In its report An End to Sofa Government, the taskforce argues Tony Blair's off the cuff «sofa» style of politics has
damaged public faith in government.
Not exact matches
If required to do so by law or in the good
faith belief that such action is appropriate: (a) under applicable law, including laws outside your country of residence; (b) to comply with legal process; (c) to respond to requests from
public and government authorities, including
public and government authorities outside your country of residence; (d) to enforce our terms and conditions; (e) to protect our operations or those of any of our affiliates; (f) to protect our rights, privacy, safety or property, and / or that of our affiliates, you or others; and (g) to allow us to pursue available remedies or limit the
damages that we may sustain.
Adding to this disillusion, he continues, is a gradual erosion of
public faith in politics, driven in part by the distorting impact of 24 - hour news and social media — «it does trivialise politics, and it has done a real amount of
damage to the perception of politics» — a backlash against a political class that favours spin over frankness — «I detest spin, it is deceit and it is intended to be deceit» — and, ultimately, by the failure of mainstream parties to «reach out beyond the political sphere» and speak to people's real concerns.
The
damaging message to the
public would be denying minority evangelical Christians the opportunity to earn their law degree in a private,
faith - based setting that meets the technical requirements to qualify as a law school.
Section 73 (a) prohibits proceedings against a
public body for
damages resulting from good
faith disclosure or non-disclosure of all or part of a record under the Act.