Not exact matches
Some analysts have
questioned whether Kim, believed to be in his early 30s, would choose for his first overseas visit an event where he would share the stage with several
leaders and have less control over proceedings
than in a two - way summit.
I asked readers the
question, «What is the ONE mistake
leaders make more frequently
than others?»
More
than anything else, to be adaptable or creative in this new environment, even to be an effective
leader, requires a practiced ability to be «open» to new ideas, to
questioning old ways, even to where those
questions and new ideas come from.
That
question came up more
than once as entrepreneurs took the mic at the start of our first annual gathering of startup
leaders and our BBVA partners in Sausalito this April.
VANCOUVER — The report from an expert panel of engineers confirms that the Mount Polley tailings pond failure was avoidable, but leaves British Columbians with more
questions than answers, said New Democrat
leader John Horgan.
I have struggled with how to answer this
question for many years, because while we do not officially «attend church,» we feel that we are more involved with the Church
than ever before, and are following Jesus in a more relational way
than we ever did as regular church attenders or church
leaders.
The
question in their minds would have been «how can we be more righteous
than the religious
leaders?»
Viv Thomas: This scenario asks more
questions of you as a
leader than of him.
Furthermore, if by way of preparation for the meeting, some preliminary reading has been done by the participants, if the
leader lets them feel that they are not just «lecture - fodder» but part of the whole enterprise, and if there is insistence on something more
than being at the «receiving - end,» the discussion and the
questions and the desire for further exploration will almost inevitably follow.
Gil you have asked some very good
questions why does bad things happen in the world i personally do nt know God did nt explain to Job either why he had to suffer.What i do know is that God desires that none of us should perish but that all would have eternal life in him through Jesus Christ.This world will one day pass away and the real world will be reborn so our focus as christians is on whats to come and being a witness in the here and now.Both good and bad happens to either the righteous or the sinner so what are we to make of that.What we do know is that God will set all things right at the appointed time the wicked will be judged and the righteous will be rewarded for there faith isnt that enough reason for us to believe.Free will is only a reality if we can choose between good and bad but our hearts are deceitfully wicked we naturally are inclined toward sin that is another reason whyt we need to be saved from ourselves so what are we to do.For me Christ died and rose again that is a fact witnessed by over 500 people that were alive at the time and was recorded by historians how many other religious
leaders do you know that did that or did the miracles that Jesus did.As far as the bible is concerned much of the archelogical evidence has proven to be correct and many of prophetic words spoken many hundreds of years ago have come to pass including both the birth and the death of Jesus.Interested in what philosophy you are believing in if other
than a faith in Jesus Christ so how does that philosophy give you the assurance that you are saved.Its really simple with christianity we just have to believe in Jesus Christ.brentnz
The real
question Cobra is how did I get this smart, and the answer is by watching dumber
than rock idiots like you who keep giving money to faith
leaders who know the crap they preach is nothing but lies but are too stupid and lazy to get a real job so they depend on ignorant and stupid fools like you to provide them with an income.
In describing and accounting for the lives of the Religious Right, which we define simply as religious conservatives with a considerable involvement in political activity, the book and the series tell the story primarily by focusing on leading episodes in the movement's history, including, but not limited to, the groundwork laid by Billy Graham in his relationships with presidents and other prominent political
leaders; the resistance of evangelical and other Protestants to the candidacy of the Roman Catholic John F. Kennedy; the rise of what has been called the New Right out of the ashes of Barry Goldwater's defeat in 1964; a battle over sex education in Anaheim, California, in the mid-1960's; a prolonged cultural war over textbooks in West Virginia in the early 1970's — and that is a battle that has been fought less violently in community after community all over the country; the thrill conservative Christians felt over the election of a «born - again» Christian to the Presidency in 1976 and the subsequent disappointment they experienced when they found out that Jimmy Carter was, of all things, a Democrat; the rise of the Moral Majority and its infatuation with Ronald Reagan; the difficulty the Religious Right has had in dealing with abortion, homosexuality and AIDS; Pat Robertson's bid for the presidency and his subsequent launching of the Christian Coalition; efforts by Dr. James Dobson and Gary Bauer to win a «civil war of values» by changing the culture at a deeper level
than is represented by winning elections; and, finally, by addressing crucial
questions about the appropriate relationship between religion and politics or, as we usually put it, between church and state.
