Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

957 Sentences With "precedents"

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

Precedents will be set, and Gorsuch may be the deciding vote in what those precedents are.
And it is hard to predict how courts will apply the multiple criteria — what Judge Kavanaugh referred to in his testimony this week as "precedents on precedents" — for deciding when precedents may be overturned.
He argued not that his court had incorrectly applied Supreme Court precedents, but that those precedents are the real problem.
"  "House Democrats' hunger to break on Senate precedents just like they broke their own precedents could not be more telling.
"So far as precedent is concerned, there are all kinds of precedents, different governors have used their precedents in different ways," added Kashyap.
And by striking down the new executive order without addressing the precedents, Bybee points out, the court's creating two contradictory precedents at once.
"Frankly, we remained faithful to previous precedents, including precedents established by the administrations of both political parties," said one person close to the legal team.
"Chief Justice John Roberts asked serious, carefully considered questions about particular execution procedures, the court's precedents, and the ramifications of those precedents," Chris Geidner, BuzzFeed News' legal editor, reported on Twitter.
" The group urges the justices to "reconsider those precedents.
But there are plenty of precedents — beyond America's borders.
There have been precedents for the establishment of new states via treaties, such as the creation of the Vatican state, and there have been multiple legal precedents for the peaceful acquisition of land.
The court found that under the Supreme Court's precedents on qualified immunity, a legal privilege for certain types of government officials, the violation of Zadeh's rights wasn't "clearly established" under existing legal precedents.
There are also other precedents here that are worth noting.
Both rulings, upheld by Mr Zavascki's fellow justices, set precedents.
The result has been dueling talking points about historical precedents.
Tuesday's decision overruled two precedents upholding Florida's capital punishment system.
The Supreme Court, by contrast, can overturn its own precedents.
Are there particular international precedents that you are looking at?
One with Japan could set some useful standards and precedents.
Trump's nakedly provocative brawling style is also built on precedents.
But the ferocity of his rhetoric has few recent precedents.
So the precedents were not promising when Trump fired Comey.
Boyd's stories overlap with the list of precedents offered in
Reconstruction and its failure are precedents for understanding Barack Obama's
Granted, he had never before embraced the precedents he cited.
But there are plenty of precedents that nevertheless indicate opportunity.
Records were set, precedents were broken and nothing is settled.
The Senate precedents on quorums do not mention this question.
Mr. Trump is creating precedents that may outlast his tenure.
All of those precedents are at risk, Professor Epstein said.
They warn against dangerous precedents should Democrats' efforts prove successful.
Casey are precedents that lower court judges like himself follow.
Unfortunately, I do not believe those precedents are good ones.
Kavanaugh's views on the court's abortion precedents are largely unknown.
There are precedents, albeit inexact ones, for such a scenario.
And the cases could set precedents that stand for generations.
There are precedents for the kinds of regulations under consideration.
But Carroll's own work was very different from any precedents.
I also help them understand the historical precedents that inform it.
But recent precedents suggest these claims will outstrip the NFIP's funds.
NASA's Juno mission has already made mincemeat of precedents and expectations.
Brussels may hate these precedents, but it cannot deny their existence.
And there are also precedents for gold at his advancing age.
Clearly, the artist had internalized a wide range of historical precedents.
With so many cross-currents, it's tough to site past precedents.
There are, of course, precedents for documenting the world from above.
But World War I and its aftermath have left discouraging precedents.
There are precedents for reformed extremists to start their own groups.
In theory, five justices could change those precedents whenever they want.
The evenly divided Senate in January 2001 established some new precedents.
Have we spent the last 15 years setting dangerous international precedents?
It also extended the concept of standing well beyond existing precedents.
This, too, has precedents in countries such as Kenya and Ethiopia.
"I loved putting together precedents and making legal arguments," he said.
And much of what's awful about Trump's administration has Republican precedents.
So there's not a lot of historical precedents to look to.
Virtually all judges acknowledge that past precedents should sometimes be abandoned.
But precedents also exist of clerics adopting changes they initially condemned.
What Spotify is doing is different, however, and has few precedents.
They exude an enthusiasm for historical precedents and their pictorial inventions.
Katrina, a shaping event for society and politics today, had precedents.
Here, too, Biblical precedents are often invoked in the predator's defense.
The Supreme Court is typically reluctant to overturn its own precedents.
Issues around all these precedents will be continued to be litigated.
There are also precedents for using tariffs to back up negotiations.
It also reversed multiple FCC precedents to reclassify broadband as telecommunications.
Those terms could have invited a complicated argument about judicial precedents.
Han artists built on Qin precedents in art, but with adjustments.
The decision to freeze hiring has precedents in American presidential history.
The Johnson-Nixon era provides precedents for all of these scenarios.
There are precedents for Chanel's plan, however, and they are positive.
Judge Kavanaugh has followed those precedents in at least one case.
There are precedents for everything, but the disconcerting truth is that America's political situation is downright weird today — too weird to be flattened into historical parallels, though as always there are precedents to study and weigh.
Wade and other precedents could be on the line in the future.
Rather, it fell squarely in line with the Supreme Court's leading precedents.
This is the problem with the immigration precedents in this case, too.
The Senate does much of its work based on long-established precedents.
Those in favour of a ban will cite two famous cricketing precedents.
In the ruling, Jones cited Supreme Court abortion precedents including Roe v.
And case-by-case rulings mean the precedents don't have much weight.
So instead, it steadily set court precedents that did the same thing.
It set precedents and paved the way for several of its peers.
Have there been any precedents that can shed light on this moment?
Censorship programs set dangerous precedents for freedom of expression on the Internet.
There are few historical precedents and they tend to go both ways.
However, Delury said that there were precedents for deftly altering ideological course.
There are precedents, but they're not binding, which is a good thing.
Democrats have two precedents for beating Trump, but just one alternative: Scandal.
Employers have a unique obligation to establish new precedents along these lines.
This rate of credit expansion has no clear precedents in modern history.
" The history: "Tribal leaders...say there are precedents for health care exceptions.
Both types of cases could set precedents that would last for decades.
That means that the court doesn't lightly upend precedents like Roe v.
It is a bull market with few precedents in recent investing history.
Their astounding vitality results from extending different precedents while committing to none.
It can also point as precedents to the activities of its predecessors.
Krieg: Which precedents -- what are the fundamental arguments we're going to hear?
What viewers were watching was a roster-rebuilding strategy with few precedents.
But after the full court heard the case, it reversed those precedents.
Wrongly-decided precedents inaccurately reflecting what the Constitution says however, require correcting.
Pruitt's EPA says nary a word about these authoritative Supreme Court precedents.
There are precedents for Canada to follow in California, Colorado and elsewhere.
Contract negotiations are formal and complex, framed by precedents and detailed rules.
Here are three books that examine both arguments and their historical precedents.
That made him uncomfortable with some of the Supreme Court's most important precedents.
In his writings, Thomas has expressed the greatest willingness to reverse entrenched precedents.
Third, we want a nominee who will be willing to reject unconstitutional precedents.
He could just use the precedents the last two presidents created for him.
But it's easy to cite many precedents for both Cueva's and Colon's works.
As for Colon, his image appropriations and shaped canvases also find many precedents.
Other seemingly new phenomena like viral false news and deepfakes have predigital precedents.
"There are no clear, obvious precedents for what needs to happen," Inglesby said.
"There are precedents" of such unfair treatment to foreign bondholders, the source added.
There are only a few artistic precedents for that inversion of traditional roles.
But he acknowledged that under the court's precedents, the law is not valid.
Precedents exist, such as Israel's centrist Yesh Atid party that emerged in 2012.
But the FAA has made it clear that it wasn't setting any precedents.
He describes the process as "case law," in that most infractions have precedents.
Officials say these show its current actions are in line with previous precedents.
"It begins to create all kinds of precedents for other sectors," he said.
Court precedents on the subject—including the 1992 decision in Planned Parenthood v.
But they declined, citing two Supreme Court precedents dating back almost four decades.
Still, if the economy holds, campaign analysts will be scraping around for precedents.
He imposed more analytical rigor in his approach to legal precedents and outcomes.
The penalty also creates a couple precedents, though it should have created more.
The precedents were left standing, but hollowed out — a forest of dead timber.
They're not even a rough translation — or a strong misreading — of those precedents.
The two cited separate historical precedents to forecast how the debate might proceed.
Two limits exist on the president's pardoning power under current law and precedents.
Democrats have only two precedents for beating Trump but only one real chance.
There are precedents in American governance for a comprehensive approach to righting wrongs.
Backstopping these internal company policies are regulations and court precedents under federal law.
There are precedents for keeping former presidents' U.S. attorneys on after an election.
Teams formed and competed, establishing rules and precedents undefined by the game itself.
Damn. DOPS should look into who sets the suspension precedents and express outrage.
When it overruled precedents, it was in technical cases that attracted little attention.
These precedents tend to be old and mostly inapplicable to the current crisis.
It has overruled decades-old precedents on labor unions, antitrust and criminal justice.
The precedents set by the articles of impeachment, however, will endure far longer.
Guessing Eisenman's historical precedents has been something of a sport among her critics.
However, Stetson said Supreme Court precedents discourage federal courts from drawing such distinctions.
"The story dictated the form," Mr. Wise said, unaware of any other precedents.
With more than 100 successful state precedents, shouldn't we all embrace cherry-picking?
The courts had to navigate two bodies of precedents, pointing in different directions.
Chevron is a widely cited precedent, and precedents should never be casually overturned.
Hooper says precedents for religious accommodation in the U.S. military contradict the Citadel's decision.
Under existing precedents, however, it is out of bounds for a Title VII case.
In all these cases censorious governments cite similarly worded Western laws as precedents. Enough.
Fear and precedents like this add fuel to theorists' fire—especially on the web.
Mr. Burnham maintained that the courts wrongly decided those precedents, which are not binding.
Wade was settled law and that he had a healthy respect for establishment precedents.
But there are few precedents for such a prolonged period of government by crisis.
Such judgments and affidavits were invaluable precedents, like imprimaturs for forged works of art.
If Trump gets away with these things unscathed, dangerous precedents will have been set.
He described the lawsuit as "mostly a symbolic measure" under current Supreme Court precedents.
According to Lehner, the arrests violate legal precedents that regulate the detention of minors.
Gorsuch explained those cases are court precedents that must be given due weight. Sen.
Roe, Casey, and Hellerstedt would remain binding precedents for the lower courts to follow.
Pruitt has demonstrated an unwavering disrespect for the requirements of statutes and judicial precedents.
The Warren Court's landmark precedents went no further, but neither were they rolled back.
Those precedents were judged inapplicable to the territories seized during the Spanish-American War.
The Trump administration built on those precedents to open a wave of leak investigations.
Their legal arguments, so far, even cite some of the same laws and precedents.
We are also worried that in 2017, there were some extremely worrying precedents set.
Justice Williams wrote that he had reviewed more than 1,500 pages of legal precedents.
The decision was more important for its discussion of when precedents may be overruled.
They are receiving requests for further evidence that are baffling, with precedents continuously blurring.
Legal and historical precedents do not provide clear guidance as to who is right.
The answer here is we have some historical precedents to back this thinking up.
I keep my firearms for historical precedents and reasons, but I don't shoot them.
But Republicans can take hope because neither of these precedents was a federal election.
Such claims of privilege could be analyzed by the courts under existing constitutional precedents.
Court rulings and precedents, such as they are, tend to be narrow and particular.
Instead, she thinks of trigger warnings in the context of their real-world precedents.
The court still spends most of its time and energy on its own precedents.
They say they are simply applying bipartisan precedents established in the 1999 Clinton trial.
There are really no political precedents for the way we have to live now.
There are precedents for OPEC members to be exempt from agreements on output restraint.
But Supreme Court precedents offer few definitive guideposts, giving the attorney general broad latitude.
