Sentences with phrase «scathing editorials»

"Scathing editorials" refer to strongly critical or harshly written newspaper articles or opinion pieces. Full definition
By the end of the week, several major newspapers printed scathing editorials in their Sunday editions calling the governor secretive and controlling.
From scathing editorials to calls for legislation, much of the public seems angered by the apparent unfairness of the situation,» says a news release promoting Bigland's new book, Along for the Ride.
Since being fired by May in 2016, Osborne has overseen a series of scathing editorials expressing his disapproval of a headlong rush into Brexit.
Since then the politician - turned - Evening Standard editor has overseen a series of scathing editorials expressing his disapproval of a headlong rush into Brexit.
Newspapers have printed scathing editorials, and unflattering analysis pieces on a daily basis.
The bureaucrats backpedaled only after the D&C published one of the most scathing editorials I have ever seen in a daily newspaper, one in which the paper's editorial board proclaimed that the state bureaucrat who shipped off the redacted documents gave the paper «his middle finger.
From scathing editorials, to commentary across social media, the apparent demise of a stranglehold of Democrat power is being met with cheers for justice.
Nadler's support of the Iran deal also led to a scathing editorial in the New York Daily News, which urged its readers to toss him from office and accused him of «helping lead the world in a disastrous direction.»
NYCLASS, at least so far, has also met its match in the Teamsters union, representing the carriage drivers, and the Daily News, which has blasted the group in scathing editorials and launched a petition drive to keep the horses in Manhattan.
Many in Westminster reckoned that Lawson was taking his cue from the Daily Mail, which published a scathing editorial this morning calling Hammond «dismal, defeatist [and] relentlessly negative» and even went as far as suggesting that he could be replaced by Jacob Rees Mogg.
«One might call it Shakespearian if there were a shred of nobleness in the story of Eliot Spitzer's fall,» they wrote in a scathing editorial.
Captivity, meanwhile, despite the not - insignificant controversy surrounding a disastrous billboard campaign and a scathing editorial by Joss Whedon condemning it sight - unseen, has all but vanished into obscurity.
Nature, the science magazine, wrote a scathing editorial in 2011, called Into Ignorance.
As the Wall Street Journal and other conservative media hyper - ventilated over the hacker leaks they referred to as the «Climategate Scandal»; Nature quickly retaliated in defense of Anthropogenic Global Warming with a scathing editorial titled: «Climatologists Under Pressure» stating: «Stolen e-mails have revealed no scientific conspiracy, but do highlight ways in which climate researchers could be better supported in the face of public scrutiny.»
From scathing editorials to calls for legislation, much of the public seems angered by the apparent unfairness of the situation,» says a news release promoting Bigland's new book, Along for the Ride.
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