Sentences with phrase «broad leeway»

The phrase "broad leeway" means having a lot of freedom or flexibility to make decisions or take actions. Full definition
The SEC has given companies broad leeway in calculating these ratios, which means they may not be consistent across the board.
Unlike medications, this category isn't regulated by the FDA, which gives companies broad leeway to say their product can treat any number of conditions without supplying the necessary evidence to back it up.
It was passed in the 1970s in order to give the federal government broad leeway in prosecuting organizations tied to illegal activity.
State law gives county executives, mayors and town supervisors broad leeway in managing municipal finances.
The Court was convinced to give the plaintiffs broad leeway with their proposed testimony, and rejected the insurance company's motion.
«The pressure to show high test scores and get kids into college, combined with the broad leeway given to charter schools to suspend and expel students, means the «difficult to teach» kids have been effectively abandoned,» said investigative reporter Andrea Gabor.
But we have retained a broad leeway between the 25 % minimum and the 75 % maximum in common stocks, which we allow to those investors who have strong convictions about either the danger or the attractiveness of the general market level.»
I'm pretty sure any judge is going to give them broad leeway to the business to self - determine the manner in which they secure their electronic systems.
The federal judge thus upheld the CFTC's position from 2015 that cryptocurrencies are commodities, saying it was supported by the plain meaning of the word «commodity» and that the agency had «broad leeway to interpret the law» regulating commodities (The Commodity Exchange Act of 1936).
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