In response, Mr. Musk's lawyers said the commission was overreaching based on comparable precedents.
Will they adhere to the court's own abundant precedents mandating judicial scrutiny of agencies?
The work in the CMCA show is not without its precedents in Bisbee's oeuvre.
Equally important, neither the Constitution nor the rules nor the precedents nor history provide any permissible means for a bare majority of the Senate to take that radical step without breaking or ignoring clear provisions of applicable Senate rules and unquestioned precedents.
There are, however, precedents that past White Houses have followed in choosing applicants for clemency.
There's a reason the Supreme Court is reluctant to overturn established precedents such as Roe.
And, again, when you have major precedents of the court, that&aposs a big hurdle.
And everything is riding -- all these major precedents are now riding on this pivotal decision.
They set precedents no one can tell are set until they pop up years later.
But it should follow the precedents that has been set in the last three impeachments.
They compounded and concentrated an ongoing human-made environmental disaster, with few analogies or precedents.
Democrats and Republicans scurried to find historical precedents to buttress their preferred courses of action.
It is a gulf that is at once counterproductive and freighted with dangerous historical precedents.
These set important precedents and led to institutional reforms by the end of the decade.
With this case, however, he will have two serious precedents to overcome: Yick Wo v.
His office is also armed with myriad precedents of committees receiving such information throughout history.
As a Supreme Court justice he could be in a position to change such precedents.
This case and others create troubling precedents, especially now when backed by a federal court.
The exchanges at times waded into nuanced analysis of legal text and past court precedents.
There are precedents for older New York institutions reviving themselves with such real-estate upheavals.
Besides which, he scrambles all rules and all precedents so thoroughly that you never know.
The Wachowskis expertly crafted a story drawn from Joseph Campbell, with mythological and biblical precedents.
But there is little question that calls for reconsideration of precedents can have an effect.
The precedents are clear on this crucial point, in case after case, court after court.
The concept, which has precedents in the autism community, works beautifully for the merely shy.
But it refused to overrule two key precedents, to the frustration of four conservative justices.
President Trump, by contrast, is well on his way to following the Nixon-Clinton precedents.
Nobody knows how this will end, but developments elsewhere in Europe offer some scary precedents.
Bloomberg's approach comes from a less visionary tradition, which also has precedents in New York.
There's been plenty of scrutiny in recent years on how the Roberts Court respects precedents.
The government's post-trial legal brief was conspicuously short on precedents, because there aren't many.
There are certain precedents that are set in battle royale-style games at this point.
I can recall at least two precedents that might put Mr. Ghosn's downfall in perspective.
They heard about climate lawsuits underway based on precedents from 1990s lawsuits against tobacco companies.
The law in this instance is decidedly against the president, and so are the precedents.
She relied on the language and logic of Title VII, and on Supreme Court precedents.
Albright said the exceptions risked setting precedents that Iran could use to seek additional waivers.
Mr. Trump's document drew from organizational precedents in the Obama and George W. Bush administrations.
Trump seems to delight in upending precedents and the established order more than any president.
And Manfred, so far, is not always taking the same approach in establishing disciplinary precedents.
" But she said it was "not appropriate" to comment on the "correctness of particular precedents.
I am also extremely concerned about the various precedents he is setting for future administrations.
"There have never been so-called precedents," Mr. Geng said when asked about those examples.
And there are precedents in other previous administrations, Democrat and Republican, that are also troubling.
Hulu is not concerned about such precedents, said Craig Erwich, the head of original programming.
Grasz told the senators he would be bound to follow the Supreme Court's abortion precedents.
Canadians worry that current legal precedents are lax, and opportunities for criminals to escape conviction by using mental illness as a defense are a normal occurrence, yet many fail to realize that those same legal precedents continue to allow the unjust confinement of other Canadians.
" Kavanaugh said that "all parties" recognize that Roe and Casey as precedents that "we must follow.
Taylor's lawyer, Philip Ellison, told the Washington Post that he could find no other chalking precedents.
Ms. Hahn presents an impressive, cohesive body of work, although it rests on many formal precedents.
It is not uncommon for companies to challenge legal precedents being used in cases against them.
And that's where I think that the precedents on some of this stuff get really tricky.
Feinstein called that ruling and others since then buttressing abortion rights "super precedents" deserving special deference.
The Supreme Court "does not overturn its precedents lightly", the dissent noted, quoting a 2014 case.
The result has been civil unrest with few modern precedents, John Lichfield writes in the Guardian.
Officials are looking at ancient precedents, since the last time an emperor abdicated was in 1817.
Despite investors' concessions, the assault on lending standards is accelerating as precedents get ever more aggressive.
There's plenty of precedents about the worst that can occur that can actually, ironically, reassure investors.
U.S. Supreme Court precedents limit the ratio of punitive to compensatory damages to 9 to 1.
Robots will set new precedents for who and what are allowed to travel in public spaces.
Last night's strikes did not involve Trump "repel(ling) sudden attacks," so these precedents don't help.
What's in store for that case in 2016, and will the resulting decision set any precedents?
Justice Kelley, however, ruled that the board had failed to followed state law and court precedents.
When economists apply these precedents to Brexit, they basically reverse the effect from positive to negative.
But Salman and the Courts' other insider trading precedents show that the law is often unclear.
Over time, those policy-based judgments yield to the guidance provided by the courts' prior precedents.
It also means a Court that will probably overturn one or more important liberal precedents outright.
Still, most valuation metrics do show that stocks are relatively expensive as compared with historical precedents.
There are few precedents for securitising NPLs, in Italy or abroad, that provide a useful guide.
The software suggests the most effective precedents, in addition to scouring the legal brief for errors.
Even victories for affirmative action establish precedents that draw the circle of acceptable practices ever smaller.
Of all the states, experts say, California has the most protective pension laws and legal precedents.
There are many precedents for bringing the debate about rights down to the lowest possible denominator.
Clinton intended to violate the law and the lack of precedents for prosecution in comparable cases.
"It's the power of setting precedents," said New America Foundation senior fellow Peter Singer via email.
Some of these landmark precedents may yet survive the Roberts Court's scrutiny in the short term.
By not resolving the separation of powers issue, the courts let Bush's and Carter's precedents stand.
It's very clear under decades of Supreme Court precedents that the House can enforce this subpoena.
Even if that claim were true, and it isn't, they are looking at the wrong precedents.
It produces precedents that liberals do not like that meanwhile must be applied by lower courts.
Justice Alito wrote that Mr. Gamble had failed to make the case for overruling those precedents.
Democrats are expected to emphasize such precedents as they continue to hammer the need for transparency.
There are precedents showing that a small effort like Ms. Chase's can have a large impact.
None of those laws or precedents mean that children must be taken away from their parents.
Lawsuits provide a valuable role for society in publicizing information and building legal precedents, Szalzi said.
He is acting in dangerous ways that undermine the rule of law and establishing consequential precedents.
Thus there are several precedents for inserting firm human rights language in a new Nafta agreement.
Armed with such precedents, and the mental checklist, you can reduce errors, if not eliminate them.
She threw out the bipartisan standards and institutional precedents this House gave Presidents Nixon and Clinton.
Echoes of the Clintons The historical precedents for Kavanaugh's big move were political rather than legal.
There are less earth-shaking precedents for returning clear-headed to Washington from Louisville and Milwaukee.
This history of the U.S. Postal Service shows that many of its current problems have precedents.
While a formal shadow cabinet would be new to the U.S., there are somewhat similar precedents.
Kyle Cheney: Reading the unsexiest texts possible: Congressional Research Service reports about impeachment process and precedents.
What kind of "treatment" Judge Gorsuch thinks the court's abortion precedents deserve was left neatly unspecified.
His approach was a variation on Chief Justice Roberts's incrementalism and reluctance to overrule precedents outright.
Mr. Francisco said a properly limited version of the challenged precedents would play an important role.
The trial will turn, as trials necessarily do, on a lot of legal details and precedents.
The claims in Steele's dossier are lurid and unproven, but they draw on very real precedents.
Nowhere is this vicious circle clearer than in the obliteration of traditional precedents concerning judicial appointments.
In short, the Government's program fits comfortably within the Supreme Court precedents applying the special needs doctrine.
The authors also say it's inappropriate to base electronic personhood on either preexisting legal or ethical precedents.
President Donald Trump's attack on Canada over trade has historical precedents ("Breaking a few eggs", June 16th).
But modern historical precedents show China does not react positively or constructively to that kind of handling.
In multiple dissents, they argued that the majority deeply misunderstood the Supreme Court's precedents and their goals.
Set precedents that would also limit how regulators can attack other emissions sources, like refineries and manufacturing.
Other precedents set with the Comcast-NBC merger will also be called into question, according to Blumenthal.
The Federal Circuit upheld both of these precedents when it ruled against Impression Products earlier this year.
Now, let's judge it as a piece in terms of its precedents and possible influences in turn.
Some of his arguments rely on Justice Department authorities and past precedents involving the special counsel regulation.
In his testimony before the Senate last year, Justice Gorsuch said precedents should not be abandoned lightly.
That maintenance requires that later precedents which diverge from the Constitution are not allowed to preempt it.
Supreme Court nominations are rare, so neither side has much data to rely on in determining precedents.
Chief Justice John Roberts echoed these precedents in his opinion upholding the Affordable Care Act in 2012.
There are precedents for reauthorizing existing U.N. peacekeeping mandates under Chapter VII to address deteriorating security conditions.
Feinstein called that ruling and others since then buttressing legalized abortion "super precedents" that deserve special deference.
That's because, under House precedents, a bill that is defeated cannot be reconsidered in the same Congress.
Ironically, the coal executives celebrating Trump's plan for now may come to regret the precedents it sets.
Professor Pozen said court precedents generally indicated that recording the police was protected by the First Amendment.
Bucklew argues that all he has to do under those precedents is demonstrate that alternative methods exist.
However, there are recent precedents that demonstrate that this route is the most certain guarantee of stability.
Liberals had no trouble urging the Supreme Court to overturn millennia of precedents against same sex marriage.
This, too, seems a highly improbable reading of the textile, with no known precedents in Islamic art.
The court, after shifting rightward in the 1970s and 1980s, frequently narrowed major precedents from that era.
And part of interpreting the Constitution is taking into account major precedents, and that's going to happen.
Also, immigration judges are bound by precedents established in the federal appeals court that covers their location.
Knowing there are precedents for FBI interference in elections, however, hardly makes the situation any more reassuring.
But that won't stop Trump, who isn't exactly the sort of guy to worry about institutional precedents.
By 1993, they had succeeded in all 50 states, though the laws and legal precedents vary widely.
These precedents had created an imbalance, giving broad powers to the government and few rights to individuals.
In the United States, Mr. Trump's salute caused some Americans to examine history and search for precedents.
Earlier nominees have also said that Casey is a key decision about when precedents may be overruled.
The abrupt plunge in the nation's economic fortunes has no obvious precedents; it requires a massive response.
It's not easy to come up with recent favorable precedents for Democratic victories in the Deep South.
However, this version of the TPP sets dangerous precedents that will be all but impossible to undo.
It's hard to identify precedents for Christopher Wilmarth's sculpture, which uses its banal modern materials purely abstractly.
But it's hard to identify precedents for Wilmarth's sculpture, which uses its banal modern materials purely abstractly.
She looks for precedents in which Israelis received more lenient treatment than her clients in similar circumstances.
They are falsely characterizing Republican opposition as "unprecedented," even though Democrats still in office created the precedents.
"This case presents only a narrow question that is readily resolved by those very precedents," Vance said.
This video will be included in a 3-part documentary titled "Precedents" that's currently in the works.
And she was not one to use her decisions as a soapbox even when they set precedents.
These examples are contestable at best — we will return to the lack of good historical precedents later.
"The Supreme Court is of course free to revisit those precedents, but we are not," he wrote.
