrote.
Critics who knocked the FBI director in early July for breaking precedent to comment on the investigation and criticize Clinton's "extremely careless" behavior are now pushing him provide more details.
"And that is precisely what the government seeks here: to obtain an order that it can use as precedent to lodge future, more onerous requests for Apple's assistance," they said.
No president has ever been indicted on serious criminal charges by a state or federal attorney, so we have no Supreme Court precedent to answer the question — just legal theory.
Sarah Isgur Flores, a Justice Department spokeswoman, noted that there was scant precedent to scrutinize when interpreting the 1999 regulations because only one previous special counsel was appointed under them.
Is there, I&aposm going to start with you, Ari, is there any kind of precedent to assume that if a conservative justice dies, that only a conservative can replace him?
Brown added that in factoring political risk too, with prime minister David Cameron's resignation last Friday, there was no precedent to compare to the actual scenario the U.K. was currently facing.
Regardless of what you think about Donald Trump, this is such a horrible precedent to be spying on political opponents and to be doing it with, and to be avoiding accountability.
If successful, the lawsuits will have a chilling effect on online free speech, as other potential plaintiffs utilize the precedent to sue social media companies for all types of "offensive" content.
After the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, McConnell was willing to break with centuries of precedent to deny President Barack Obama's nominee, moderate judge Merrick Garland, so much as a hearing.
He also noted that several of his Democratic colleagues are running for president and floated that they could use Trump's precedent to try to ram through proposals Republicans are opposed to.
" The president, he said, was empowered by decades of precedent to stonewall the House's subpoenas, and to assert otherwise would be "antithetical to the proper functioning of the separation of powers.
Congress has allowed this precedent to take root, and now it seems the only remedy is for the very institution responsible for this to finally assert itself and exercise its constitutional authority.
"  It also has a wing span on par with a Boeing 737, they noted, saying "There is little to no precedent to guide us as we continue to optimize [sic] Aquila's performance.
" In response, Huffman argued that hate speech is "difficult to define," adding that enforcing a total ban on hate speech is "a nearly impossible precedent to uphold," and "impossible to enforce consistently.
The Palestine Liberation Organization accused the Israeli court of aiming "to set a precedent to enable the Israeli occupying forces to demolish numerous Palestinian buildings located in close proximity" to the barrier.
In general, the law enforcement stance toward encryption has been terrible, but if Apple had traditionally fostered a more open App ecosystem, law enforcement wouldn't have reams of precedent to lean on.
" It then continues by quoting James Madison's observation that freedom of religion "is in its nature an unalienable right," since our devotion to God "is precedentto the Claims of Civil Society.
For Apple, and a litany of tech and security experts, what the government wanted was a backdoor, and a dangerous precedent to require other companies in the future to do the same.
That is true, too, of the pictures that are the closest precedent to Arbus's "Untitled" series: Peter Hujar's little-known but excellent photographs at residences for developmentally disabled children in Southbury, Conn.
With strong opposition from citizens and their representatives in government, fishery managers will be forced to end ocean aquaculture and set a precedent to protect threatened ecosystems, fishermen and coastal communities nationwide.
Their reasoning is that creating a financially dependent relationship in which Mom and Dad's money can be counted on whenever it is needed is a bad precedent to set for our daughter.
Some GOP colleagues voiced concern at a lunch Tuesday that it could set a dangerous precedent to vote to expel someone for something done before that person was elected to the Senate.
Earnest insisted that some of Trump's nominees carry "obvious conflicts of interest" and that it was an "egregious" breach of precedent to hold hearings before the ethics office signed off on disclosure paperwork.
But it has thus far refused to pay a "ransom" to the protesters, saying it would set a dangerous precedent to Libya's many other armed groups and endanger yet more oil production facilities.
The DOJ lawyer argued that two cases from the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals in the 1990s provide precedent to keep the courts from reviewing the president's record management in the first place.
They acknowledged the government's argument that the standard is generally lower for civil cases, but they pointed to a different Supreme Court precedent to say that deportation cases aren't like most civil cases.
So, again, the mantle will fall to the chief justice; and the question will be whether his loyalty to precedent, to the doctrine of stare decisis, is more pronounced than his ideological leaning.