Question the
leader when the one
questioning the
leader can actually do a better job
than him.
Prepare for cheap replacements, no
leaders who may
question Wenger, and more excuses
than Kroenke has shares.
Leaders are trained to listen and to ask more
questions rather
than judging what's right for you.
Been more
than a year since our nations
leader has stood before the full press and answered
questions.
Another answer to the
question of whether Trump's foreign policy will be revisionist, however, would be that the personality of
leaders matters more
than IR scholars tend to acknowledge.
The Mirror
questions whether «chicken» Cameron might have preferred accepting a head - to - head debate with Miliband rather
than the «trial by TV» he and the other
leaders got at the hands of «angry voters».
ICM also asked a voting intention
question asking how people would vote assuming that Gordon Brown was Labour
leader — like YouGov's poll earlier this week this showed Labour doing worse under Brown
than under Blair; with Brown as
leader voting intention would be CON 40 %, LAB 37 %, LD 18 %.
Questioned about the
leaders» failure to properly address the scale of the cuts the country has to make in the coming years, Tim Montgomerie claimed David Cameron had said more about the cuts that are necessary
than any other opposition
leader.
So it was more
than a little strange, said Katwala with tongue in cheek, that only now we have an Old Etonian as Tory
leader is the
question of class off the agenda.
Pushing the line that the PM's referendum plans are for the benefit of the Tory party rather
than in the national interest, which Labour strategists clearly see as their strongest retort (read: EUreka), the Labour
leader insisted that, four hours after the big speech that was six months in the making, Cameron still «can't answer the most basic
question of all.»
The majority
leader also
questioned whether it's constitutional for the governor to insert himself into the redistricting process other
than to sign or veto the plan drawn up by the Legislature.
Senate Republicans likely would want to resolve the leadership
question sooner rather
than later: Democrats are once again expected to push for a resolution that would oust Skelos as majority
leader.
The Labour
leader did appear on Monday evening — but then infuriated colleagues by leaving after less
than an hour without taking any
questions.
Howard Zemsky, the
leader of New York's economic development agency, maintained the Cuomo administration's no - comment policy with regards to
questions surrounding a probe by federal prosecutors of the Buffalo Billion program — other
than to say the agency is cooperating fully.
If he does win tomorrow, Mr Cameron has less
than 24 hours before his first major test as party
leader - prime minister's
questions in the Commons, where he will face Tony Blair over the dispatch box.
But consider the subtext of the
question posed by Hitchens: Is the
leader of Iran or Hezbollah more dangerous
than leaders of the US or Israel?
Labour was engulfed by
questions on tax and spending plus the Corbyn issue when the
leader os demonstrably less popular
than the party's policies.
As readers will see, the
Leader of the House dodged a
question about Quentin Davies in a less
than admirable manner, and was unable to resist yet another dig about all those years of «Tory rule».
Senate deputy majority
leader Cathy Young, one of the first lawmakers to
question de Blasio, said the mayor had come in with a «litany of complaints» about Cuomo's budget proposal, but argued the city has more
than enough money to cushion the blow.
To be broadcast at 9 pm on June 7, the two party
leaders will take
questions from a studio audience during the hour - long programme, hosted by Julie Etchingham, with Mr Farage, who has campaigned for Britain to leave the EU for more
than 20 years, taking
questions first.
The poll had a «who would be your first preference as
leader»
question with a very long list of candidates in which Corbyn got less
than a majority of support, but on a mock ballot paper against Hillary Benn, Dan Jarvis, Lisa Nandy, Angela Eagle and Tom Watson he wins comfortably on the first round (62 % support, with Benn in second place on 15 %).
The new
leader's performance at Prime Minister's
Questions was a good deal more competent than many expected — even if, by politely reading out questions emailed in by Labour supporters, he had effectively appointed himself the moderator of a national weekly edition of Cameron Direct, the public meeting format in which the P
Questions was a good deal more competent
than many expected — even if, by politely reading out
questions emailed in by Labour supporters, he had effectively appointed himself the moderator of a national weekly edition of Cameron Direct, the public meeting format in which the P
questions emailed in by Labour supporters, he had effectively appointed himself the moderator of a national weekly edition of Cameron Direct, the public meeting format in which the PM excels.