Are there precedents for hostility between a prominent member of a New York team and its owner?
The lack of precedents speaking directly to the specific question in this case plays in Trump's favor.
Judge Gorsuch responded that he would respect precedents providing for constitutional protections for those and other groups.
The tribunal, and its Rwanda counterpart, also created precedents on sexual crimes committed in times of conflict.
Briefs from the administration could help such victims get justice and set precedents to protect other Americans.
Historically, there are more relevant precedents that provide the formula for preventing another Patriots Super Bowl parade.
"But as a judge, it's a precedent of the United States Supreme Court and it deserves the same respect as other precedents of the United States Supreme Court when you're coming to it as a judge and it has to be analyzed under the law of precedents," he added.
Signed by the USCIS chief counsel, it emphasized that asylum officers should make decisions on a case-by-case basis rather than categorically denying any kind of claim, and it pointed officers to the past precedents Sessions had upheld instead of explaining which other precedents were now voided.
Two months on, the government is still trying to close the case without setting precedents it may regret.
But look at some of the precedents that could have happened if this had gone the other way.
And part of interpreting the Constitution is taking into account major precedents, and that&aposs going to happen.
Blumenthal pressed Nalbandian about why he was comfortable endorsing certain legal precedents but not others — why Roe v.
Jonathan Herbst of Norton Rose Fulbright, another law firm, notes that precedents exist for "variable geometry" in regulation.
Its judgment refers to 17th- and 18th-century precedents, when Parliament defended citizens' rights against an overweening king.
Chief Justice Roberts said Supreme Court precedents have frowned upon the government offering benefits on a conditional basis.
Most contentious is the academy's new rule to weed out less active members, an effort that has precedents.
The Senate has concluded, based on its own precedents, that disqualification can be done with a simple majority.
Although the court generally respects its prior precedents — referred to as stare decisis — it need not do so.
Maybe it's time for people pushing for Trump's impeachment to reevaluate which historical precedents they cite as well.
It is a meaning the Supreme Court will reject if it is true to its precedents and principles.
However, I'll tell you there are two precedents that kind of inspire me that both involve mass addiction.
As a Supreme Court justice, not so much: The Supreme Court, by contrast, can overturn its own precedents.
Britain, wary of setting awkward precedents, played an outsized role in sheltering Italians with blood on their hands.
Grim historic precedents It was perhaps Iraq's Saddam Hussein who made the term "human shield" a household term.
Both precedents were considered carefully by the judge who was pondering the case of the pious prison gardener.
The threats to national security will have to be severe to instigate these changes, but history has precedents.
The aesthetic and mechanical cues, the sleeve-worn inspirations, are great, all from the best kind of precedents.
In a voluminous 133-page decision, the judges admonished the state courts for ignoring precedents like Solem v.
Precedents on abortion, LGBT rights, racial discrimination, and the scope of federal power would almost certainly be imperiled.
But the precedents for his visual presence are far weirder: victims in horror movies, mad scientists, Vine comedians.
There have been precious few precedents to suggest that this Congress is capable of handling them all responsibly.
And while any other court's ruling can be persuasive, the Supreme Court's precedents generally carry the most weight.
They are tacked together from a host of precedents and compromises, and riven with ambiguities and ethical pitfalls.
Companies quickly settle any case that passes the preliminary stages in order to avoid negative precedents or publicity.
Precedents that have long supported the entrenched overseers and gatekeepers of the U.S. capital markets are being challenged.
It's likely one of the most specific legal precedents the Knight Institute can use to strengthen their suit.
Or it might be that Obama (and Trump, too) set precedents that Trump is now pressured to follow.
Senators are likely to question Kavanaugh in detail on his willingness to question long-standing Supreme Court precedents.
Hyatt, the Court's five conservatives gave a stark preview of how they regard precedents with which they disagree.
There may be precedents in other countries, but one would be hard pressed to find a precedent here.
As Democrats set precedents now, they should remember that a Democratic president will nominate justices in the future.
At stake in these cases are billions of dollars in liability and legal precedents that will last generations.
To create that band, Bang had to shake up the established precedents for how idol groups are treated.
Rather than looking back, or being wistful or ironic, Marshall synthesizes these precedents, bringing them into the present.
Here are some highlights, and lowlights, of baseball's newest trend, with a nod to some historical precedents, too.
But the case is likely to set precedents for future cases involving those who were sentenced as minors.
One contribution that presidents have made is to establish precedents and norms that define the institution over time.
That would throw the intelligence agencies into a crisis of credibility and status with few, if any, precedents.
Companies quickly settle any case that passes the preliminary stages in order to avoid negative precedents or publicity.
There are precedents in the tribunals for Sierra Leone, Lebanon and Cambodia to help guide such an initiative.
But the path forward remains murky, with few historical precedents and scant constitutional guidance to light the way.
"If you look at the precedents (of previous chancellors)...they often struggled in their fourth year," she said.
George Washington was very careful in making decisions, recognizing his actions would set precedents for generations to come.
Meanwhile, in a move that has absolutely no horrifying historical precedents, the Tories promise to "tackle" Gypsy camps.
Mr. Kneedler allowed that the court's precedents indicated that some congressional commitments to pay salaries were enforceable, too.
There are precedents around the world for the kind of political jolt the United States experienced in November.
Much of the line where Congress's power stops and the president's begins is blurry, with few definitive precedents.
Chief Justice Roberts has occasionally voted to overrule precedents, notably in cases on campaign finance and public unions.
"Legal precedents show that it's not enough to provide a product that is kind of safe," he said.
"If I were to start telling you which are my favorite precedents or which are my least favorite precedents or if I view a precedent in that fashion, I would be tipping my hand and suggesting to litigants that I've already made up my mind about their cases," he said.
"There's a lot of precedents to the bounce that we've seen," Gordon said on CNBC's "Trading Nation " on Thursday.
One of those precedents involves a most recognizable employer: the Trump Marina Casino Resort (since rebranded under new owners).
"It will be a maintenance operation with no precedents, with enormous investment in public works," he told Il Messaggero.
Y.: We already know that President Trump&aposs nominee will be prepared to overturn the precedents of Roe v.
The Senate adheres to an elaborate set of rules and precedents about just what it can and can't do.
I think, certainly, Chief Justice Roberts will be very cautious about overturning any of these --- any of those precedents.
Still, he and his advisers will get better at using the presidential toolkit, including its legal precedents and firepower.
But a majority of the justices seem sceptical that Texas's standards for measuring intellectual disability jibe with their precedents.
But a majority of the justices seem sceptical that Texas's rogue standards for measuring intellectual disability matched their precedents.
Google won the Damore case without overturning any broader precedents, and organizers say it shouldn't be necessary here either.
Split rulings do not set nationwide legal precedents, but a 4-4 decision would effectively kill Obama's immigration plan.
He soon became one of the most influential sovereigns in Colorado, with a savant-like recall of legal precedents.
Restructuring asset ownership into non-sanctioned entities has precedents in Russia going back to Gunvor in 2014, it added.
All told, nearly 400 companies big and small are going through the process, establishing a first batch of precedents.
There are some relevant precedents in the broadcasting industry, but no current regulators are really up to the job.
Trump aides have studied precedents, including the Reagan White House's handling of Iran-Contra and President Clinton's scandal machinery.
Some legal scholars question whether the executive order is constitutional, based on the 10th Amendment and previous court precedents.
However, I must present the historical precedents that indicate Jeff's star power can't always compensate for a sequel's shortcomings.
Divergent precedents are substituted for the Constitution and effectively become the "new and improved" highest law of the land.
And there is no shortage of precedents for extreme prices and scarcity to generate a totally unforeseen technical breakthrough.
There have also been precedents for international recognition of non-territorial sovereign entities, such as the Order of Malta.
The use of "self-referrals" to issue new immigration court precedents was perhaps the best example of this phenomenon.
Bacevich argues that three mistakes by Carter set precedents that led to decades of squandered American lives and treasure.
Under the Supreme Court's precedents, the judges concluded, the oversight left the reservation legally intact until the present day.
That those Supreme Court precedents, the much-reviled Insular Cases, are still part of American law is an embarrassment.
A future administration inheriting those precedents would have very different options for jumpstarting our country's stalled progress on climate.
The Supreme Court's defamation precedents are meant to shield newspapers that scrutinize power and magazines that satirize prominent figures.
He's not going to take his Scotus seats and starts crushing precedents like the judicial equivalent of Genghis Khan.
The late Justice Antonin Scalia used to excoriate his liberal colleagues for highlighting foreign legal precedents in domestic cases.
Even if Trump is toppled by impeachment, there will still be a thousand precedents for federal coverups and duplicity.
He wrote in the same dissent that all the judges recognized Roe and the precedents that must be followed.
Will Americans learn from mistakes like that, or will they cite them as precedents for their own future misdeeds?
There are sound precedents for this in earlier crises: Germany in the aftermath of 1945, and France following decolonization.
Since U.S. immigration courts fall under the Justice Department's jurisdiction, the attorney general can intervene and help set precedents.
In defiance of precedents set by the Supreme Court, Trump has called for flag burning protesters to be jailed.
He said he had followed Supreme Court precedents, even as he acknowledged that there was no directly applicable case.
Justice Kavanaugh took a more serious approach, often asking how particular precedents applied to the cases before the court.
For instance, the justices have agreed to hear an unusually large number of appeals asking them to overturn precedents.
It is true that Roberts has often tried to slowly dismantle precedents he dislikes rather than overruling them immediately.
Justice Brett Kavanaugh spent much of his confirmation hearing detailing his respect for precedent, especially "super-precedents" like Roe.
Accordingly, our legal system in the United States will have to adapt these anachronistic precedents to the new realities.
Whether these moves set precedents for post-pandemic Hollywood is an open question, and one that industry insiders fear.
"It's perfectly reasonable for folks to suggest that the House should follow these more conciliatory precedents," Mr. Vladeck said.
And you can look back to the precedents of the Fed and they've been clear about where they stand.
SIDEBAR The president has vowed to ask the justices to intercede, but the Constitution and precedents are against him.
"Chief Justice Rehnquist demonstrated a great sensitivity to adhering to and respecting Senate procedures and precedents," Professor Gerhardt wrote.
For Mr. Ratmansky — surely the most historically conscious choreographer alive — there are many precedents here, but three in particular.
With unprecedented drama in an action with only two precedents, it is fair to ask: What did Democrats gain?
The timing and scope of such dismissals have often led to charges and countercharges that they violated prior precedents.
But for those watching closely, the Supreme Court's decisions track earlier precedents, and the outcomes tend to be predictable.
And historical precedents are fairly unambiguous regarding longer-term results: appeasing aggressors only whets their appetite for more aggression.
And the courts may soon produce legal precedents that could radically reshape the future of greenhouse gas-emitting industries.
John Kennedy says his staff had created a detailed briefing book of past impeachments and precedents he's working through.
This raises the question of whether he considers the Court's precedents inventing a "right" of personal autonomy/ identity legitimate.
By heading into its final year with a robust regulatory agenda, the Obama administration is following its predecessors' precedents.
As with many legal issues involving the president, this is disputed, and there are few clear precedents about it.
It might be helpful if there were more precedents for peaceful, orderly, democratic separations, rather than violent, chaotic ones.
Instead, Rehnquist applied the relevant precedents, then left it up to senators to decide whether to reverse his decision.
America's energy sources, like booming oil and crumbling coal, have defied projections and historical precedents over the last decade.
The jobs are different; a Supreme Court judge is less obliged to follow precedents she doesn't like, for instance.
They aren't voting on dozens of laws, but setting precedents on a smaller number of very different, very important topics.
Other than Marlo Thomas' 1960s sitcom character "That Girl," who at least had a steady boyfriend, there were few precedents.
As with intent and knowledge, there is a rich set of legal precedents distinguishing linking from hosting and displaying content.
