Sentences with phrase «editorial pages called»

The state Legislature is empowered to name a replacement to fill out the remainder of Mr. Schneiderman's term, but a range of editorial pages called for lawmakers to hold off and keep the interim attorney general, Barbara Underwood, who had served for years as state solicitor general, in the job.
Newspaper editorials have complained, the New York Times editorial page called the plan «sleazy».
Expressing concern about increasing divisiveness between LAUSD and the teachers union, the LA Times editorial page calls for a more thoughtful, balanced approach to making much - needed improvements, including a proposal for LAUSD to make student achievement less than 30 percent of teacher evaluations:
CAFÉ: Obama introduced a bold new plan that brought Republicans and Democrats, CAFÉ supporters and long - time opponents together in support of legislation that will gradually increase fuel economy standards and offer what the New York Times editorial page called «real as opposed to hypothetical results.»

Not exact matches

The New York Times used a full page to print an editorial on Sunday to call on Republicans to stand up to President Donald Trump.
This from an editorial page that leads the pack in calling for doctor - assisted suicide as an essential component of «death with dignity.»
Those who are excessively impressed by the academy, the editorial page of the New York Times, and powers claiming to control what are called the commanding heights of culture may think America is post-Christian.
When Governor Pat Neff vetoed a piece of legislation that would have given West Texas its own college in 1921, newspaper editorial pages actually called for secession.
Cuomo has been negotiating behind closed doors with legislative leaders over an ethics bill for weeks now (much to the chargin of the NY Times editorial page, which called over the weekend for these talks to go public).
Interestingly, Paladino is on the same page here with the NY Times editorial board, which also called recently for Cuomo to introduce an omnibus ethics bill sometime during his first week in office.
After lawmakers consented to his steep cuts to health care and school spending this year, he held a news conference to call the New York Legislature — for years the butt of late - night comics and a target of editorial pages — «the best legislative body in the nation.»
Editorial pages from New York City to Buffalo are calling for reform measures, and good government groups say Governor Cuomo, who came into office vowing to win back the public trust, may find his very legacy in jeopardy.
The NY Post editorial page: «Cuomo calls the $ 168.4 billion budget Albany passed Saturday a «bold blueprint,» and it is — for anyone who puts political goals over fiscal responsibility.»
In that portion, editorial page editor Arthur Browne calls Spitzer «a racketeering prosecutor and the attorney general,» accuses him of money laundering, and asks him exactly how much he spent on hookers.
That's what a spokesman for Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver told the Daily News this week, when editorial pages and good - government groups throughout the state called for his boss's ouster after the Vito Lopez sexual misconduct mess.
While state Senate Democrats were calling for an update to their chamber's policies on sexual harassment [Jan. 26, Page 1, «Senators Eye Policy Update»], I happened to be doing research and read an editorial published in the Journal Inquirer newspaper in the spring of 1980.
The paper's editorial page also called on the state's Joint Commission On Public Ethics to investigate the Assemblywoman.
Paterson was not expected to resign from office at the press conference, but front page editorials in the New York Post and the Daily News called on him to do just that.
Many, from Randi Weingarten of the American Federation of Teachers to the National Council of Teachers of English to the New York Times editorial page, have recently called for caution on testing until teachers and students have a chance to adjust to the new requirements.
The Charleston Conference Continues — p. 78 Getting to No: Calling for an End to Contention by James Bunnell, Jill Emery, Michael Levine - Clark, Emily McElroy, Anne McKee, and Mary Page — This editorial is about the first keynote during the 33rd Charleston Conference.
You'll get your manuscript reviewed and feedback given via a 30 minute phone call or a 2 - 3 page editorial memo.
They care about public opinion and keep close tabs on issues constituents raise in letters, meetings, phone calls and the editorial pages of local papers.
The historical significance of the Environmental Protection Agency's recently proposed new limits on fine particle pollution, colloquially called soot, wasn't lost on a number of editorial pages.
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