Sentences with phrase «little room for manoeuvre»

They don't quite realise who they're dealing with and they've got very little room for manoeuvre now.»
You can read my match report here and there's an analysis piece on what the short - term future holds for Chelsea here: Chelsea failure leaves little room for manoeuvre.
It «s really down to the nitty - gritty now, with increasingly little room for manoeuvre.
UN agencies have little room for manoeuvre at present and no room for strong advocacy statements.
Rochester and Strood teaches us that Cameron, Farage and even Nick Clegg now have relatively little room for manoeuvre.
The Chancellor has little room for manoeuvre as he ploughs ahead with the Herculean task of eliminating the deficit over the next four years.
The consultation reads: «For losing authorities, this would leave them with very little room for manoeuvre
In the bedroom the four - poster leaves little room for manoeuvre, but the unified fabric makes the room appear large.
Mr Gove's appointment, one of the last to be announced, was the major surprise of a reshuffle in which Mrs May was seen to have little room for manoeuvre.
Constrained by the «golden rule» (however discredited), the Chancellor has very little room for manoeuvre.
But with little or no money in the kitty, Osborne has little room for manoeuvre.
• An already financially efficient school with low levels of deprivation has little room for manoeuvre — core funding levels (the lump sum and the per pupil funding in the formula) will make the difference between survival and insolvency.
Do not just mark exactly where you think the problems will arise, remember those files could be called in evidence and though it might save costs if all the perceived problems are highlighted, it will leave your insurer very little room for manoeuvre.
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