Her goal, as it's dramatized in the film, is to find ways to not challenge laws so much as precedents.
A Latin phrase, stare decisis means that judges should respect legal precedents by letting them stand instead of overturning them.
But "Jamaica" is an untested political formula on the federal level, and the state-level precedents haven't been incredibly successful.
The newspaper called on the justice to follow previous Supreme Court precedents of not weighing in on elections and campaigns.
Whether they can pull this off is a legal and constitutional question for which the precedents do not look good.
" Although Justice Clarence Thomas joined Alito's opinion, he wrote separately to note his "growing discomfort with our modern severability precedents.
Why it matters: The most successful Democratic politician of his generation is breaking with precedents from a more civil era.
Windsor into the history books and setting one of the most influential legal precedents in the fight for marriage equality.
In his view, the Supreme Court's precedents commanded an outcome in the officers' favor—and that is precisely the problem.
China's courts have set few reliable precedents on VIEs and the official position is one of toleration rather than approval.
We do not yet know whether judges like Chief Justice John Roberts will follow existing precedents that support this investigation.
It was, but Supreme Court decisions can be surprisingly broad and durable; precedents may stand for decades, if not centuries.
In turn, Pittsburgh Mayor Bill Peduto said that the city will adhere to the precedents set by the Paris agreement.
There remains a lack of legal precedents in terms of effective enforcement in many jurisdictions where sukuk issuance is prevalent.
"There are basically no precedents we can identify for a shock of this sort acting across sectors simultaneously," he said.
There are precedents for reparations, say the Namibians: Germany has paid billions of dollars to survivors of the Jewish Holocaust.
It's hard to say why clowns are this season's reigning bogeymen, but there are precedents for this candy-colored hysteria.
Jay: He can't go through the history of litigation—Keenan: I don't think it's unreasonable to ask for precedents.5.
Technology has changed the contours of fandom and celebrity worship, but the fundamental sentiment is timeless, with clear historical precedents.
There is a long line of precedents applying this principle to African-American, Jewish, female, Catholic, Mormon, and gay judges.
These standards and precedents mandate full and informed approval from Indigenous peoples before advancing any projects that impact their territories.
That is why the distinction between the role of precedents in constitutional law and other types of law is critical.
Getting there will mean building some dangerous tools and setting some troubling precedents, but that's basically what the bureau wants.
Get smart: Trump proved a long time ago that he wouldn't be bound by the precedents set by past presidents.
Competition lawyers said there are few precedents for the CMA to dramatically revise its findings between provisional and final reports.
There are plenty of precedents of failed AI experiments that have diminished trust in narrow AI solutions and conversational bots.
These two divergent services of driverless transportation already have clear precedents in existing large cities: commuter rail versus rapid transit.
Under the Supreme Court's rules, an evenly divided ruling leaves the lower courts' decisions intact and sets no new precedents.
His study was based on data collected in the 1980s from more than 240,000 households, but there are historical precedents.
Last week, he announced that Mueller would abide by existing Justice Department precedents and forego a criminal indictment of Trump.
She spent countless hours on the phone and researching court cases that she could cite as precedents in her favor.
The law and legal precedents that govern investment advisers, and that shaped fiduciary duty, do not specifically spell that out.
The NLRB also overturned two precedents last week that had been seen as improving workers' chances at winning union elections.
But they would still have to reckon with it, as well as with similar precedents from other states, like Massachusetts.
Since joining the court in 21992, Thomas has never shied away from identifying the precedents with which he takes issue.
And for many thoughtful judges, the real rule book is, similarly, the set of precedents laid down by earlier judges.
Cases are decided using that procedure when a lower-court ruling is considered to be counter to Supreme Court precedents.
And since winning the election, he has continued to defy precedents set by the 4003 presidents who came before him.
As you might imagine, that gap consists of an almost infinitely knotty tangle of legal precedents, gray areas, and jurisdictions.
His confirmation would fundamentally alter the balance of the United States' highest court and put dozens of precedents at risk.
After 2018 won the label of a new "Year of the Woman," record-breaking precedents are now the new norm.
Judge Matsumoto rejected that argument, citing legal precedents establishing that fraud losses cover property whether or not it is returned.
Under the court's precedents, Justice Kagan wrote, Congress was powerless to enact the law, dooming Mr. Allen's case, Allen v.
Those citations prompted a political uproar that failed to distinguish between useful comparisons and treating foreign rulings as binding precedents.
As the coronavirus spreads, there are already precedents in the U.S. for providing wages for those thrown out of work.
But there could be no way to know for sure, because the Ohtani experiment has few precedents in baseball history.
"He's a titan of the music world, and over his long-established career has set many precedents," Mr. Ball said.
The Senate performs its essential role by operating under a set of standing rules and the precedents interpreting those rules.
Of course the triumph of "Parasite" goes beyond those precedents, but in other ways it's an almost ideal Oscar movie.
Critics called Bush- and Obama-era targeted killing programs legally and ethically dubious, and argued that they set dangerous precedents.
But with few legal precedents and different standards between countries or even states in the US there is little clarity.
Critics say the precedents behind those decisions are outdated in light of the realities of life in the digital age.
Of course, one of the best precedents for that was Martin Luther King Jr.'s opposition to the Vietnam War.
Everyone involved wants a quick resolution, but they have to be wary of setting precedents that could harm the monarchy.
Yet, if the Court's recent precedents in similar cases are any sign, it is very likely that Mesa will prevail.
The courts get the final say in US politics, setting precedents that can shape the country for years to come.
Most jurists, most of the time, follow modern judicial precedents rather than pondering first principles of constitutional text and history.
Religious liberty legal precedents lend support to consequential free speech cases, because religious speech has often been targeted for suppression.
Precedents for legislative triggers do exist, like a balanced budget measure from the Reagan era known as Gramm-Rudman-Hollings.
The rulings were entitled to respect as precedents of the Supreme Court, he said, and should not be overturned lightly.
If the latter question becomes the controlling one, then a few non-immigration law precedents may suggest a possible outcome.
Indictment precedents are not required if the elements of a statutory violation are satisfied by the misconduct of the offender.
John Kennedy says his staff had created a detailed briefing book of past impeachments and precedents he's working through. *Sen.
The Supreme Court's modern history, from Franklin D. Roosevelt's appointees onward, provides precedents for how justices have taken their leave.
And perhaps all of those precedents, too, have persuaded players that there is no such thing as a lost cause.
The idea is similar to the idea of hardball, but focuses more on the precedents that such conflicts can create.
The El Museo's show proposes a far more expansive approach, one that considers poetic, mystical and religious precedents, associations and meanings.
The larger debate will surely surface more in upcoming years as justices on this increasingly conservative court question past liberal precedents.
Wilkie, the case that drew Roberts' comment about fading precedents, is one of the 2170 pending disputes yet to be resolved.
I agree with everything Mollie says about this is a historic -- there are deep historic precedents about defense spending in Europe.
The inability to set national precedents deprives people in parts of the country the full protections of the law, they argue.
Asperger's is the most famous eponymous diagnosis linked to the Nazi period, but there are other precedents where we've renamed diagnoses.
But the precedents—including Burma in 28.5, the former Soviet Union in 250 and North Korea in 22—are not encouraging.
The legal precedents around this kind of extortion are ambiguous and it's unclear whether AMI's defense would hold up in court.
Cases are decided in that fashion when a lower court ruling is considered to be particularly counter to Supreme Court precedents.
The letter from the White House is a political stunt that misinterprets the Constitution, ignores relevant precedents, and defies common sense.
The justices will soon have another opportunity to weigh the merits of abandoning old precedents with significant implications for America's economy.
It could eventually mean a rollback of liberal precedents for abortion rights, campus affirmative action, and protections based on sexual orientation.
As copyright holders continue establishing even more precedents of compelling ISPs to enforce copyright disputes, other publishers may well follow suit.
Judge Paul Niemeyer wrote the majority had "radically extend[ed] Supreme Court establishment-clause precedents" to reach a "politically desired outcome".
The insurers appealed, arguing that Supreme Court precedents require much more explicit legislative language to eliminate a previously adopted payment obligation.
But the enforcement of them and the core precedents that determine how they're enforced have been weakening ever since the 1970s.
Because few precedents existed, and because of a fear that ICANN would lack legitimacy, America kept it on a long leash.
There are ongoing court cases involving rape and appeals being granted, all raising extremely complicated questions and setting potentially dangerous precedents.
All three suggested that it would be a bad idea to deviate from the court's preference for upholding its own precedents.
"We are currently doing what I have to do, which is review very carefully the legal standards and precedents," he said.
In the face of uncertain precedents, nonprofits often choose to remain silent, muting their voices when they are needed most. 2.
In his Thursday op-ed, McCain called for regular order -- adherence to the precedents and rules that guide the legislative process.
But it also means that her doctor, Jochen Lorch, has no precedents to guide him, because her case is without precedent.
But since he has broken with all precedents by refusing to release his tax returns, it's impossible to resolve such disputes.
The House voted along party lines last week to approve rules for an impeachment process for which there are few precedents.
The DNC chief said the Thursday hearing on the assault allegations was essentially a "kangaroo court," ignoring judicial and legal precedents.
But the strategic miscalculation by justices impatient to undo those precedents hardly turns the Fisher outcome into the incarnation of liberalism.
The result is a thicket of laws, precedents, and practices that determine when a federal or tribal government will bring charges.
In a way, the measure embodies the party's argument that Trump and his administration have repeatedly shirked ethical standards and precedents.
The only other time this had ever occurred was in 28503 in a Senate so different that no precedents were useful.
Or, better yet, the Democrats should recognize that no historical precedents can prepare them for a world in which a lawless
Why it matters: Privacy groups say some of the key precedents concerning phone records and police searches are out of date.
In this context, it's hard to understand why journalists wouldn't take a harder look at the precedents Trump's past has set.
But what we cannot survive is establishing dangerous precedents by one side that can be used later against the other side.
Judge Garland was not on the panels that developed the early key precedents, but he embraced and applied them without objection.
But the Yahoo mail case, and other ongoing cases raise troubling precedents for what the courts have allowed to pass muster.
Even with Strassman's blueprint and a number of precedents in place, getting approval to study psychedelics is still a steep challenge.
Precedents are supposed to be overturned only in the rarest circumstances, not simply because the current Court would have decided differently.
The Supreme Court's precedents point in one direction: Congress has a broad oversight power, and presidents are not above the law.
Wherever we are in the scope of management, we can change the rules and set precedents and be transparent about it.
He has regularly published scholarly articles on such topics as the future of NATO and the precedents for modern insurgency warfare.
So you might have thought that the Supreme Court would have discussed or at least cited Casey before overruling major precedents.
Democrats complain that previous nominees have pledged to respect precedents, only to narrow or overturn them once seated on the court.
There are "no recent precedents to guide any policy response to the current situation," Powell said Friday, referencing the trade war.
But the one they settle on is a lag in the adoption and effective use of A.I. There are historical precedents.
Moreover, in reviewing the past trials of Johnson and Clinton, Democrats may have to struggle with precedents of their own making.
How they shake out could set rough precedents for how the government will approach the many future questions that will emerge.
Mitch McConnell, take note: If a Democratic president follows Mr. Trump's precedents, you have already bartered away your authority to object.
Mitch McConnell, take note: If a Democratic president follows Mr. Trump's precedents, you have already bartered away your authority to object.
It would enter a new phase, and liberal precedents on abortion, the death penalty and gay rights would be at risk.
Those terms, as my colleague Peter Baker wrote, are criminal charges, meaning they would have invited complicated debate about judicial precedents.
Its decisions will be public, and will serve as precedents — meaning that a kind of case law will develop over time.
And the outcomes of their trials established precedents that arguably strengthened legal protections that serve to benefit the community at large.
There are recent precedents for such transparency involving investigations of major politicians: the Hillary Clinton email probe and the Mueller report.
