Sentences with phrase «of a leadership challenge»

Also, in the event of a leadership challenge, it would not help the party if it ends up in court having to argue over the meaning of our rules.
Middle managers in higher education face a distinctive set of leadership challenges.
Today's managers must deal with a myriad of leadership challenges, such as recruiting, managing turnover, training and mentoring.
[140] Lamont had attempted to quash rumours of a leadership challenge at the 25 September 2014 session of First Minister's Questions, the first of the post-referendum era.
With the global financial crisis deepening by the day, Labour MPs began to pull back from the idea of a leadership challenge.
And as my Spectator colleague James Forsyth has argued, we must add to this the prospect of leadership challenges.
[13] Lamont had attempted to quash rumours of a leadership challenge at the 25 September 2014 session of First Minister's Questions, the first of the post-referendum era: «When the First Minister is long gone I will still be doing my job on behalf of the people of Scotland.»
He dismissed the threat of a leadership challenge by backbench MP Simon Danczuk as «that's Simon being Simon».
Talk in the press of a leadership challenge even in the event of a Remain win, incidentally, is very far - fetched in my view and would be crushed easily.
Yet there was no mass revolt from his backbenches, and no revival to date of the leadership challenge rumours.
Last year, the Prime Minister flew to Brussels amidst rumour of a leadership challenge if he didn't achieve at least a token repatriation of power.
And yet, for all the recent talk of a leadership challenge, it is still a racing certainty that he will lead the Labour party into the next general election.
Some have suggested that in the event of a leadership challenge Corbyn could be excluded altogether.
All the reporting has been entirely through the prism of a leadership challenge, nothing on the substance of what he's saying.
Alyson is a veteran public school leader with a deep understanding of the leadership challenges faced by superintendents today.
Hess of AEI, who says it's «naive and simple - minded to insist «you need to be an educator to lead schools,»» cautions that it's equally problematic to imagine that any leader from the business world can successfully run an urban school system: «I think schools and districts pose a diverse array of leadership challenges, and that leaders facing different challenges will require various skills.
Furthermore, in organising talks with union leaders about the way forward, Deputy Leader Tom Watson seems intent on fuelling the delaying tactics of the Corbynites, in the hope that the idea of a leadership challenge might lose momentum and fizzle out.
When I asked him if he's worried about the prospect of a leadership challenge, he said simply, «Do I look worried?»
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