Sentences with phrase «means unassailable»

Yet Corbyn's lead is by no means unassailable.

Not exact matches

This is the broadest, deepest and most unassailable meaning of the idea of Evolution.
The result, combined with Man City's 4 - 0 win over Bournemouth earlier in the day, now means that the Red Devils are now 13 points behind their rivals, a gap that to most seems unassailable.
The result means we go into matchday six against APOEL in December in an unassailable position atop Group H, playing to maintain our unbeaten record in this season's competition.
Budgets have turned into raffles when major U-turns on everything from tax credits and pension relief, disability payments and police cuts, and of course the crumbling of the notorious pasty tax, mean a group of angry MPs, led by disrespectful rebels in the Tory ranks, will pick big ticket items and batter a once unassailable Chancellor into another humiliating change of direction.
This wasn't a particularly good thing, from a good - government perspective: The Democrats» unassailable majority, and the combination of loyalty and fear that Silver inspired in his members, meant little dissent, debate or — aside from the occasional prosecutorial or investigative - journalistic breakthrough — public scrutiny of the chamber's activities.
The potential for somewhat different results meant that a moving party can not show an «unassailable» case, using the language from the Alberta Court of Appeal's decision in Ghost Riders Farm Inc. v. Boyd Distributors Inc., 2016 ABCA 331.
Although ActiveSync plays central role in pushing email to smartphones, that doesn't mean it's unassailable.
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