While relying on family members for advice is hardly unusual for a president, giving them a formal role has few precedents.
These cases have the potential to establish important precedents regarding Presidential power, and there is value in letting them play out.
Still, those precedents did not address a situation in which the White House has advance notice about what will be asked.
But Mr. Northam has not had to look far into history for precedents of governors hunkering down in office despite scandals.
And the main insight that they had was that the big Supreme Court precedents from the 1960s and '70s involving free speech were precedents created in an era that looked very, very different from the one we're in right now, where the threats to the First Amendment were quite different from the ones we're facing right now.
It's hard to know if Gomes is consciously referring to Nengudi or others, but at least the precedents seem to be women.
Colorado, Minnesota and Illinois are largely limited in how much they can alter pension programs due to past court precedents, Fitch said.
He tried to distinguish between Loving and Brown, saying they were "long-standing" and "well-accepted" precedents unlikely to come up again.
But these precedents offered "no help," he said; Joshua was at home, not in government custody, at the time of his injuries.
Compared with the Nixon and Clinton precedents, Trump's impeachment inquiry begins with the two parties already locked in much more intense conflict.
Viewing all code as speech would make regulation of digital communication ver complex, and courts will likely be careful about setting precedents.
"Rejecting the physical presence rule is necessary to ensure that artificial competitive advantages are not created by this court's precedents," Kennedy said.
The bottom line: The media industry is facing unprecedented disruption, which is forcing the employment dynamics to change from decades-old precedents.
In the recently completed Supreme Court term, significant rulings on abortion rights and university affirmative action relied on precedents crafted by O'Connor.
It does provide some small reassurance, however, pointing to the legal battles that have already set precedents for trans rights in America.
ET with a clearer explanation of existing legal precedents supporting trans rights and a statement from the National Center for Transgender Equality.
Many of these standout features of the magazine had direct precedents in Japanese gaming publications of the time, including Family Computer Magazine.
And those who like the results subsequently try to cement them in place by demanding allegiance to those precedents from then on.
Other examples of regulatory precedents for the EPA's approach in the Clean Power Plan abound, as discussed further in our recent article.
This isn't just a game—this is a sport, with all the passion and fire and broken hopes of any "traditional" precedents.
"I'm taken aback because I can't reconcile the court's precedents with this decision," said Patricia Lawrence-Kolaras, a lawyer for Kelly-Brown.
After all, there are beloved precedents for the archaeologist turned action hero, namely Indiana Jones, the inspiration of the Tomb Raider series.
Existing legal precedents regarding states' power (or lack thereof) to restrict federal candidates pertain mainly to congressional candidates rather than presidential aspirants.
Murphy then turned to the federal courts, where he argued that the state courts had wrongly interpreted existing precedents on tribal reservations.
But a federal judge just blocked the law, saying it defies Supreme Court precedents and "unequivocally" infringes upon a woman's constitutional rights.
Dangerous precedents for democracy are set when politicians are allowed to act above the law in office and get away with it.
"Recent judgments have set precedents, emphasizing the need to strengthen investigation, denying traffickers easy bail and awarding compensation to survivors," he said.
She is still mining modernism, but going back to an earlier vein than her Swiss training, back to Constructivist and Dada precedents.
There were clear precedents, including Clarence Thomas's outrage during his own nomination process at being accused of sexual harassment by Anita Hill.
As 'the Drum Major in this parade of new precedents,' Justice Breyer is not well positioned to complain about their inevitable consequences.
In America, the legal meaning of "due process" derives from the common law tradition, the Bill of Rights, laws and court precedents.
And, as discussed below, although people didn't need to rely on precedents from the White House, secret taping simply has become rampant.
Two teams that are this historically good existing in the same season, let alone in the same conference, has few historical precedents.
And he's set new precedents that future Senate majorities could use to justify ramming their own controversial new laws through budget reconciliation.
Such an investigation has innumerous precedents: identifying the thresholds separating art and life was a defining preoccupation of 20th century avant-gardes.
But we have no recent precedents to guide us about how a contested presidential nominating convention would play out under modern conditions.
And with abortion-rights precedents suddenly at stake, all eyes will be on two swing blocs: moderate Republicans and red-state Democrats.
Thomas said the nine justices should not uphold precedents that are "demonstrably erroneous," regardless of whether other factors supported letting them stand.
In a September 2018 ruling, the Atlanta-based court said the Pensacola law was unconstitutional, citing its own precedents on the issue.
It was not immediately clear whether they would appeal the verdicts that could serve as precedents for many other cases in Denmark.
Since the legal principles these lawsuits invoke have never been applied to climate change, the outcomes stand to set huge legal precedents.
That formula, giving each state control over the "health, welfare, safety and morals" of its residents is woven into countless legal precedents.
But this is when those considerations matter most, because they establish precedents that do not end with the crises that produce them.
There are few historical precedents to a criminal defendant with this amount of wealth dying before a trial with this many plaintiffs.
"It's hard to come up with similar precedents in the history of technology," says Dan Wang of Gavekal Dragonomics, a research firm.
But the other Allied powers saw these concessions as regrettable deviations from accepted law, not precedents to be followed in the future.
In addition, arbitrators aren't required to follow legal precedents and both sides have only a limited right to appeal in the process.
What the courts do in the coming days could also affect the balance of legal precedents and arguments available to both sides.
This remedy is at odds with a raft of Supreme Court precedents, including a 2018 decision authored by conservative Justice Samuel Alito.
We are talking about setting precedents for how a president can and should interact with his national security apparatus and intelligence community.
The founders of this country, conscious that they were creating a new form of government, leaned heavily on the available ancient precedents.
What resulted was 22 switches between d'Arnaud and Cabrera, and a box score that most like had few precedents in baseball history.
The rules for how a witness might be subpoenaed are murky, with gaps in the written procedures and only a few precedents.
It can set precedents for regulating other food products that might not be harmful or might even be beneficial to our health.
He later said he would do so even if the precedents had not themselves used an originalist approach to interpreting the Constitution.
" He continues, "Sometimes, originalists agree about the founders' intentions but disagree about overturning deeply rooted precedents that may clash with those intentions.
A handful of Supreme Court precedents give employers with religious objections to a civil rights law some ability to ignore that law.
Carlos Rivera, director of the Institute for Legal Defense, said it had asked the court to intervene based on two court precedents.
The question is whether the potential challenges for corporate borrowers in the years ahead can remain more isolated than in those precedents.
At the College Art Association conference, artists, curators, and writers will talk about contemporary forms of feminist resistance and their historical precedents.
" Yet Hawley vowed in his letter not confirm a nominee "whom I believe will expand substantive due process precedents like Roe v.
The idea was that, at his age, Roberts would have the unique opportunity to set legal precedents for almost 40 years or so.
The appeals courts can set binding precedents on a broad array of issues, including voting rights, gun rights and other divisive social issues.
With real-world precedents still too rare to form the basis of any reliable estimates, the industry has turned to using hypothetical scenarios.
Britain has no written constitution, so until a few years ago they had little to go on apart from some contradictory historical precedents.
Disagreements arise over the scope of precedents and interpretation of statutes, but no one (save possibly Clarence Thomas) gives no weight to precedent.
There are just two precedents for impeaching a president over obstruction of justice that he can rely on: Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton.
His ruling is based on precedents set out in Erskine May, the bible of parliamentary procedure, that date as far back as 1604.
There are few recent precedents for this type of trade, though government guaranteed securities were common in the wake of the financial crisis.
While these are theoretical scenarios, there are some precedents of spies and hackers targeting tech companies's departments tasked with assisting law enforcement agencies.
How Congress and American political institutions respond in the coming weeks to Mr Mueller's report will set precedents that could last for decades.
In reality, he would not be able to unilaterally change the laws because they are generally governed by individual states and court precedents.
STEVE WALSHFredericksburg, Virginia Trade wars in historyPresident Donald Trump's attack on Canada over trade has historical precedents ("Breaking a few eggs", June 21950th).
There is a semblance of plausibility to all this, but only because of precedents set in times when the internet looked very different.
And a lot of that is down to just how successfully it cribs from sci-fi precedents set by the world of cinema.
With an even number of justices, tie votes do not create "landmark" national precedents, but merely affirm lower court decisions in limited jurisdictions.
Even with the precedents and policies, participants expressed the view that they wanted more from their government to galvanize the population towards action.
The Roberts Court has already shown itself willing to overturn major precedents on issues like voting rights and organized labor in recent years.
Now if only the Europeans can overcome the stultifying precedents of the past, a new day and a host of opportunities will emerge.
Instead of an American-style constitution, the United Kingdom relies on an unwritten body of precedents and traditions to shape its political system.
"Under our precedents, that is all that is needed for citizens to have a right under the Second Amendment to keep such weapons."
The court overturned two precedents, dating back to 1967 and 1992, that imposed an artificial physical presence rule on state sales tax systems.
The Court said that she was not, and cited a series of precedents in which courts had upheld the constitutionality of school segregation.
"It will be a maintenance operation with no precedents, with enormous investment in public works," he said in an interview with Il Messaggero.
That is why senators should ask him his thoughts on certain bedrock immigration precedents that are hanging on by the thinnest of threads.
The Trump Administration already inoculated to such precedents, political and military, claims a strategy of unpredictability makes it a wily and cunning adversary.
The rules of parliament have proven flexible and speaker John Bercow has broken precedents to allow opponents of Brexit to have their say.
The court took a lot of liberties when interpreting legal precedents and jurisprudence to make sure its rulings always went the government's way.
They can solicit the help of the Senate and House legal counsels, who maintain the historical institutional knowledge of committee and chamber precedents.
There are so many precedents at work here, one of them obviously is don't fuck with the Standing Rock tribe and their allies.
Thomas also said demonstrably erroneous decisions should not be "elevated" over federal statutes, as well as the Constitution, merely because they are precedents.
The lower courts' finding makes it much harder for McKee to win a defamation claim against Cosby under the Supreme Court's current precedents.
If Kyrgios is suspended for committing a major offense, there could be plenty of room for legal maneuvering, particularly with so few precedents.
Precedents for this type of reverse-colonization-through-food exist: In the 21960s, curry surpassed fish and chips as Britain's favorite national dish.
Challengers would argue that the rules are rooted in statutory language, court precedents and in careful documentation of environmental, technological and market facts.
The court overruled two precedents, on procedures in property rights cases and whether states may be sued in the courts of other states.
Mr. Gamble argued that this violated the double jeopardy clause, but lower courts said the dual prosecutions were permissible under Supreme Court precedents.
Judge Koh declined to hold hearings on potential remedies, citing legal precedents that included rulings in Microsoft's antitrust battle with the Justice Department.
Other justices raised concerns that overruling the precedents could hamper subsequent federal civil rights prosecutions after acquittals or lenient sentences in state courts.
The court cited its actions during the Spanish flu epidemic of 29 and the yellow fever outbreaks of the 230th century as precedents.
All of those precedents could be in jeopardy, said Lee Epstein, a law professor and political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis.
Second, the legal record in that court district includes precedents favorable to companies, like making it easier to walk away from union contracts.
Under the Supreme Court's precedents, the narrowest opinion in the majority is considered to be the controlling one for lower courts to follow.
The Court's conservative wing suggested in 2015 that a raft of precedents permitting states to fight gerrymandering through ballot initiatives should be ignored.
There are precedents for these ready-mades, including in different ways, the work of Cady Noland, the young Jeff Koons and Chakaia Booker.
It has not been a winning battle, as the liberals made clear last term when they protested reversal of two decades-old precedents.
The umpiring done in courtrooms, however, is done by judges who follow First Amendment precedents established over the years by the Supreme Court.
That is a serious mistake, because these violations establish precedents that lie around like loaded guns capable of being aimed at other targets.
The Senate's 28503 standing rules, usually obscured by their more popular precedents or made irrelevant by routine waivers, are suddenly getting some love.
