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118 Sentences With "presumptively"

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

Mike Pompeo, presumptively the next director of the CIA chief.
The criminal justice system is presumptively open to public view.
Presumptively, resisting an information request is not evidence of obstruction.
"All content is presumptively protected by the First Amendment," Goldman says.
"Such conduct as this is presumptively unreasonable absent a warrant," she said.
I don't think it should be presumptively declared by a U.S. presidential candidate.
State Attorney General Josh Hawley, presumptively, but uh, we'll get back to that.
His long-awaited LP, still presumptively titled Boys Don't Cry, is nowhere to be seen.
The Trump administration ended a policy to stop presumptively releasing pregnant migrants in March 2018.
"I don't think any judge is presumptively hostile to the idea of disclosure," Breyer said.
Such recordings without consent would be presumptively unethical and clearly reckless, but this is Cohen.
Once the protocol for presumptively privileged material is triggered, the majority said, lawyers don't have discretion.
The Iowa Electronic Markets, where traders invest in the outcome, show the Democratic nominee — presumptively, Mrs.
Clinton — even more likely to win the popular vote than the Republican nominee — presumptively, Mr. Trump.
Not surprisingly then, federal law and courts alike presumptively and openly favor the enforcement of arbitration agreements.
Traditional adtech companies are presumptively in the best position to satisfy brand demands for better mobile ads.
From the start, something violent and presumptively male has been threatening the complacent skin of the story.
The result is that some acts of violence are now more likely to be presumptively described as terrorism.
The Florida Department of Health said Friday night that six Florida residents have tested presumptively positive for coronavirus.  .
After all, the motivation behind EO 13771 is presumptively that we can't trust bureaucrats … they're going to game this!
Casting people of color as whites does not presumptively do away with our understandings about the meanings of race.
And in 2008, the Supreme Court held that "longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons" are presumptively lawful.
More broadly, the opinion said lawyers don't have discretion to consider whether the facts strip privilege from presumptively privileged documents.
Under the circumstances, they should demand more concrete proof of plausible claims, and present unproven claims as presumptively in doubt.
The administration should also stop treating the drone operations carried out by the C.I.A. as presumptively classified, and therefore secret.
But it also said that because the regulation targets speech based on its particular content, the law was presumptively unconstitutional.
To act pragmatically upon this core understanding, he must first range far beyond his presumptively "realistic" orientations to world politics.
Rotondo claimed that the bank presumptively considered biological mothers as primary caregivers, and gave them 16 weeks of paid parental leave.
" But Chaffetz wrote, "discussions with foreign leaders regarding international missile tests, and documents used to support those discussions, are presumptively sensitive.
"Discussions with foreign leaders regarding international missile tests, and documents used to support those discussions, are presumptively sensitive," the letter reads.
On Tuesday, Hillary Clinton became the first woman to (presumptively) win a major party's nomination for president of the United States.
And if so, what might be their path into a society that presumptively belongs to those who bought their way in?
During President Barack Obama's administration, ICE in 2016 announced that pregnant women not subject to mandatory detention should be presumptively released.
Ron DeSantis announced two 'presumptively positive' cases of the coronavirus, in Manatee and Hillsborough counties, and declared a public health emergency.
Yet, since the Carter administration, the service has interpreted the act to presumptively require treating all threatened species like endangered ones.
Although the FBI has a broad counterintelligence mandate, hate groups enjoy constitutional protections that make them presumptively off-limits for counterintelligence investigations.
Many neutral N.B.A. fans have awarded the title to the Warriors presumptively and complained that next season has been ruined for them.
Musk's lawyers argued that statements on the internet, and more specifically on unmoderated forums like Twitter, are presumptively opinion, not objective fact.
Employees in the Justice Department and the F.B.I. have tested positive for the virus or been presumptively diagnosed based on their symptoms.
As an analytical matter, Wheeler's proposal is fundamentally inconsistent with the FCC's recent conclusion that the multichannel video marketplace is presumptively competitive.
Because the United States Supreme Court has told us that prior restraints (as such pre-publication orders are legally known) are presumptively unconstitutional.
"As a measure protecting the presumptively innocent, the speedy trial right — like other similarly aimed measures — loses force upon conviction," Justice Ginsburg said.
Since there are no Republican candidates running in the general election, Allam and the four other candidates will presumptively take office in November.
They can even affect national security, as in the case of the Office of Personnel Management data breach by—presumptively—China in 2015.
It would add a defensive-minded coach to the mix while presumptively retaining Rambis as the associate and experienced chieftain of the offense.
