Sentences with phrase «often lucrative deals»

The growing influence of paid fund - raisers has angered donors in both parties, who are skeptical of Washington's consultant class and the secret, often lucrative deals they reach with campaigns.

Not exact matches

For the promoters, the deals were lucrative, often generating $ 1 million or more in fees per transaction.
I've mentioned that book here so often, you can all be forgiven for assuming that Ms. Poppendieck and I are secretly related, or that I have some lucrative royalty deal with her publisher, but in truth, it's just an awesome book for anyone trying to wade through the byzantine mess that is our current national school lunch program and interested in ideas for fixing it.
The paper cited the «decision to sweeten an already lucrative pension program in 1998 [as] a classic example of how public employee benefits are enhanced, often with privileged insiders pushing for the deal, and little study in advance.»
Once their union dues are no longer automatically removed from their paycheck, union members often decide they're not willing to foot the bill for union bosses» posh salaries and lucrative benefits — or their unrealistic union deals that put teachers in job danger.
Traditional publishers are scrambling to stay relevant in the age of self - publishing, often doing so by offering lucrative deals to successful self - published authors.
These offers can be particularly lucrative, as they often contain exclusive signup bonuses or low - interest deals.
As valuable as signup rewards can be, however, intro - APR deals can often be even more lucrative for cardholders prone to carrying a balance.
In the period around both the 2006 and 2011 elections, mining magnate Gertler secured mining and oil assets at prices that were often well below market value, before later striking lucrative deals for those assets with the likes of London - listed giant commodities trader Glencore.
The trick was that they knew they could profit by offering lucrative deals to these customers because they could predict that some portion would soon be paying much more — often «default» or «penalty» rates topping 30 % — on big balances.
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