There are numerous precedents for creating a nutrition research institute at the N.I.H., which was created by an act of Congress in 1930.
But if they succeed, they could set critical precedents, lead to billion-dollar payouts, and radically reshape the effort to limit global warming.
" Solicitor General Noel J. Francisco defended the challenged precedents but only to a point, saying they should be sustained in their "core applications.
The post-Sessions DOJ has continued Sessions's interest in reviewing and overturning precedents in immigration courts, especially when it comes to asylum eligibility.
" Kalt agreed: "Based on internal precedents, I think that most any US attorney would stop short of seeking an indictment against the president.
" Kalt agrees: "Based on internal precedents, I think that most any US attorney would stop short of seeking an indictment against the president.
Even when courts do not explicitly cite this particular passage in upholding gun laws, they often rely on other precedents that do so.
When fan-fic readers and writers make moral arguments about disallowing depictions of sex acts, they're talking about obscenity and all its legal precedents.
Justice Elena Kagan She has tried to underscore the importance of preserving past cases and counter the current majority's interest in reversing certain precedents.
Strangio said that while the two cases set no legal precedents, Manning and Quine's victories could help lawyers argue similar cases in the future.
This conversation, moderated by Hyperallergic Editor-in-Chief Hrag Vartanian, will take up the query, looking at historical precedents and context along the way.
Appearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee May 22, 9th Circuit nominee Daniel Bress called Brown one of the most "treasured" of Supreme Court precedents.
Considering these precedents, privacy and security experts agree that Apple's "hacking department" would be an "attractive" and "irresistible" target for foreign spies and hackers.
Thursday's ruling isn't likely to lead to more rape prosecutions for this behavior in other countries or change precedents around the world, Chalmers said.
She retired from the bench in 2006 and was ultimately replaced by Justice Samuel Alito, who could vote to chip away at those precedents.
Then, with partial support from Roberts, Kagan drew a bare majority to rebuff much of a challenge to two key precedents shielding agency authority.
Principled interpreters of the Constitution do not advocate overturning precedents that protect citizens from government abuse, which was the primary purpose of the Constitution.
But he stated that under the Court's precedents, any such unenumerated right had to be rooted in the traditions in conscience of our people.
"We have to remember precedents we set and what it does to civil liberties and what it does to protect personal privacy," Ryan said.
The autonomous vehicle is still in the very early stages of development, but the way we decide to build its AI will set precedents.
The series recalls historical precedents set by Thoreau, Gandhi, King, Arendt, and others while also considering the pamphlet's important role in American revolutionary history.
The court's post-Buckley precedents conclude that "independent expenditures do not lead to, or create the appearance of, quid pro quo corruption," Kennedy wrote.
So, should President Trump rely on these and other precedents and prepare to sacrifice some of our values on the altar of "national security"?
Instead, he anchored the decision in the court's immigration and national-security precedents, which give extraordinary deference to the judgment of executive branch officials.
Justice Antonin Scalia's death the following spring led to a 4-4 split that set no national precedents on whether Abood remained good law.
But he cited legal precedents, going back almost 90 years, ruling that even the possibility of foul play requires that the election be scrapped.
"The accused is not above the law and his prosecution and this trial should serve as precedents," Tommy Thomas said in an opening statement.
His concurring opinions and dissents have long offered an unorthodox view of the court's precedents and practices that set him apart from his colleagues.
The new members are experts in the law who respect labor precedents and seek to strike a balance in deciding workplace disputes and policies.
But the case here is clear, and it's dire, and it has dangerous historical precedents that we would be foolish and irresponsible to ignore.
Those precedents led the justices to narrowly uphold Trump's travel ban last June, effectively sanctifying the most bigoted presidential act in modern American history.
These SOGI laws and court precedents have prevented citizens' right to run their local schools, charities and businesses in ways consistent with traditional values.
President Donald Trump is an enthusiastic proponent of hunting down journalists' sources and silencing whistleblowers, building on precedents set by his predecessor Barack Obama.
The new median justice will be Chief Justice John Roberts, a mostly reliable conservative who has proven remarkably willing to overturn decades-old precedents.
Q. You argue that for the Chinese Communist Party to make it past 2030 in its present form would break a lot of precedents.
In the sheer unlikely speed of his rise — and then of his catastrophic fall — Hitler was a phenomenon with few precedents in world history.
The progressive precedents of the Warren Court are being systematically overturned and the business-oriented philosophy has been firmly cemented in the Roberts Court.
If Mr. Kavanaugh goes through, he would fundamentally alter the balance of the United States' highest court and put dozens of precedents at risk.
That explosion occurred during the 22012s but had deep precedents, even before Woese's work opened the door to appreciating its unimaginable prevalence and significance.
The Supreme Court's precedents bar the execution of people who lack a "rational understanding" of the reason they are to be put to death.
But he made up for his silence with three opinions in eight days that took issue with some of the court's most prominent precedents.
He tries to unearth the original meaning of the Constitution, and he has no use for precedents that have veered from that original understanding.
Writing for the majority, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. said there was no good reason to overrule 170 years of precedents allowing separate prosecutions.
Contemporary art spaces here are sometimes awkward about acknowledging the historical precedents that created their huge, airy exhibition halls, conveniently located in city centers.
Chief Justice Roberts was in the majority in Monday's decision, and he has voted to overrule important precedents on campaign finance and public unions.
The top court cited its actions during the Spanish flu epidemic of 193 and the yellow fever outbreaks of the 18th century as precedents.
The court's statement announcing the delay cited historical precedents for the action, but had to reach back more than a century to find them.
" Although "no party in this case has asked us to reconsider these precedents," he concluded, "at some point, it behooves us to do so.
"The court has occasionally said that it is more inclined to take a fresh look at precedents that have sparked criticism," Professor Kozel said.
Writing for the majority, Justice Neil M. Gorsuch said the court's conclusion was dictated by a federal law favoring arbitration and the court's precedents.
Keith cites precedents for his thinking: a company that scatters cremation ashes from a high-altitude balloon, and jet engines, whose exhaust contains sulfates.
Priebus was constantly going on TV saying he was certain Trump would win, even though he could read polls and precedents like everyone else.
Benjamin Wittes, of Lawfare, predicted that the Supreme Court would reject Barr's extreme positions, creating precedents that ultimately reduce the power of the Presidency.
The Second Circuit, which heard Zarda's case, also had precedents on the books which held that Title 7 did not apply to LGBT workers.
The administration has mostly emphasized claims that Mr. Suleimani posed an "imminent threat" to American lives, hinting at legal precedents set by past presidents.
But Judge Mizdol cited various precedents that indicated that Mr. Brennan did not have the legal right to file such motions in the case.
The upper chamber should expeditiously process Puhl because it has a constitutional duty, and multiple precedents, regarding Bush appointees his last two years, apply.
Mexican ex-votos, book illustrations and folk tales are possible sources, but whatever her precedents, Ms. Lundqvist grinds them finely and mixes them well.
There are precedents for both Congress and the executive branch using reciprocity to reduce the barriers to international trade in drugs and medical devices.
The court's rulings in the financial records cases could set precedents consequential not only for Trump but for other presidents for decades to come.
A Congress that has seen lawmaking grind to historic lows in recent years is suddenly ready to swiftly act and break long-time precedents.
"The court unanimously upheld longstanding precedents recognizing that all states retain certain core aspects of sovereignty, including sovereign immunity from copyright lawsuits," Stein said.
Justice Stephen Breyer, joined by fellow liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg, agreed with the ruling but only because he said the court's precedents dictated it.
There is a chance that Roberts's alleged deference to settled precedents could save Roe, but Matthews says we have good reason to be skeptical.
Justice Elena Kagan, perhaps thinking of other decisions that may be at risk as well, said the court should not lightly overrule its precedents.
Second, the past precedents of the Saturday Night Massacre and the Comey firing both ended up failing to squelch the respective investigations at play.
It does not just sit comfortably on its precedents, but establishes a dialog with each previous generation and sets the terms of agreement and disagreement.
Its works of documentation nudge us toward a recognition of current border policies not as an aberration, but as the continuation of long-established precedents.
Wade, including Georgia's heartbeat bill, could use this vague language to escape any claims that they go against current precedents provided by the Supreme Court.
"African states don't want to set precedents about interference in domestic affairs," said Stephanie Wolters, an analyst at the Institute of Strategic Studies in Pretoria.
Recent precedents being what they are, it seems that companies have gotten into the habit of taking their sweet time with these sorts of disclosures.
Clinton's use of a private email account for official communications was in line with precedents set by Bush administration officials but violated Obama administration directives.
Roberts has also voted to reverse four-decade-old precedents that have been part of the nation's legal fabric nearly as long as Roe v.
The big picture for the media: How Facebook handles its latest video fiasco could set a lot of precedents for everyone in the digital ecosystem.
But the Hawaii and Maryland restraining orders were grounded in Lemon v Kurtzman and McCreary v ACLU, Supreme Court precedents the scholars acknowledge "remain controversial".
Judge Howell agreed with the Democrats, calling the Republican arguments "cherry-picked and incomplete" and lacking support from the Constitution, House rules or court precedents.
This is a significant development because we're already establishing precedents that could pave a path towards granting human-equivalent rights to AI in the future.
A federal judge filed a preliminary injunction against the law in June, suspending it from going into effect, because it may violate Supreme Court precedents.
The government would want to erase precedents that constrain its authority while the challengers would want to keep them in place for the same reasons.
The justices imposed new limits on the legal doctrine, which is called "Auer deference," that was rooted in Supreme Court precedents dating back to 1945.
Of course, things get more complicated when you try to include protocols like SMS, but there are a couple of clear precedents Facebook could follow.
There are other, even more brutal, historical precedents for presidential candidates pandering to racial fears and winning elections by appealing to our worst racial impulses.
Since the policy was written in 2009, legal advocates argue, several court cases have set new precedents that could make some CBP electronic searches illegal.
If complicated Senate precedents and procedure make repealing the entire healthcare law difficult, then lawmakers should aim to repeal what's leftover through other legislative efforts.
Electronic privacy: The Supreme Court's precedents about technology and privacy are, for the most part, decades old and tied to outdated tools like landline phones.
No, a negotiated start to World War Three isn't likely, but it's not impossible; it really could happen—there are at least two important precedents.
But with their heads deep in data and court rulings that set fine precedents, the scientists of antitrust are able to sidestep some troubling questions.
Albeit early in his run as PM, Trudeau has already set new precedents with his heartwarming efforts to make Canada a safer place for all.
In a 2-1 decision, the Fifth Circuit panel sided with the government based on existing precedents on searching closed containers during a consensual search.
" Republicans, Trump said, "dramatically outperformed historical precedents," despite what he called a "very dramatic fundraising disadvantage" and "very hostile media coverage, to put it mildly.
But for unusual, emerging or extreme risks—such as natural catastrophes, cyber-threats or terrorism—the lack of precedents means such methods can be inadequate.
The N.R.A. says 30 states have laws or court precedents stating people have no duty to retreat from a threat anywhere they are lawfully present.
Ominously, the current White House is establishing methods and precedents of how a future president can evade constitutional controls in pursuit of a socialist utopia.
Rather, if we allow authorities to exploit the civil rights of the most vulnerable, those violations serve as precedents to strip the rights from others.
Second, the past precedents of the Saturday Night Massacre and the James Comey firing both ended up failing to squelch the respective investigations at play.
Yet the socialist believers will not relinquish ideas that have been disproved repeatedly by historical precedents, and no amount of reality can shake their convictions.
Strikingly, even the four dissenters acknowledged that the physical presence rule was "wrongly decided" and merely argued that the court should adhere to prior precedents.
Legal experts say there are no court precedents to say whether Siemens could be held responsible if a third party brought the turbines to Crimea.
Between the precedents set by Pruitt and the urgent business on his desk, Wheeler has the opportunity to show the world what his intentions are.
