Comes down to who needs whom more I suppose, and who Trump picks for key
cabinet positions like Secretary of State.
Not exact matches
On balance, Lighthizer looks
like one of the Trump
cabinet members who will seek to moderate the new president's more extreme rhetorical
positions and channel them through the much - despised mechanisms of the Washington and global establishment.
Groeneveld was a well -
liked MLA, snubbed by Stelmach and stripped of his
cabinet position.
Had Brown not been cut down, he may have grown into a more life affirming
position; perhaps as an internationally renowned neurosurgeon, a nationally syndicated newscaster, a White House
cabinet member, a military general, a preacher of the Gospel, or perhaps as a simple and ordinary man who loves his wife and leads his family well,
like so many who sit in our congregations every Sunday.
The
likes of Tony Benn, Michael Foot, Barbara Castle and Peter Shore, senior
cabinet ministers at the time, were not awaiting Wilson's renegotiation before declaring their
position.
Charlie Falconer, one - time flatmate of Tony Blair and a man once described as being
like a brother to the former prime minister, could easily be talking about his unlikely
position in Jeremy Corbyn's shadow
cabinet.
«On Monday, I met with my
cabinet colleagues to discuss the options and would
like to confirm the
position of the
cabinet on integration.
You have to fill
Cabinet positions, junior ministerial
positions, select committee chairs — things
like that — while also having places for MPs sulking or who don't want to sit in government.»
In other words, several of the key resignations, including
cabinet departures
like that of Hazel Blears, are prompted by the need to clean up the government and the knowledge that individual
positions may become untenable — if they are not so already.
«If you look at many of the other individuals who have been appointed to
cabinet level
positions or high level
positions in various administrations, and it's
like a «who's who» of Koch Brothers affiliates.
The members of the
cabinet want Viscount Halifax (Stephen Dillane), but he treats the
position like a hot potato, turning the role over to the last person they see as someone who can ensure peace or win the war.
«By making this a regular
cabinet position just
like all the other departments, we're going to add some accountability there, and then if we don't
like the results we're getting with our schools, we're able to make some changes a little easier,» Sanfelippo said.