Saturday's
leader states that the Conservative campaign has been «one of the tawdriest in decades» and argues Ed Miliband has better answers
than his rivals to the «profound
questions» facing the country.
Any righteous pretence that it was really about him being political, rather
than Conservative, was immediately put into
question when Labour (unsuccessfully) tried to get Deputy
Leader of the Board Lorna Reith appointed to replace Cooke straightaway.
The big
question, that of their leadership, will probably not be much informed by polling — after all, Charlie Kennedy, while few people's choice for Prime Minister, is generally far more positively rated
than any other political
leader.
The
questions is a bit of a simplification — firstly saying that one sagely considers the parties» policies is obviously a more «socially acceptable» answer
than saying one votes for the nicest chap, and equally most pollsters (not least MORI themselves) will tell you that there is a third important factor, the overall image of a party, which is itself influenced by the
leader's image and the party policies.
If the
leaders remain as they are now at the next election (which YouGov ask as a control
question) people's voting intentions would be CON 34, LAB 41, LDEM 9 (when asked this way it consistently shows a slightly smaller Labour lead
than usual — probably the effect of mentioning Ed Miliband in the
question).
Senate GOP Majority
Leader John Flanagan walked away from a reporter on Monday rather
than answer a
question as to why he had not called for legislative hearings into water quality issues around the state.
No appointment of the 14 panel members was
questioned by political observers more
than that made by Senate Democratic Minority
Leader John Sampson.
David Cameron's honeymoon as Conservative
leader seems to be coming to a close — there is criticism of his strategy from the Thatcherite old guard and murmurs of disquiet from party donors, at the same time the media have started to ask
questions rather
than bathe in the glory of the Tory wunderkind.
After more
than 2,700 days as Scotland's longest - serving first minister and 215 sessions at first minister's
questions, Salmond parried and ducked attacks on his record from Baillie and the Scottish Tory
leader, Ruth Davidson, with open relish.
In recent months he has taken to sitting to the side of Labour MPs during Prime Minister's
Questions, more an observer
than a foot soldier, and out of the media spotlight since last autumn when Gordon Brown successfully managed a Labour revival Clarke had argued would not happen without a change of
leader.
Questions during the Q&A portion of the press conference included his plans during his scheduled visit to Albany on March 4th, why he expects to convince legislators who he has not convinced, whether he's concerned that the middle school program will be pushed aside if there is a pre-K funding mechanism other
than his proposed tax, where the money to fund the middle school program will come from, how he counters the argument that his tax proposal is unfair to cities that do not have a high earner tax base, how he will measure the success of the program absent additional standardized testing, whether he expects to meet with Governor Cuomo or Senate Republican
Leader Dean Skelos during his March 4th trip, what he would say to a parent whose child planned on attending one of the charter schools that his administration refused to allow, whether he doubts Governor Cuomo's commitment or ability to deliver on the funding the governor has promised, what are the major hurdles in trying to convince the state senate to approve his tax proposal, whether there's an absolute deadline for getting his tax proposal approved, whether he can promise parents pre-K spots should Governor Cuomo's proposal gointo effect, and why he has not met with Congressman Michael Grimm since taking office.
She was not surprised to learn that evangelical scientists (59 %) are similar to their non-evangelical peers (67 %) in saying they are much more likely to consult a scientific source about a science - related
question than a religious text or a religious
leader (6 % for evangelical scientists, 4 % for non-evangelical scientists).
For instance, she noted, evangelicals «were more
than twice as likely as the rest of the sample to say that they would turn to a religious
leader or text if they have a
question about science.»
More
than 200 Iraqi - American intellectual
leaders debated that
question at a meeting last weekend in Washington, D.C..
Because high - performing, high - poverty schools are places of reflection and inquiry,
leaders» work in these schools is better characterized in the form of
questions than in formulaic lists of strategies.
This knowledge will allow senior
leaders to
question inspectors and raise concerns over inconsistencies during the inspection, rather
than after the event.