Ross' job was to guide the development team on creating a cult and situation that was fictional but steeped in enough precedents to feel scary.
Wade and other key precedents that define modern constitutional doctrine, the result would be a nationwide convulsion from which the high court might never recover.
"There are almost 50 years of precedents on how this should work," U.S. Justice Department lawyer Elaine Goldenberg, arguing the SEC's case, started to reply.
The bottom line: These rulings suggest the court will not hesitate to adapt or discard precedents when it believes technological change has eroded their relevance.
But at this point, it is worth looking at the precedents for how things could get out of hand for Mr. Trump and his party.
He said it would be more honest to overrule precedents allowing limits on the president's power to fire people than to water down the standard.
In an industry as notoriously hierarchical and slow to evolve as publishing is, that's a risky decision, with few if any precedents to guide protesters.
The push for data transparency rather than data restriction was in keeping with American legal precedents and political traditions that long predated the computer age.
Litigation over whether those subpoenas were legitimate will turn on precedents that require both branches to make good-faith efforts to accommodate each other's needs.
In doing so, conservative Christian legal organizations were formed, and pro-life groups marshaled liberal free speech precedents established by antiwar and anti-government protesters.
The Supreme Court has overruled racist precedents that allowed for segregated accommodations for blacks and whites and permitted the internment of Japanese-Americans during wartime.
Stretching the rules or chipping away at norms and precedents only encourages opponents to do the same — and risks a wider degradation of constitutional practice.
"Clearly, there are precedents for troops to learn food procurement survival skills without having to use live animals in abhorrent training drills," the letter reads.
There are very few precedents for impeachment, and the factual merits of the case against the president could be just as important as the politics.
Historical precedents and the Senate's rules suggest that the chief justice's role is largely ceremonial, as his rulings can be overturned by a majority vote.
The judge's decision could set precedents that send shockwaves through the on-demand economy, which is capturing an increasingly larger share of the American economy.
In a democracy that relies heavily on precedents set by the Supreme Court, such conflicting opinions would undermine stability and integrity in the judicial process.
The N.L.R.B. has generally used its rule-making authority to clarify existing precedents and has reserved its more sweeping judgments for decisions adjudicating individual cases.
The current rally has lasted so long and has gone so far that precedents from past markets may not be very helpful in understanding it.
But their future presence and positive impact will come into question if tax precedents can be suddenly torn up and tossed aside by the government.
Moreover, there are many precedents for state visits to take place to our country which do not include an address to both Houses of Parliament.
There are laws that take a head-on approach targeting Roe, and others that seek to chip away at the court's precedents on abortion rights.
Casey, which states laws that place an undue burden on women seeking abortions are unconstitutional, or whether they want to revisit those decades-old precedents.
And the court could have limited the scope of those precedents rather than give immigration policy near-total exemption from normal constraints on religious discrimination.
There are historical precedents dating back to 1879 for and against allowing the presiding officer of the Senate to count nonvoting members toward a quorum.
"Such prolonged sluggish growth in trade volumes relative to economic activity has few historical precedents during the past five decades," according to the International Monetary Fund.
Despite the CMAs' clear precedents, people were still pissed: Here's a question: Where is this imaginary threshold that determines who or what qualifies as country music?
ALLYSIA FINLEY, EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBER: It overturned two precedents, 1967, 295, and limiting states from collecting sales tax from remote retailers, those outside of their borders.
He also said he could not "countenance" AIG's effort to seek a declaratory judgment, which he called an effort to benefit from "more favorable" legal precedents.
The precedents that lie behind it belong to an age when software was a business novelty—and when computers dealt mostly with abstract things like spreadsheets.
They can either answer it or refuse, which many have done, but past nominees have answered it and then declined to answer questions about other precedents.
In the following years, a number of lawsuits, mostly brought forth by black woman plaintiffs, set winning precedents for the use of those regulations in court.
His female figures tend to be derivative, borrowing heavily from such precedents as Edouard Manet's "Olympia" (1863) and Salvador Dali's surreal appropriations of the classical nude.
Transgender individuals have "been subjected to unique disabilities on the basis of stereotyped characteristics not truly indicative of their abilities", she wrote, citing Supreme Court precedents.
Why it matters: Some of these actions have led to historic legal cases or set new precedents that could create stronger protections in the long term.
Critics say China&aposs incremental push to leverage its economic power to forge new international norms — in this case regarding Taiwan&aposs status — creates worrying precedents.
He's not some right-wing extremist who would run wild – like the proverbial bull in the china shop – overturning legal precedents, despite what the Democrats claim.
Why would Rosenstein seemingly set precedents that undermine the core principles of the Justice Department, an institution that he's devoted nearly his entire career to serving?
It would not eliminate the precedents set by dozens of federal courts over the last two decades affirming the full rights and identities of transgender people.
It's about being aware of historical precedents, and not being duped by PR people telling you this is a real democracy, and that you have rights.
The IRS might investigate whether the new corporation pays Smith a reasonable fee for his services, which some tax-law precedents suggest it is obliged to.
Major departures from the precedents of disclosure and vetting are just part of the story as to why the institutions of government are already under duress.
The company says 82% of its proposals have existing precedents around the world, either fully or partially implemented - although not necessarily at the scale Sidewalk envisions.
Previous Supreme Court precedents establishing a degree of deference to the executive branch in matters of military and national security were also cited by the administration.
Baude noted in his 2017 article that the court is usually reluctant to overturn its own precedents when they interpret federal statutes instead of the Constitution.
One of the precedents the Court quoted prominently in support of its decision was a case it had decided thirty-one years earlier—Plessy v. Ferguson.
Scalia had a theory that some precedents, even if wrong in his view, were so thoroughly a part of our law that justices shouldn't overturn them.
I've written in the past about why the state's claim to standing is frivolous and contrary to the Supreme Court's modern precedents on federal court jurisdiction.
Tactics used to squelch pornographers set precedents that can enable overzealous censors to go after artists, educators, libraries, and anyone else they consider inflammatory or obscene.
Because the technology and growth of short-term rentals is so new, few if any legal challenges have made it through the process to set precedents.
Paul Simon once said that music should continue "right on up until you die," a belief with precedents that are as literal as they are ancient.
It is a dubious prediction, given that both Roberts and Gorsuch showed themselves to be quite willing, just last month, to overturn decades-old legal precedents.
A majoritarian government backed by a huge mandate is not going to let judicial or bureaucratic precedents stand in the way of carrying out its agenda.
Precedents don't easily come to mind in front of Pelton's levitating motifs, subtle colors, effusions of light and the clear transparent space within which everything unfolds.
"Justice Thomas, more than any other justice, is willing to revisit and reverse old precedents that are inconsistent with the Constitution's original meaning," Professor Blackman said.
This was a hard road to hoe for the Department of Justice, and it was a case worth bringing, but unfortunately the precedents just weren't there.
His message was clear: He sees himself as a trailblazer who drew deep criticism but established legal precedents that set a course for those who followed.
" Jimmy Fallon said the meeting had historical precedents, such as "when Abraham Lincoln met with his generals and said, 'Why aren't my speeches getting more likes?
"Recent departures and appointments, coupled with an increasing skepticism of established precedents, suggests the Supreme Court is more amenable than ever to overruling Roe," she said.
Conservatives hold the majority 5-4, but the left has worked to minimize the rollback of liberal precedents from earlier decades, including to preserve abortion rights.
And even before the 1980s, it made little sense for federal courts to publish opinions in those civil cases where they must follow state judicial precedents.
Sometimes, however, constraints on a branch's power come from norms and precedents — the way previous presidents, justices and members of Congress have carried out their responsibilities.
The current five-member bloc has already started overturning decades-old precedents and remaking the law in ways that align remarkably well with conservative policy preferences.
But now, under President Xi Jinping, the C.C.P. is actively working to erase the cultural and political diversity that is the legacy of its imperial precedents.
Over eight pages, Mr. Cipollone listed various ways House Democrats have diverged from precedents set during impeachment inquiries against Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Bill Clinton.
They recently compiled a survey of early American and English writings and precedents about bribery, as well as discussion in more contemporary scholarly works on impeachment.
For his part, Dreeben pointed to a series of court decisions and urged the appeals panel to "take heed of precedents" and fully uphold Mueller's powers.
The key is to realize that every decision you face has a precedent you can learn from, and analyzing those precedents will lead to better outcomes.
But there are few precedents for the annulment of electoral results in Turkey, a trend most analysts do not expect to be suddenly bucked this week.
The Constitution lays out only the barest facts about impeachment, and traditionally the House has proceeded based on a mix of its own rules and precedents.
But that would not make his killing just, moral or wise, Ms. Hennessey stressed, only that it would fall within legal precedents set by past administrations.
But the rules for how a witness might be subpoenaed are murky, with gaps in the written procedures and only a few precedents to look to.
We'll need robust strategies that ensure the U.S. is positioned to pioneer these new technologies, reaping their profound benefits while establishing precedents for their responsible use.
Artificial intelligence does pose certain perils, but it also holds tremendous promise — that is, if our leaders act quickly and practically to set the right precedents.
On paper, Ms. Mutu is many things, including a globalized Surrealist who builds on precedents, like those made by Hannah Höch, Hans Bellmer and Romare Bearden.
"  During debate on Schumer's resolution, no one claimed it had any legal or binding authority, and Schumer conceded that his initiative was "one with few precedents.
This doubling added layers of meaning, and the cross-gender casting, as in "Curlew" and its Noh precedents, supplied a distancing that refined and distilled emotion.
As Rick Hasen explains in Slate, doing this would violate legal precedents, as it would be effectively changing the rules under which the election took place.
"I write to explain why, in an appropriate case, we should reconsider the precedents that require courts to ask it in the first place," he wrote.
Bartik said that he doubted that any city would go too far in giving Amazon incentives, but noted that deals like Foxconn had been setting bad precedents.
The result has been a proliferation of contentious legal precedents, extending the authority of the president, which in unscrupulous hands could amount to a toolkit for tyranny.
In saying this I am not claiming (or denying) that their art is as important as these sources; rather, I am considering how they respond to precedents.
The case was hard because there are few precedents: only since the mid-20th century has it been possible to keep comatose people alive for many years.
Lamps Plus and business groups such as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce said that the lower court ruling flouted federal law and Supreme Court precedents favoring arbitration.
In its 29-page ruling, drafted in less than 48 hours, the Ninth Circuit panel turned to a host of Supreme Court precedents to reject this proposition.
So I do think that people running these companies have an obligation to try to push back on that and fight establishing precedents which will be harmful.
The New Jersey Supreme Court's ruling prohibiting state funding for the repair of religious buildings lies in "serious tension with this court's religious equality precedents", he wrote.
But according to the progress report, many participants have frowned on the idea of precedents at all: Overall, feedback generally supported some sort of precedent-setting arrangement.
The agency determined that regulators must figure out how to certify a car that completely abandons all precedents set by the current federal motor vehicle safety standards.
The court's decision averts that, and until Merrick Garland, or someone else, is confirmed, it's likely the court will punt more cases to avoid setting awkward precedents.
Because few precedents existed, and because of a fear that ICANN, which is based in Los Angeles, would lack legitimacy, America kept it on a long leash.
But doing so requires overturning laws and precedents blatantly inconsistent with the Constitution, to reinstate those rights and protections that have been eroded since it was written.
"Simply put: Kushner's role and relationship with the president—neither chief of staff nor regular political adviser—come with no precedents," The Washington Post reported on Monday.
But Mr. Goldsmith said Captain Smith faced many other hurdles, including precedents that suggest that when Congress appropriates money for a conflict it has implicitly authorized it.
The precedents of once-rare, now-routine procedures such as laser eye and cosmetic surgery suggest that invasiveness alone need not stop brain implants from catching on.
But because the nation's libel laws are written at the state level and shaped by Supreme Court precedents, the president has virtually no power to change them.