Nevertheless, Hanlon and her colleagues want to set a precedent to make sure that similar mistakes don't happen in the future, which could put the material history of the Apollo missions at risk.
It is instead about clearing a path that no one else might be on, without relying on an established precedent to support your decision, because in the end that is just being cowardly.
Go deeper: The speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, has emerged as a surprise star of Brexit after he broke with precedent to wrest some control over the decision-making process.
Go deeper: The speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercrow, has emerged as the surprise star of Brexit after he broke with precedent to wrest some control over the decision-making process.
Some of the criticism is tactical in the hunt for lawmakers' votes, and some breaks along ideological lines because Mr. Bercow went against precedent to allow Parliament to thwart the government over Brexit.
The debate is raging over the permanence of the Obama administration's decision, but Alaskans and other proponents of Arctic development argue that there is no precedent to suggest a ban can be permanent.
While the Virginia Constitution and the rules of the House of Delegates appear to give the legislature the authority to conduct investigations into elected leaders, there is no precedent to guide the process.
The last 15 minutes were about me preparing to fire you, and I'm actually just setting up the legal precedent to do so, so just be clear, in three months you'll be fired.
"The notion that federal criminal charges could be brought based on the publication of truthful information is an incredibly dangerous precedent to set," Barry Pollack, a U.S. lawyer for Assange, said in a statement.
While even just looking at a picture of the Burger King/Cheetos Flamin' Hot Mac n' Cheetos provides a sensory experience comparable to no other, there is a bit of precedent to the food.
And in an eye-opening warning, the lawyer, Lee Wolosky, cited precedent to the effect that privilege disappears if "government misconduct occurred," in an apparent suggestion of possible criminal activity within the White House.
Apple is arguing that conscripting it to write code that will weaken its security will set a chilling legal precedent to allow the government to strong-arm tech companies into weakening their security measures.
There's no precedent to measure Trump's comments against, after all – because this is virgin territory: presidential nominees don't encourage our adversaries to commit cyberespionage and cyber theft in order to interfere in our elections.
President Donald Trump's personal lawyers have filed a petition to the Supreme Court, potentially setting up a showdown between the two branches of government and putting the "separation of powers" precedent to the test.
This reached a peak when they broke all precedent to deny Obama's last Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland even a hearing for nearly a year, permitting Republican President Trump to fill the seat instead.
When Obama got his first chance to nominate someone to the Supreme Court, the NRA broke with precedent to assert its influence over a branch of government putatively independent from partisan politics: the judiciary.
The city's instant entombment beneath a dozen feet of volcanic ash following the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 A.D. was its own sort of nonhuman recording, a distant precedent to our contemporary panopticon.
Not only would the federal contribution become limited in a way that inexorably atrophies care, there is precedent to worry about how states might spend federal money now disconnected from their own Medicaid spending.
Alas, the Ninth Circuit found, relying on a 2004 precedent, to escape penalties, Universal just had to show that it had "formed a subjective good faith belief" that the video was not fair use.
Justices also tend to dislike simply overturning past rulings (though the court's five conservatives, including Mr Kennedy, displayed no such squeamishness in a recent case that overturned decades of precedent to weaken public-sector unions).
All this is framed as a historical precedent to the supposed plot by another Anglichanka,Theresa May, to poison the image of Russia's modern tsar, Mr Putin, by unleashing a nerve agent on the Skripals.
They have pointedly refused to comment on the release of the tapes, rather than get drawn into a tussle, but this month broke with precedent to talk about their private experience of their mother's love.
Public health groups argue that the tobacco industry has used trade agreements to fight cigarette labeling and packaging requirements, but say the TPP deal sets an important precedent to treat tobacco differently in future deals.
It wouldn't be without precedent to find evidence of a presidential cover-up, but not participation in the underlying crime: Nixon, for example, claimed he didn't know ahead of time about the Watergate break-in.
The challenges will be taken to courts that have shown hostility towards Trump in the past, such as the federal district court in Hawaii that flouted precedent to block the implementation of his travel ban.
Trump would have nothing to lose, of course; the longer he stays in office, the longer he can use the U.S. Justice Department's "sitting president cannot be indicted" precedent to maintain power and avoid prosecution.