Significantly, this presumptively reassuring argument can make sense only if it is first assumed that the authorizing North Korean dictator is predictably rational.
" As such, he would use the canon, writing that he "would interpret the statute as requiring bail hear­ings, presumptively after six months of confinement.
The Senate bill basically eliminated these guardrails and deemed state reform plans presumptively valid, so long as they did not increase the federal deficit.
The Florida Legislature has determined that criminal history records are presumptively public unless the additional step is taken to have the record sealed or expunged.
Although Mr. Nocera recognizes that a team salary cap on college athletes' pay is presumptively illegal absent a collective bargaining agreement, his solution won't work.
Court proceedings are presumptively public, and when one party claims confidentiality, courts are supposed to weigh its privacy interest against the public interest in disclosure.
But now that Trump's own words supported their claims, major media outlets like The New York Times and CNN treated their allegations as presumptively legitimate.
The Preserving Employee Wellness Act would change all of that by stipulating that workplace wellness programs are presumptively in compliance with the ADA and GINA.
"Innovative uses of data shouldn't be presumptively unlawful just because they are unprecedented, but organizations must account for and mitigate potential harms," the framework says.
The problem was that the law, the Tenure of Office Act, was presumptively unconstitutional and the impeachment was narrowly built around that dubious criminal act.
Then, instead, American national security could ultimately have to depend upon some presumptively optimal combination of ballistic missile defense and defensive first strikes, or preemption.
Prosecutors grant immunity sparingly because under Department of Justice policy, immunized witnesses presumptively should not be prosecuted for the crimes about which they have testified.
"As I have noted before, the proposed transaction is presumptively illegal under decades of black letter law and the Justice Department's merger enforcement guidelines," Cicilline wrote.
The language of the amendment requires little proof of effects from the states, and indicates that all applications would be considered presumptively approved after 60 days.
Yet legislators are in an uproar because some prosecutors have started using their discretion to presumptively dismiss or divert all cases involving certain low level offenses.
In North America, for the first time, the "frontier" was not simply where imperial civilization stopped; it formed a presumptively (and actually) advancing vanguard of universal history.
This presumptively unanticipated response, whether non-nuclear or some non-nuclear-nuclear "hybrid," would be directed at some as yet undeterminable combination of U.S. and allied targets.
Members of that elite make a fetish of their admiration and concern for gay people, black people, immigrants—and flaunt their disdain for backward, presumptively racist traditionalists.
National Australia Bank  – which, as you know, said federal securities laws presumptively don't apply beyond U.S. borders - because ADR purchasers did not engage in domestic transactions with Toshiba.
In 2018, New Orleanians paid over $213 million to arrest and prosecute presumptively innocent people, but spent just $85033 million to ensure accurate, fair and zealous representation. Sen.
As the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit recently noted, firearm restrictions that fall outside historical protections for the right to bear arms are presumptively constitutional.
"The President's conversations with his personal counsel were presumptively protected by attorney-client privilege, and we did not seek to obtain the contents of any such communications," Mueller writes.
Despite these and other rulings by the federal courts, politicians still act as if they are still operating before Heller in which any rational gun control is presumptively constitutional.
The opposition letter is a call to disrupt that consensus with a "new" view that vertical mergers are presumptively a bad deal for consumers and violate the antitrust laws.
Blumenthal says with the passage of AB5, "all workers will presumptively be employees," and the onus will be on the companies to prove that a worker is a contractor.
"The Court finds that the conditions of detention in CBP holding cells, especially those that preclude sleep over several nights, are presumptively punitive and violate the Constitution," Bury wrote.
Circuit Judge D. Michael Fisher said this and other data showed the merger is "presumptively anticompetitive," even if it led to cost savings that could be passed on to patients.
"In my ninety-third year this is (presumptively) my last book in the long series of editions of my father's writings," Christopher Tolkien wrote in the introduction to the book.
The party's 2008 nominee, U.S. Senator John McCain of Arizona, has said he would support the eventual nominee, "who is now presumptively Donald Trump," said McCain's Senate campaign spokeswoman, Lorna Romero.
The message he found won a real and intense emotional response from some group of Americans — powering him to the top of the Republican primary race, and now, presumptively, the nomination.
"This (proposed regulation) would essentially change the presumption that a refusal to share facilities - which is now presumptively lawful - to nearly conclusively unlawful," said Professor John Lopatka, an antitrust scholar at Penn State Law.
Prosecutors said Reyes' case was "presumptively related" to their cases in Brooklyn against Guzman and Genaro Garcia Luna, formerly Mexico's top security official, because the facts arose from the same criminal schemes, transactions and events.
