There is a new controversy over the Puerto Rican Day Parade's plan to honor a former
leader of a group blamed for terror bombings in the 1970s.
There is a new controversy over the Puerto Rican Day Parade's plan to honor a former
leader of a group blamed for terror bombings in the 1970s as a Republican candidate for mayor is demanding that Mayor Bill de Blasio bow out of the march.
Not exact matches
Merck chief executive Ken Frazier set off a parade
of departures from Donald Trump's CEO - packed jobs councils — and Trump's subsequent decision to disband those
groups before even more business
leaders could leave them — following the President's widely criticized response to white supremacist attacks in Charlottesville, Virginia in mid-August
blaming «many sides» for the violence.
Friction between the business
leaders and the president came to a head in the wake
of a Trump press conference on Tuesday in which the president
blamed both sides for violence at a rally in Charlottesville, Virginia last weekend rather than single out racist hate
groups.
The problem with
blaming all this on faith or religion is that it hides the true culprits: fear, hatred, and selfishness — which culprits are leveraged by evil
leaders of groups like ISIS.
While Lipton and activist organizations — like Make the Road Action, a leading immigrants» rights
group that endorsed Nixon on Friday — were careful to
blame the crack - up on Cuomo, at least one labor
leader offered a more scathing indictment
of the WFP.
The council's Labour
group leader Adam Hug
blamed «atrocious» housebuilding rates and «insidious» welfare cuts, adding: «The cumulative effect
of it is social cleansing.»
He can hardly be
blamed for the make up
of a parliamentary
group elected before he became
leader.
And in the House, Republican
leaders worked up a proposal to streamline National Environmental Policy Act reviews,
blaming lawsuits by environmental
groups for slowing the pace
of forest thinning.
Not Evil presents Innis as the
leader of a historic civil rights
group fighting to reinstate use
of the pesticide DDT, whose ban the film
blames for the daily malaria deaths
of more than 300 African children.
During our focus
groups, several
leaders of AmLaw 200 firms said they would like this data as a management tool for partners who are all - too - ready to
blame the client.