There's also a concern that if Democrats go down the inquiry route, they will create a new precedent to open impeachment proceedings anytime a future administration is obstinate in handing over desired documents and witnesses.
With little precedent to guide them, House and Senate leaders were working with Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who will preside over the trial, to nail down the timing of what was to come.
And largely because of President Barack Obama's own crackdown on leakers, as well as an increase in what information is considered classified since the 9/11 attacks, Trump's administration has precedent to do something about it.
While even Trump himself has expressed some reservations about whether the talks will ultimately be successful, the Norwegian MPs said that it is not without precedent to award a prize when a process is still underway.
If the Justice Department prevails in compelling Apple to create an encryption "back door" for the iOS operating system, it will use that precedent to force companies like Surespot to do the same to their products.
Felicity Huffman wants to make it clear to the judge sentencing her -- what she did in the college case didn't hurt anyone, and therefore there's no precedent to put her in prison for even a day.
The majority acknowledged, in a footnote, an amicus brief by dozens of state attorneys general who called on the Supreme Court to overturn Illinois Brick precedent to allow downstream consumers to sue monopolists under federal law.
The Senate precedent to grant a right of priority recognition to the majority leader has been repeatedly abused to block the ability of the minority to offer amendments, another of the foundational protections the minority enjoys.
This is a hugely disingenuous argument, as I have discussed in detail before (involving Brett Kavanaugh, now on the Supreme Court), but the court determined that it was bound by precedent to defer to the agency.
Such a move would open the possibility that a future Democratic President could use the precedent to declare a national emergency to bypass Congress to exert executive power on another issue — combating global warming for instance.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the most powerful EU leader, refused to budge, insisting that it would set a bad precedent to relax the EU's anti-bailout rules just two years after they were overhauled in 2014.
How could the court go from unquestioning acceptance of a long-lived precedent to a situation in which all that remains in doubt is whether that same precedent will be overturned in early June or late June?
Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanPaul Ryan moving family to Washington Embattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway MORE (R-Wis.) inherited the speaker's gavel from Boehner, he too took the precedent to heart.
"It is a very dangerous precedent to start destroying records," said James B. Jacobs, professor of constitutional law and the courts and director of the Center for Research in Crime and Justice at N.Y.U. School of Law.
In deciding that Bucklew had no right to an alternative method of execution, the majority does what it increasingly feels like it must do: mangle facts and precedent to keep the machinery of state-sanctioned death rolling.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, the most powerful EU leader, has refused to budge, insisting that it would set a bad precedent to relax the EU's anti-bailout rules just two years after they were overhauled in 2014.
But for the most part, it has remained dominant for two decades, and many internet freedom advocates have argued that allowing any exemptions to Section 230, no matter how well-intentioned, is a dangerous precedent to set.
Because no president has tried to fire a Fed chair who was unwilling to resign, there is no precedent to serve a guidepost for whether the protection from arbitrary firing extends to the role of board chair.
While the prospect of an unabashed democratic socialist becoming the Democratic nominee represents a unique moment in U.S. political history, there is one clear precedent to draw on—that of former fellow organizer-in-chief, Barack Obama.
This enables federally recognized groups to continue developing their own governmental bodies, and possibly sets a welcome precedent to stop non-native members from exploiting native members, particularly in cases of sexual abuse, by questioning tribal court jurisdiction.
The reasoning in Watson's decision Wednesday largely followed his decision from two weeks ago, which used Supreme Court precedent to conclude that Trump's statements about Muslims during the presidential campaign speak to the constitutionality of the executive order.
And as many have warned, setting this kind of precedent to vigorously go after leakers often becomes a freedom of press problem, not only limiting more information available to the public but also resulting in investigations of journalists.
The IMF also said there was little international precedent to guide some of the measures, they are likely to have adverse consumer impacts in the near term and they explicitly encourage the growth of the 'shadow banking' industry.
"The worry about the possibility that the national liquidation, applied for the first time to significant banks supervised by the ECB, may create a precedent to sidestep the rules in the future ... must be taken seriously," he said.
Mr. Trump, who has proposed changing libel laws to make it easier to sue news organizations, could abandon the Obama-era internal restraints and invoke the Obama-era court precedent to adopt more aggressive policies in leak investigations.