Like the oil sands center of Fort McMurray before the oil price collapse about five years ago, Longview became famous as a boom town, one so lively it presumptively adopted the name Little New York.
There are still lots of federal jurisdictions in which juror addresses are presumptively private, as the court-appointed amicus defending Judge Stearns' order, Gregory Dubinsky of Holwell Shuster & Goldberg explained in a brief to the 1st Circuit.
And the company advertises "behavior based learning," so it'll presumptively take your daily life and preferences and optimize them with machine learning to make the Moon even better at quietly tracking you and your family's daily life.
Since 2010&aposs "Alice in Wonderland," Disney&aposs strategy of remaking its animated classics as (presumptively) live-action films has been highly lucrative, grossing over $8.2 billion worldwide, and the studio shows no signs of slowing down.
Phil Murphy confirmed to CNBC on Tuesday that a 55-year-old man from Englewood, New Jersey, who had tested positively presumptively for the coronavirus, had attended CPAC, and that the man was symptomatic as of Feb.
" The consequences for America's civic-republican colleges deserve protest, too, not least because journalists and public intellectuals have descended upon them to shift blame for our civic and political crises onto presumptively coddled students and "social justice warriors.
As such, in the absence of a provable "corrupt intent" to obstruct justice or engage in unlawful activity, his order to initiate an investigation of the FBI and Justice Department as outlined in his tweet would be presumptively legal.
"As I have noted before, the proposed transaction is presumptively illegal under decades of black letter law and the Justice Department's merger enforcement guidelines," Cicilline, chairman of the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee, wrote in a letter to the FCC.
"As I have noted before, the proposed transaction is presumptively illegal under decades of black letter law and the Justice Department's merger enforcement guidelines," Cicilline, chairman of the House Judiciary antitrust subcommittee, wrote in a letter to the FCC.
It is only in the last 40 years or so that the conservative movement, behind a well-funded media and advocacy apparatus, convinced Americans that the government is "broke" and that public intervention in the economy is presumptively illegitimate.
Congress has the power to direct the V.A. to presumptively grant disability benefits to veterans with lung disease if they were exposed to burn pits, but so far no member of Congress has proposed a bill to do so.
"It is an extraordinary and significant step toward the critical and constitutionally mandated goal of ending the longstanding practice of jailing presumptively innocent persons prior to trial because they are too poor to post cash bail," Garcia said in a statement.
So, for example, testimony from other women about alleged prior attacks is presumptively not allowed, but an accuser may be permitted to testify if there is significant factual similarity, such as a grooming method or a particular use of specific drugs.
In response, Pyongyang, then having no realistic option to launching certain presumptively gainful forms of armed reprisal, could choose to strike American military forces in the region, and/or certain other carefully selected targets in Japan, Guam or South Korea.
Despite Risch's reluctance to challenge Trump — even when the president veers wildly off course — this does not presumptively mean Risch cannot carve out an informed foreign policy agenda to influence the White House and selectively push back against particularly appalling decisions.
But in recent years, federal bureaucrats at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) have declared that such programs should be reclassified as a presumptively illegal form of age discrimination, even when an employer does not intend to discriminate because of age.
But a half dozen employees contacted The Times to say that they were not being encouraged to stay at home, even after people in their buildings had exhibited symptoms including fevers and coughs and were presumptively diagnosed with the novel coronavirus.
In response, Pyongyang, having no realistic option to launching certain presumptively gainful forms of armed reprisal, could then choose to strike American military forces in the region, and/or certain other carefully selected targets in Japan, Guam or South Korea.
Worth noting: The lead Canadian negotiator, Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland, is expected to give up her speaking slot at the UN on Monday, where she's angling for a seat on the Security Council, due to (presumptively still ongoing) NAFTA talks.
"Most of the incidents where presumptively conservative speech has been interrupted or squelched in the last two or three years seem to involve the same few speakers: Milo Yiannopoulos, Ben Shapiro, Charles Murray, and Ann Coulter ," Sanford Ungar, the project's director, writes.
"Requiring the Court of Chancery to defer - conclusively or presumptively - to the merger price, even in the face of a pristine, unchallenged transactional process, would contravene the unambiguous language of the statute and the reasoned holdings of our precedent," the state justices said.
Some of these voices are radical and forward-thinking while others seem discouragingly stuck in the same era as, well, "Green Book," yet another movie that seems mostly interested in making its audience — here, presumptively white — feel good about its own racial sensitivities.
After pushing to have his legal dispute with Alexandra Trent, the woman who carried his and partner Gage Edward's daughter Monroe, be sorted out in private arbitration, the Flipping Out star was told that he will have to take part in a presumptively public trial.
