Sentences with phrase «railing against issues»

Not exact matches

The letter is a rebuttal against a push by Canadian grain shippers and farmers, who have called on Ottawa in recent weeks to issue an order - in - council to ease a persistent bottleneck in rail deliveries.
Battles over priorities in a huge governmentwide spending bill are essentially settled, leaving a scaled - back plan for President Donald Trump's border wall and a huge rail project that pits Trump against Capitol Hill's most powerful Democrat as the top issues to be solved.
For years he has railed against the «single issue» politics of abortion.
McLaughlin took to Twitter this week to rail against Flanagan's decision to not hold hearings on the issue.
Cuomo has railed against the Medicaid takeover for the last several days, issuing a series of statements that could fill a textbook blasting the measure and warning of its potential implications for New York's taxpayers.
But a slew of Democrats defended the need for a women's issues party today, and railed against what they deemed efforts to rein in women's access to contraceptives or abortion.
Tenney says she finds it ironic that town halls, which have become such an issue for decidedly liberal activists who oppose a repeal of the Affordable Care Act, became a thing, when tea party conservatives railed against that legislation during the 2010 election cycle.
On the heels of the Lazio campaign's latest Web video that slammed Democratic gubernatorial designee Andrew Cuomo for his fundraising and spending, Jacobs turned the tables on the former Long Island congressman, issuing a statement that railed against his «complete lack of fiscal discipline» in his own campaign spending.
Faso, who spent decades as a minority member in the New York State Assembly, likewise railed against the funding issue during his campaign last year.
In this issue (clearly not struggling with the «difficult second album» curse), the magazine broadly rails against what the editor - in - chief Samine Joudat describes as «a need for commodification that forces everything to become the same».
It is easy (and a little lazy) to only rail against the stupidest or most extreme position on the «other side» of an issue.
For example, Justice Zuker, of the Ontario Court of Justice, recently issued a strongly - worded judgment railing against stereotypes, and providing examples of how certain assumptions continued to be used to discredit sexual assault complainants: R. v. Ururyar, 2016 ONCJ 448.
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