When the key to unlock your phone is in your own mind or on the tip of your finger, it becomes a legal question that judges have to rely on decades-old, pre-modern-technology precedent to answer.
But to transgender students like me, those who have been driven from the "normal" bathrooms in our schools and who have waited for months and even years for a legal precedent to be set, this delay is unfathomable.
They have precedent to back them up, in the form of a decision by a federal judge last August that struck down an ag-gag law in Idaho on free-speech grounds, the first such ruling in the country.
But his research shows that the FBI's claim that the technique wouldn't work was at best mistaken and at worst was an attempt to set a legal precedent to force tech companies to cooperate in hacking their own devices.
"The Court is bound by Circuit precedent to find that it lacks authority to oversee the President's day-to-day compliance with the statutory provisions involved in this case," wrote Jackson, a Washington-based appointee of President Barack Obama.
The target audience for these books was usually young, white men, and the lurid covers that featured male heroes and helpless or femme fatale women can be seen as a precedent to the character patterns of American comic books.
The CIT technologists lay out a scenario in which the FBI uses the Apple ruling as precedent to force tech companies to turn televisions, computer monitors, and other internet-connected devices into a web of in-home surveillance hubs.
"There is no precedent to really resolve which one is the stronger between GO and COFINA," said Tim Blake, a managing director at Moody's, noting that Title III was uniquely created under last year's Puerto Rico rescue law, PROMESA.
Under her landmark ruling, private citizens now have a precedent to turn to if they want to sue the president in state court, which can hear millions of cases each year and requires less-burdensome standing than federal court.
"The lower courts will obviously have the Fisher precedent to apply while looking at those schools' programs," said Rachel Kleinman, senior counsel at the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, referring to the name of the case, Fisher v.
Republicans used that precedent to confirm Justice Neil Gorsuch and Justice Brett KavanaughBrett Michael KavanaughLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Cook Political Report moves Susan Collins Senate race to 'toss up' Sen.
Casetext just announced the release of its new AI-powered product Compose, which applies BERT, a natural-language-processing technique pioneered by Google, in order to find the relevant arguments and the closest legal precedent to support a case.
Not that you have to go along, just saying that there's a venerable precedent to cyclical optimism and avowals (whether those tools ever made their way back to the garages of their proper owners is lost to history, however).
In the early 20th century, as the Qing Empire's demise brought a close to dynastic rule, leading intellectuals like Liang Qichao drew heavily on the American precedent to try to give purpose to a newly formed, modern Chinese identity.
Several years later, Pepsi paid Fox to have one of the leads on Empire shoot a Pepsi commercial inside of the show, which later also aired outside of the show, which is probably the closest precedent to this campaign.
"Because social media is relatively new, and the use of blogs to promote policy is relatively new there's no real precedent to say whether freezing communications in the way Trump administration has is a common practice or not," he said.
January 11, 2017 - Booker breaks with Senate precedent to deliver testimony against the appointment of Jeff Sessions as attorney general, becoming the first sitting senator to testify against a fellow sitting senator at a confirmation hearing for a cabinet position.
One major thing that separates the UT shooting from campus shootings of recent years is the lack of a system for alerting students or faculty to danger: Because it was the first, there was no precedent to fall back on.
What is new, and potentially momentous, is the fact that four of the court's justices expressed a willingness to jettison nearly 85 years of consistent precedent to invigorate a doctrine that has been pronounced dead on more than one occasion.
The last three administrations have pointed to the Indian Wars as precedent to justify executive action in the war on terrorism, with the Trump administration invoking the plenary power doctrine as justification for family separation, migrant detention camps and religious persecution.
The draft by the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), to be unveiled in South Korea in October, acknowledges "there is no documented historical precedent" to limit warming to 1.5C but outlines four possible ways to do it.
At issue is whether the court will choose to respond to a bold act of judicial defiance: the refusal by a federal appeals court to apply the Supreme Court's most recent abortion precedent to a situation that is all but indistinguishable.
But this delay of a state primary election understandably triggered fears that other officials, potentially even President Trump, might take advantage of the Ohio precedent to postpone or cancel November's election if it appears that Trump is likely to be defeated.
Some White House officials who were not involved in the letter's preparation said they were surprised when they saw the six-page document, which was indignant in tone and cited the Salem Witch Trials as a precedent to his situation.