Under those precedents, a state could not require sellers without a physical presence in the state to collect and remit tax on sales to the state's residents.
In fact, we believe that a strong case can be made that it would have precedents in the foreign-policy and constitutional history of the United States.
The first Congress did tackle difficult issues and set important precedents, yet few historians, and fewer contemporaries, would be as effusive about this gathering as Bordewich is.
Some major business priorities now at risk are Supreme Court precedents restricting class actions, limiting punitive damages and requiring parties to go to arbitration rather than court.
" However, Justice Alito continued, "the argument that a plaintiff's own interpretation of his or her religion must yield to the government's interpretation is foreclosed by our precedents.
So far, apparently no vigilante hacker has tried to fight the criminals who control Mirai, but given the historical precedents, that doesn't mean no one will try.
"If we force the market open, then Amazon can basically walk into it, and Express Scripts will have some very problematic precedents to deal with," Schwartz said.
International actors should also advocate policy solutions that draw on precedents such as those from Indonesia and Colombia, whose governments signed peace deals ending decades-old insurgencies.
First of all, they pioneered the surprise album drop with 2007's independently-released In Rainbows, setting industry precedents for everyone from Beyonce to Chance the Rapper.
"Precedents have shown that the state was unwilling to compensate victims, even when the judges have ordered it," said Chiara Gabriele, a legal adviser for the group.
Replacing him with a committed conservative, who could potentially serve for decades, will fundamentally alter the balance of the court and put dozens of precedents at risk.
Rulings from trial judges do not set binding precedents, however, and Judge McFadden's ruling did not concern subpoenas issued by the House seeking information from the administration.
The relevant directive will not apply to the UK, as we leave the EU, and relying solely on precedents will hurt consumers and businesses on both sides.
Among the precedents cited for the "need not facilitate" rule are those holding that the government need not pay for abortions for women who can't afford one.
Your Honor, you have the ability to make that new world possible by sending a resounding message of new precedents and accountability by valuing our individual lives.
Between the lines: House and Senate rules regarding impeachment are mostly based on the precedents set by past impeachment proceedings — of which there have only been three.
States would be newly empowered to regulate conduct that occurred entirely outside their borders — contrary to the principles of federalism that animate this court's personal jurisdiction precedents.
If you're wondering why McConnell keeps emphasizing the importance of following precedents from Bill Clinton's trial in 1999, it's because that framing appeals to these key senators.
Through legislative and administrative developments, as well as through judicial reinterpretations of constitutions, statutes or precedents, law has the power to articulate the course for social transformation.
"The precedents shape the text, rather than the other way around," the University of Chicago law professor David Strauss wrote in The Harvard Law Review in 2015.
How the chief justice approaches the Louisiana case could illuminate his commitment to respecting precedents, said Pratik A. Shah, a lawyer with Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld.
At the same time, they have argued that the party is pursuing a fake impeachment that is shredding solemn constitutional precedents solely to satisfy its left wing.
"Faithfully applying this Court's precedents addressing Congressional subpoenas, two levels of the federal judiciary have upheld that subpoena as valid and enforceable," Letter wrote in Thursday's filing.
But the legal perils of using march-in rights are evident, given the precedents set by prior administrations and the peculiarities of the language of Bayh-Dole.
The search for instructive precedents quickly leads to a company called Sidecar, which started in 2011, in San Francisco, as one of the first ride-sharing businesses.
Simply by pruning back past precedents, the new Roberts Court can remake the law in areas like reproductive rights, public funding of religious education and police searches.
A political fight began to brew in Washington between conservatives determined to confirm a nominee quickly and activists vowing to fight to preserve the court's liberal precedents.
Why not offer a critical consideration of Ms. Trump and the political uses, as well as the historical precedents, of her carefully cultivated image of white womanhood?
The tone in the email from 2003 contrasted with his responses to questions on Wednesday when he stressed how difficult it is to overturn precedents like Roe.
And with abortion-rights precedents that have existed for decades suddenly at stake, all eyes will be on two swing blocs: moderate Republicans and red-state Democrats.
Pointing to several precedents barring the government from targeting people by religion, Justice Sotomayor criticised the court for "fail[ing] to safeguard" America's "fundamental principle" of religious liberty.
As is tradition with Supreme Court nominees, Gorsuch declined to give direct answers, saying it would be "inappropriate" to suggest how he would rule on already established precedents.
"We have seen growing interest in our country's founding and other topics related to the government and the precedents that George Washington set," Aloisi said in an email.
But while the presidency is imperial, we have seen four major precedents that Trump is setting into place that could have enormous long-term consequences on the institution.
Yet suddenly, Democrats and other supporters of abortion are interested in upholding legal precedents because a strict adherence to stare decisis can be used to safeguard Roe v.
Hughes and others have cited historical precedents such as the government's breakup of Standard Oil and AT&T as a justification for stricter antitrust regulation against tech giants.
But Mr Mishra shows how violence, nihilism and hatred of the "other" have ample precedents among Western liberalism's 19th- and 20th-century opponents, whether revolutionaries, anarchists or artists.
Lawyers are advising companies to exercise extreme caution until prosecutors set a few precedents, says an executive in charge of government and press relations at a large conglomerate.
Key Supreme Court precedents on abortion rights, economic regulation, and many other issues hang in the balance — as does the Court's very legitimacy after this intensely controversial process.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew called on the European Union to reconsider tax probes targeting U.S. companies on Thursday, arguing that such moves represented disturbing precedents.
It's worth noting that senators play an integral role in determining who sits on the courts, though they would not be making decisions about various legal precedents themselves.
Be smart: While many legal precedents have been set around these issues at the local level, this lawsuit is unique in targeting a sitting president and his staff.
"He could've nuanced it," Forbes said, citing the 1960 and 2000 elections, voter ID issues, and the IRS's alleged voter suppression as precedents for concern regarding fraudulent elections.
"Maybe for two diseases, this could be the case, as there are precedents, but usually, we would try to tailor-make a drug for each disease," Bilbe said.
Second, although the Supreme Court can overturn precedents, and did so this month, when it overturned a ruling from 1977 on labour union fees, it prefers not to.
There was no precedent for denying Garland a hearing, but McConnell blows past precedents and norms almost as easily as Trump does; he's just less bellicose about it.
Given the parallels between the current US administration and totalitarian regimes of the past, the museum seems like an ideal place to examine troubling and instructive historical precedents.
Although Sanders' measure will certainly fail in the Republican-controlled Senate, Zelizer noted that historical precedents could someday work in favor of a single-payer health care system.
To be sure, any attempt to predict how the federal courts will rule in a pardon case is fraught with uncertainty, given the limited precedents in the area.
But it is open to question whether a court would accept many of the positions in the letter, which is characterized more by advocacy than demonstrated legal precedents.
The Vietnam War-era precedents should encourage today's judges to take Captain Smith's case seriously — especially since the argument on the merits is much stronger this time around.
A federal appeals court on Thursday adopted a less deferential standard of review when considering appeals of benefits denials under employee benefit plans, overruling one of its precedents.
In two separate rulings, he signed on to his colleagues' flexible approach to stare decisis to overturn major precedents on state sovereign immunity and on the Takings Clause.
Though rumors have circulated about the health of past candidates, there are few precedents for a candidate to have a serious health episode during the general election campaign.
Merkel's conservatives suffered punishing losses in this month's national election, forcing them to patch together a heterogeneous three-way coalition with few precedents in Germany's post-war history.
He insists, for example, that judges have no moral or political obligation to adhere to the text of the Constitution, or to follow precedents set by prior cases.
"This has been a year in which assumptions have been challenged, stereotypes have been shattered, and precedents have been broken," executive producer Kathy Connell said in a statement.
But one thing we can no longer stand for is litigation for litigation's sake that will only set dangerous precedents that neither mom nor dad could ever approve.
Justice Samuel Alito joined only one of Thomas's dissents—in Garza, the Sixth Amendment case—and explicitly refused to join the portion disavowing the 1960s precedents under fire.
The government, in effect, required consumers to buy their products and provided subsidies to help defray the cost, under an arrangement that had few precedents in other industries.
During their confirmation hearings, both Gorsuch and Kavanaugh made the customary noises about respecting the Court's precedents, including Roe, but one group in particular saw through the platitudes.
Wade, the 1973 milestone that gave women a constitutional right to abortion, will survive in upcoming years but that the current conservative-dominated court might topple other precedents.
During a confirmation hearing for her appeals court position last year, she said she would "have no interest in" challenging the Supreme Court precedents for Roe v. Wade.
The idea that King Salman would replace his son, also known as M.B.S., with a less boisterous and erratic crown prince might appear unrealistic — but it has precedents.
His precedents include the proto-Pop paintings of Gerald Murphy; Paul Outerbridge's advertising photography; and Picabia's mechanical portraits which Mr. Winkfield might be said to have fleshed out.
The artist may be using a theme of pious suffering as his source, but his treatment is in no way tied to the usual connotations or historical precedents.
If the court doesn't follow decades of its own precedents on the constitutional right to abortion, the procedure will be available only in theory for women in Louisiana.
These Conservative Christian groups are not just using these precedents when it serves them: They have also been supporting free speech cases when abortion is not directly involved.
Through her research, Mosconi bore deeply into that prevailing argument, all the while unearthing new neurological findings—as well as historical precedents—that render the idea completely false.
We have witnessed epidemics and pandemics throughout history, and there are some legal precedents regarding the power of government to prevent the spread of the potentially deadly virus.
His comments were a reminder that, as Senator Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, has often pointed out, precedents are only settled law until the Supreme Court unsettles them.
" The Third Circuit's own precedents, the court said, "determined such a person has no expectation of privacy and therefore no standing to challenge a search of the vehicle.
It also means that the government can obtain very revealing data on a broad swath of people without going through the courts or relying on questionable legal precedents.
Stalemate might be the best outcome available if the public will support the open-ended strategy crafted here that merely builds on existing precedents that were themselves unsuccessful.
"Mar-a-Lago represents a commercialization of the presidency that has few if any precedents in American history," said Jon Meacham, a presidential historian and Andrew Jackson biographer.
From transitioning to a deep mid-summer chocolate brown to experimenting with an autumnal red in February, Roberts is always setting hair color precedents and defying seasonal expectations.
The problem is, climate change isn't much like same-sex marriage, or cigarettes, or the spread of Protestantism, or any of the historical precedents cited in the paper.
Representatives Jerrold Nadler of New York and Zoe Lofgren of California, both veterans of the Clinton impeachment, drew on historic precedents from the proceedings against him and Johnson.
Like Duchamp's bottle rack or urinal, Mr. Buren's fabric was mass-produced and presented unaltered; unlike those precedents, it also mutated wildly, adapting to situations indoors and out.
At stake is billions of dollars in liabilities for fossil fuel companies and legal precedents that could burst the dam and pave the way for even more lawsuits.
Such an intervention into a sophisticated legal system inherited from the British and based on hundred of years of legal precedents has alarmed many people in Hong Kong.
In short, whether you prefer that the Constitution be interpreted based on modern precedents, or based on original meaning, Congress has the discretion to pass the Reciprocity Act.
There are historical precedents for how a Convention challenge could still be mounted—the 1940 Republicans offer one—but the more recent examples are not encouraging for insurgents.
But there's a bevy of precedents, many of them older than the United States itself, establishing that courts typically should not conclude that one statute implicitly repeals another.
"If presidents can be impeached for partisan policy differences based on presumptions and feelings, not actual evidence, Democrats have profoundly undermined the precedents of this institution," said Rep.
But Obama at least persuaded Democrats and the media to go along with his caesarism, and he established precedents that a President Hillary Clinton would have undoubtedly embraced.
"The accused is not above the law, and his prosecution and this trial should serve as precedents for all future holders of this august office," Mr. Thomas said.

No results under this filter, show 957 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.