Sentences with phrase «public remarks since»

Goldberg, making his first extended public remarks since taking over as NAR CEO on Aug. 1, revealed several specifics for doing just that.
Chief executive Mark Parker is poised to make his first public remarks since the controversy surfaced when he delivers earnings on Thursday.
According to her, «Last night, I congratulated Donald Trump and offered to work with him on behalf of our country,» the defeated candidate told supporters, holding back tears in her first public remarks since the Republican's upset victory.
«It's not my place to tell them who their leader should be,» Cuomo said today in his first public remarks since Skelos» arrest on Monday.
In Cuomo's first public remarks since Nixon, also an education activist, declared she would challenge him for the Democratic Party's nomination, Cuomo said in Manhattan: «We're in a democracy, anybody can run, anybody can say whatever they want to say.»
Last month, former Lehman Brothers CEO Dick Fuld made his first public remarks since the world - beating bankruptcy he presided over.

Not exact matches

Powell stuck to a more reassuring script during his prepared remarks — his first public speech since assuming the role of Fed chairman in February.
In any case, since I was name - checked several times in this thread regarding you, I want to make public what I hope you've heard from me privately since my regrettable remark in that email thread 3 - 4 years ago, of which you were a part:
Speaking in Phoenix, Az., President Donald Trump last night fiercely defended his response to violence in Charlottesville, Va., at his first public rally since his remarks ignited a national debate about whether he had emboldened racists.
Hillary Clinton in her most at - ease public remarks to date since losing last year mocked the president's implosive personality and Twitter typo.
Every since the 1990s, Clinton has expressed support for charter schools, but in Saturday's remarks, she said something that is likely to irritate her supporters within the Democratic Party who are avid backers of charter schools as a principal means of reforming public education: that most charters don't accept those students who are the most difficult to educate, or, if they do, they «don't keep them.»
Her remarks appeared to be her strongest endorsement of public schools since taking office just over a month ago.
Tipping his hat to other scientists who've been attempting to inject a less alarmist tone into public discussions since the early 1990s, Carter remarked:
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