Now, legal experts worry the case will be used as precedent to open up all consumer DNA sites, even closed ones—like 23andMe and Ancestry, which together house the genetic profiles of at least 20 million people—to routine police searches.
They apparently were so convinced by his campaign statements that he was prejudiced against Muslims that they flouted precedent to be able to block a travel ban in one of his executive orders that applied to countries with large Muslim populations.
In 2018, Amazon came under heavy scrutiny for its aggressive efforts to peddle facial "Rekognition" as a law enforcement solution without a rigorous training program and at a time when there is no case law or constitutional precedent to guide its use.
"With the NSW and ACT Governments leading the way, and other States announcing their intention to introduce ridesharing regulations in the coming months, the Northern Territory will have a considerable amount of precedent to assist them in their reform efforts," he said.
GENEVA, April 26 (Reuters) - The United States said on Friday a World Trade Organization ruling on national security was "seriously flawed," a warning not to use it as a precedent to judge U.S. President Donald Trump's tariffs on imported steel and cars.
Officers should continue to follow other binding precedent to the extent they are consistent with Matter of A-B-, including Matter of M-E-V-G and Matter of W-G-R-, both of which were cited favorably in the AG's decision.
ROME, June 28 (Reuters) - Widespread concerns that the way two regional Italian banks were liquidated could set a precedent to sidestep European Union rules on banking crises should be taken seriously, a member of the European Central Bank's supervisory board said on Wednesday.
When Laing writes that "she wasn't even the first person to write down what it felt like," she means that she has a specific literary precedent to draw on for her specific love: Jenny Diski wrote about Patterson when they were together.
Harry ReidHarry Mason Reid2020 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care Reid says he wishes Franken would run for Senate again Panel: How Biden's gaffes could cost him against Trump MORE's (D-Nevada) 51-vote precedent to change the rules.
Adding to this danger, ruling against this law could place other reasonable regulations on abortion in jeopardy as fringe groups, aiming to make unregulated abortion the norm and not the exception, use this as a precedent to overturn laws around the country.
"All that lies between us and tyranny is that we respect the conventions of both Houses," said Michael Forsyth, a pro-Brexit Conservative member of the Lords, accusing Labour Party spokeswoman Dianne Hayter of setting a dangerous precedent to try and block Brexit.
Lower court judges are constrained by Supreme Court precedent to invalidate these new laws, but the opinions by which they are doing so are suffused with their personal views on abortion and their complaints about how the high court has tied their hands.
In recent weeks and months, a number of prominent evangelical leaders associated with President Donald Trump's unofficial evangelical advisory council, as well as members of Trump's administration, have used Biblical precedent to defend Trump's policy of family separation at the US-Mexico border.
As the U.S. House considers articles of impeachment against Trump, they must remember that this process is not just about Donald Trump – it is about setting a precedent to say nobody, including the president of the United States, is above the law.
Congress appears unlikely to override the veto, so the fate of the declaration probably will be decided by the same Ninth Circuit Courts that flouted precedent to block Trump's travel ban, which almost certainly will result in another lower court defeat for Trump.
If Thanksgiving conversation turns to why Trump is right to expedite the mass deportation of millions of undocumented immigrants, or how Japanese internment camps set a precedent to track Muslim immigrants in a government registry, the nasty woman will say how she really feels.
The case had a major effect on U.S. history, and decades later, it was also used as precedent to argue against laws prohibiting same-sex marriage, but in reality, the couple at the center of the case were not interested in the national stage.
U.S. companies that do business abroad are worried that if Trump makes ISDS an opt-in system it will do two things: diminish the value of their investments in Canada and Mexico; and, more importantly, create a precedent to devalue investor protections around the world.
Although the announcement sets an interesting precedent to gamify exercise and merge physical activities with the gaming world, the NBA 2K17 / Fitbit partnership may not provide enough rewards for devoted NBA 2K17 players to start tracking their steps, unless it's something they are already doing.
"On one hand, we are venturing into territory where you have an administration exacting retribution on its predecessor -- and that isn't a good precedent to start setting because the favor will surely be returned," said one former official who worked in Trump's White House.
"On one hand, we are venturing into territory where you have an administration exacting retribution on its predecessor — and that isn't a good precedent to start setting because the favor will surely be returned," said one former official who worked in Trump's White House.