Trump says that this is because his plan to build a wall along the border with Mexico presumptively infuriates every American of Mexican heritage so much that no judge with that background can be fairly preside over a case in which Trump is a party.
It said incidents that could be classified as suppression seem to spread across the ideological spectrum and "most of the incidents where presumptively conservative speech has been interrupted or squelched in the last two or three years seem to involve the same few speakers."
The board in a 3-1 decision on Thursday held that rules prohibiting employees from disclosing confidential customer and vendor lists are reasonable and do not infringe on workers' rights to organize under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), so they are presumptively valid.
Recently, Trump has gone even farther, suggesting that American judges who are Muslim also might not be able to be impartial in hearing cases involving him, presumably because his proposal to "temporarily" ban all Muslims from entering the country presumptively offends all Americans who practice that religion.
Lawmakers could do this by deeming waiver applications presumptively valid, so long as they certify that a similar number of people will be covered and at a comparable level of affordability as under the law and that the state reforms will not increase the federal deficit.
" Mr. Neyfakh proposes that the only way to explain Mr. Sessions's reinstatement of such a broadly condemned program is to understand the attorney general's distinct worldview: "a worldview that treats all police officers as righteous agents of order and all suspects as presumptively deserving of punishment.
While applications for the export of such goods from the United States to Russia are currently dealt with on a case by case basis, they will now be presumptively denied, with some exceptions — most notably for goods related to space, one of the final frontiers of US-Russia cooperation.
Here is where Secretary Wilkie can act: he can decide — he has the authority — that enough evidence exists to presumptively service-connect the debilitations suffered by troops — active, reserve and National Guard — to toxic exposure such as the toxicity of widely used burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"The government identified 364 counties across 21 states where it argues that concentration in the Medicare Advantage market would rise above the presumptively unlawful level if the merger proceeds, and 17 counties across 3 states where that would be true in the public exchange markets," he said in court documents.
Instead of highlighting mandatory arbitration provisions, the bill homed in on particular contract terms that frequently are part of arbitration clauses – but, critically, said those conditions are presumptively unconscionable in any standard-form contract between an individual consumer (or employee) and the counterparty (presumably a business) that drafted the contract.
At the same time, however, historians who have actually sought to separate fact from fiction in public venues have been derided as nitpickers who do not understand, or respect, the creative process, as if merely setting out where the play veers from the historical record were a presumptively hostile act.
In recent years, a Federal District Court in Los Angeles and the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit both rejected the government's routine practice of detaining immigrants for months or years without a hearing and held that an immigration judge must conduct a hearing when incarceration became prolonged (presumptively after six months).
One thing you might look at is when companies that have that kind of scale and power propose mergers, you assume that it's invalid and require them to carry the burden of proving that it should be allowed instead of the other way around, where it's presumptively valid and the FTC has gotta jump in and block it.
As the Verge noted, House Subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial, and Administrative Law chairman Representative David N. Cicilline also wrote a letter on Thursday calling the proposal "presumptively illegal under decades of black letter law and the Justice Department's merger enforcement guidelines," adding that he also believes the law requires the FCC allow public comment before a vote.
"Maybe the most astounding thing came out of Mr. Dershowitz, where he said an elected official always thinks they're acting in the best interest of their constituents or the country, and then presumptively that means that they never are doing anything bad — that they can do whatever they want to do because they believe that they're doing the right thing," Crow said.
Trumpism is not Stalinism, but the relevance of Milosz's insights — that intellectuals yearn to 'belong to the masses'; that there is never a shortage of ways to justify cruelty in the name of the presumptively higher truth; that those who refuse to conform are caricatured as self-righteous purists — continues to haunt me as I watch so many I used to admire offer ever-more contorted defenses of Trumpism.
Ron DeSantisRonald Dion DeSantisFlorida governor declares public health emergency after state records first coronavirus cases The Hill's 12:30 Report: Crunch time for Dems ahead of South Carolina, Super Tuesday The Hill's Morning Report — Presented by Facebook — Washington, Wall Street on edge about coronavirus MORE (R) declared a public health emergency on Sunday after two residents in separate counties tested "presumptively positive" for the novel coronavirus, also known as COVID-19.
Scholars such as Eugene Kontorovich and Abraham Bell have noted that under the international legal principle of Uti possidetis juris, "widely acknowledged as the doctrine of customary international law that is central to determining territorial sovereignty in the era of decolonization," emerging states presumptively inherit their pre-independence administrative boundaries, and thus international law clearly dictates that Israel inherit the boundaries of the Mandate of Palestine as they existed in May, 21967.

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