On Tuesday, McConnell foreshadowed the case he is expected to reiterate in the coming days, warning that the Democratic demands for witness testimony would raise constitutional concerns and set a precedent to "incentivize" future House majorities to carry out "frequent and hasty" impeachment inquiries.
Judge Kavanaugh and I had a wide-ranging discussion about our separation-of-powers system, the court's responsibility to properly apply laws passed by Congress to guard against overreach by federal agencies, and the importance of respecting precedent to promote stability in the law.
The court said it agreed with the government's argument that it does not violate Jane Doe's right to an abortion under the Supreme Court's precedent to transfer her to a sponsor, which would allow her to obtain an abortion, so long as it's done expeditiously.
The only difference was the addition of the attorney general's official letterhead and a paragraph citing additional legal precedent to back up the letter's arguments against federal regulations on hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, one of the main ways Devon Energy pumps out oil and natural gas.
Before Tuesday's court ruling, there was no clear legal precedent to determine whether Fourth Amendment protections extended to people entering the US internationally — in its absence, DHS officials operated under CBP Directive No. 3340-049A, which declared that agents could search anyone's electronic devices for any reason.
Sure, it's pretty late in Obama's presidency for a fresh Supreme Court appointment, but there is still no actual precedent to support such a hard-and-fast rule, and there's that bit in the Constitution that says it's the president's job to appoint new Supreme Court justices.
Here's the new Trump argument, stripped down to its essence: It was clear that he would reimburse Mr. Cohen for those payments to the women, and he's allowed under Supreme Court precedent to give his campaign as much of his own money as he wants to.
If the Yankees do get to the Series this year, they will have plenty of precedent to lean on: Twelve teams have already reached the Series in this fashion, over the 23 seasons since Major League Baseball began making room for division runners-up in its playoffs.
"This training package sets an important precedent to focus on preventing civilian casualties," said Larry L. Lewis, a former senior official at the State Department who visited Saudi Arabia five times in 2015 and 2016 to help the country's air force improve its targeting procedures and investigations.
The court had previously said it agreed with the government's argument that it does not violate Jane Doe's right to an abortion under the Supreme Court's precedent to transfer her to a sponsor, which would allow her to obtain an abortion, so long as it's done expeditiously.
Rahul Matthan, a partner at the Indian law firm Trilegal who specializes in tech issues, said that businesses had real concerns as to whether the new data authority would have the capacity to manage all of its responsibilities, especially with little legal precedent to guide it.
Just as important to House Republicans, Judge Collyer found that Congress had the standing to sue the White House on this issue — a ruling that many legal experts said was flawed — and they want that precedent to be set to restore congressional leverage over the executive branch.
"This ruling, about the coordination of military dictatorships in the Americas to commit atrocities, sets a powerful precedent to ensure that these grave human rights violations do not ever take place again in the region," Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director for Human Rights Watch, said in a phone interview.
Chris Ward, chair of the Polsinelli law firm's bankruptcy group, said EPA is likely to deal with a biofuel credit situation less aggressively than it would, say, an urgent waste cleanup or some other threat to public safety, but said there was no clear precedent to look at either.
The television industry is solid but still in trouble and new media, including adtech, is about to hit a financial wall as investment dries up and litigious rich people decide they can use the Thiel precedent to throw molotov cocktails from the safe confines of their Burning Man tent.
" There was even Paula Bolyard, supervising editor at PJ Media, who wrote the story about Trump's Google News presence that inspired grievance No. 3: "The government has no business regulating private companies for their political views, and it would set a dangerous precedent to do so in this case.
"This rule tramples states' retention of sovereign authority under the Tenth Amendment and seeks to destroy an entire industry, displacing hardworking men and women and setting a precedent to disregard states' own understanding of major industries within their borders," Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) said in a statement.
"A review of these opinions does not demonstrate a split, but only that the courts are applying the facts to the appropriate precedent to weed out only those cases that do not meet the Article III standards the court has long identified," the new Supreme Court brief said.
"It's a great precedent to set for the Aurora Cannabis's of the world to come in for further expansion of Canadian companies into the U.S." How it works: The deal is terminated if cannabis is not legalized (or if exchanges don't change their rules) within 7.5 years, or 90 months.
While other Republicans were hiding behind the fig leaf of a bogus institutional precedent to explain why they wouldn't hold hearings on President Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Trump simply told the truth: that he didn't want a liberal majority on the court, and Republican senators had the power to prevent it.
" It certainly was during World War II. Under fire, Higbie later called internment "horrific" and said he opposed it, but nonetheless reiterated to The New York Times, "There is historical, factual precedent to do things that are not politically popular and sometimes not right, in the interest of national security.
And I think you want to make sure that you're scoping this carefully enough that you're not giving people the grounds or precedent to argue that the things that they don't like, that change the meaning somewhat of what they said when they were doing an interview, get taken down.
And then after that investigation was closed, but new information surfaces because of what happened with Anthony Weiner, and there are new emails, you decided that that needed to be made public even though it was a, a pretty significant break with precedent to do that so close to an election.
When news broke last week, Mr. Kushner and his wife at first discussed getting a statement denying the report issued through the White House counsel, Donald F. McGahn II — who told them that it was not a good precedent to set and that it was a job for a personal attorney.
A deal was thrown into doubt when the head of Libya's National Oil Corporation (NOC) in Tripoli, Mustafa Sanalla, wrote to the U.N. Libya envoy on Friday saying that it would set a "terrible precedent" to make payments to Jathran, who he blamed for the loss of some $100 billion in export revenue.
Protesters from 'Fight Against Racism' society stage a demonstration outside the French Embassy in London, United Kingdom on August 26, 2016 Friday's ruling could set a precedent to reverse all the bans and also potentially enable women who have received fines to protest them, human rights lawyer Patrice Spinosi told the Associated Press.
But it's a strange precedent to say that amidst divided government, a president's final year in office — which means two of his eight years, because the precedent could apply to both his fourth and eighth years — is a year in which hard decisions can't be made and crucial vacancies can't be filled.
" The place where we met Sakamoto and Nakamura-Okazaki, the Japanese American National Museum, also issued a statement, saying, "We will not stand by as they (politicians and others in public) cite the unlawful incarceration of Japanese Americans during WWII as 'precedent' to create a registry for Muslim Americans or target any ethnic group for incarceration.
Though there is some precedent to offset a fight fan's usual pessimism: Gegard Mousasi beat Kyotaro Fujimoto in a kickboxing match on New Years Eve (albeit ten days after Kyotaro went the distance with Semmy Schilt), and Alistair Overeem famously upset Badr Hari after years away from kickboxing, previously only having competed at a fairly low level.
Every principled conservative and libertarian should be equally angry and outraged because when justice is deformed by partisan congressional attacks and an FBI director who appears to act in fear of them against a Democrat, he or some future FBI director may view this as a precedent to apply the same double standard against a future Republican or conservative.
As the world's leader in public financing of biomedical research, the U.S. government has the opportunity to set a precedent to ensure that medicines developed with public funding are accessible and affordable to the public; this will have enormous implications not only how for we deal with the coronavirus, but also for the crisis of unaffordable medicines in America.
Chris Murphy (D-Conn.): The President's new argument today, that anything he does to benefit his re-election, no matter how corrupt, is unimpeachable, is BANANAS From a former FBI special agent who now teaches at Yale: It's also a very bad precedent to link a foreign country's ability to investigate a U.S. citizen with our diplomatic goals.
In every meeting where you might say, "This is the way the president does things" or "The White House would never do things that way," we learned how useless that experience is in trying to understand a president willing to push every boundary, discard every protocol and ignore every precedent to do things as he chooses to do them.
"The President, Leader McCarthy, Whip Scalise, Chair Cheney, and Republican leaders on key House committees spoke on the call and emphasized that Speaker [Nancy] Pelosi and Chairman [Adam] Schiff are deliberately misleading the American people about the truth, and are trampling over procedure and precedent to advance their political goals," Deere said in the statement issued late Friday.
" White House spokesman Judd Deere said Trump on Friday spoke with House Republican leaders, including Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, Minority Whip Steve Scalise and Republican Conference Chairwoman Liz Cheney, and "emphasized that Speaker Pelosi and Chairman Schiff are deliberately misleading the American people about the truth, and are trampling over procedure and precedent to advance their political goals.
The Commons speaker John Bercow used a more than 400-year-old precedent to try to block Theresa MayTheresa Mary MayTrump backs Boris Johnson amid setbacks: He 'knows how to win' UK Parliament advances Brexit bill in second blow to Boris Johnson in 24 hours Boris Johnson criticized by parliament after losing majority MORE's efforts to reintroduce her defeated Brexit deal.
Budget policy need not follow biblical precedent to the letter, but the right response to the Great Recession's fiscal lean years now is to fatten government's revenues up a bit, to reduce the run-up in federal debt that will become increasingly expensive to pay for over time, and to moderate deficit increases so that government has flexibility in responding to the next crisis.
They are pushing the UK, which has already has a law committing to substantial reductions in carbon emissions, to move faster and become carbon neutral by 2025, a quarter-century ahead of the target set by the UN. A few weeks after their protest, the House of Commons adopted a climate emergency resolution that was mostly symbolic, but still set a precedent to demand more urgent action.
The political news of the past several weeks has been dominated by headlines that would be story-of-the-year material in normal times: courts blocking President Trump's unconstitutional and discriminatory travel ban; the collapse of TrumpCare; and Senate Republicans blowing up two centuries of precedent to ram through a justice committed to railroading the American worker at every opportunity, to name just a few.
Despite his hard-line ideology, supporters of Barr point toward instances in his first Justice Department tenure that they say show he approached decisions based on an honest review of the facts, like when he told the White House there was no precedent to support the desire of some Republicans to use a line-item veto that would give the president a strategic advantage over lawmakers.
A unanimous three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit said the board gave "clear, reasonable and compelling" justifications for upending eight decades of precedent to change its method for calculating job-search expenses in its ruling involving King Soopers Inc, a unit of Cincinnati-based Kroger Co. To read the full story on WestlawNext Practitioner Insights, click here: bit.ly/2r3ynZl
HUBERT SAGNIÈRES WILL BE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER (PRÉSIDENT) OF ESSILOR INTERNATIONAL​ * ‍PURSUANT TO THIS HIVE-DOWN, ESSILOR WILL CONTRIBUTE ITS ACTIVITIES AND EQUITY HOLDINGS TO ONE OF ITS SUBSIDIARIES RENAMED ESSILOR INTERNATIONAL​ * ‍ESSILOR INTERNATIONAL WILL CARRY ON OPERATIONAL ACTIVITIES CURRENTLY PERFORMED BY ESSILOR​ * ‍HIVE-DOWN OF ESSILOR'S ACTIVITIES IS A CONDITION PRECEDENT TO CONTRIBUTION BY DELFIN OF ITS LUXOTTICA SHARES TO ESSILOR​ Source text for Eikon: Further company coverage: (Gdynia Newsroom)
Governor: Doug Burgum (Republican)Salary: $129,096**As noted in the Book of States 2019, Governor Burgum previously said he will not take his salary, though the Bismarck Tribune reported in April that North Dakota House budget writers had given him a salary anyway, against his request, citing that it wouldn't be a good precedent to set and noting that he could donate his salary to "some worthy cause."
Rather, it's much more likely that the court will do what the Fifth Circuit did: reinterpret the precedent to its liking; credit the Fifth Circuit's charges that abortion practice in Louisiana was sloppy and dangerous rather than the District Court's precise findings that the safety record of abortion in the state was "excellent"; or pretend, as the appeals court did, that insignificant differences between Texas and Louisiana justify a completely different outcome when it comes to the constitutional rights of women.
Sen. Sherrod BrownSherrod Campbell BrownAmazon doubling overtime pay for warehouse workers Democrats grow nervous over primary delays Hillicon Valley: Senators press Amazon over workplace safety amid outbreak | Lyft expands to deliveries | Dems seek election security funds in stimulus package MORE (D-Ohio) said he is worried President TrumpDonald John TrumpNorth Korea asking for aid, while denying any coronavirus cases: report Iranian official maintains Tehran has 'no knowledge' of American hostage's whereabouts Unemployment claims surge to 3.2 million as coronavirus devastates economy MORE will use Ohio's decision to delay its Tuesday primary due to the coronavirus outbreak as a precedent to ask for the November election to be postponed.

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