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130 Sentences With "be censured"

How to use be censured in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "be censured" and check conjugation/comparative form for "be censured". Mastering all the usages of "be censured" from sentence examples published by news publications.

There is "no doubt he should be censured," McCarthy said.
Another 15 percent said he should be censured by Congress.
Manchin has called for Trump to be censured -- a public reprimand.
He voted against impeaching Clinton and said he should be censured instead.
The Tribune's editorial board said Trump should be censured, but not impeached.
She isn't clever or cute her childishness insults our American traditions -should be censured.
For this he should be censured by a vote in the Senate and House.
At the White House, his counselor Kellyanne Conway said the speaker deserved to be censured.
Stephanie Borowicz, should be censured for her prayer and called for inclusion among the members.
Norton is the second commander of the Reagan to be censured in the "Fat Leonard" scandal.
Schumer also said that if Franken stayed he could be censured and stripped of committee assignments.
For this the president should be censured, repudiated and condemned by members of the House and Senate!
Some called for her to be censured, something that would never happen since her party controls the chamber.
Meanwhile, the percentage of those who believe he should be censured has hovered between 14 and 21625 percentage.
Democrats have said Koskinen should not be censured, arguing there is a difference between misspeaking and deliberately lying.
By the numbers: 42% of respondents said Congress should remove Trump, while 17% said Trump should be censured.
A year later Argentina became the first country to be censured by the IMF for misreporting GDP and prices.
CNN's legal analyst and my good friend, Paul Callan, wonders if the Broadway hit, "The Producers," could be censured.
Forty-three percent say no action should be taken, while 15 percent say the president should be censured by Congress.
Content deemed to contain offensive language, to be lewd or to copy someone else's work, will be censured, the minister said.
White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE also lashed out at Pelosi on Wednesday, saying she was "petty and peevish" while also calling for the Speaker to be censured.
Eastman is the first Alaska House representative to be censured, but the motion is essentially a public admonition requiring no additional punishment.
Though he seems unlikely to do that, a Senate ethics investigation is underway, and Franken might eventually be censured, if not expelled.
Congressional Republicans were quick to pounce, calling her comments "vile" and demanding she be censured and ejected from the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
" Conway said she believes Pelosi should be censured by the House or that the Senate should pass a resolution "denouncing her behavior last night.
I just think that her discourse was actually discredit to the House of Representatives, and that&aposs the measure of whether somebody should be censured.
Pramila Jayapal, a cochair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, said she fully supported Tuesday's resolution and also had previously called for King to be censured.
While Andrew Jackson was the only president to ever be censured by Congress, censure measures have more recently been introduced during the Clinton and Nixon administrations.
Earlier Thursday, Davis called for Trump to be censured by the House of Representatives for "witness tampering," as well as calling for a criminal probe of Giuliani.
It has created a quandary for Republicans like Senator Amy Volk, who comes from a moderate district and called this week for Mr. LePage to be censured.
Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri dismissed what he called Mr. Schumer's "non-apology," and said Mr. Schumer should be censured in a formal Senate vote of rebuke.
Bob Walker, a Republican from Pennsylvania, demanded that her words be stricken from the record and further, that she should be censured for continuing to breach decorum.
It is also debatable whether Mr. Trump, or any first-year president, can take full credit for a strong economy (or be censured, were it to happen, for weak economic performance).
Their illiberal policies — including, in both cases, a crackdown on the independent judiciary — have made them the only two countries to ever be censured by the European Parliament for undermining democratic values.
In the weeks since Trump tweeted about Schiff paraphrasing the call, Trump and House Republicans have ratcheted up support for Schiff to be censured for reading the dramatized version of the call.
Forty-four percent say there should be no action against Trump on these fronts, while 28500 percent say Trump should be impeached and 6900 percent say he should be censured by Congress.
Forty-five percent said the investigations into Trump's actions should end with no action, 41 percent said they should end in impeachment and 14 percent said Trump should be censured by Congress.
Members of Congress can be held accountable for violating congressional rules — for example, a member of the House Intelligence Committee illicitly disclosing information gleaned by that panel could be censured by the House.
JASON CHAFFETZ, FORMER U.S. CONGRESSMAN: No if you impugn the integrity of another member, if you&aposre in sighting violence like that, she should be censured and I&aposm glad you brought that up.
Jody Hice (R-Ga.) on Tuesday doubled down on his calls for House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) to be censured and removed from the Democratic-led impeachment inquiry against President Trump.
Paul Gosar (R-Ariz.), who has called for Pelosi to be censured for tearing up the speech: In response to her classless outburst, I've decided to introduce a resolution to censure & condemn Speaker Pelosi.
The survey found that 2023 percent of voters support Trump's removal, against 40 percent who said the Senate should take no action and 15 percent who said the president should be censured by Congress.
Ms Swaraj was contacted about the doormats on Tuesday afternoon by "Atul Bhobe", a Twitter user with 60 followers, who sent a screenshot of several Indian flag doormats and urged her: "Amazon Canada must be censured".
"A walkout is a nice term for it but it is a strike, plain and simple," said Diane Douglas on Monday, suggesting that by breaking state law, teachers could be censured or lose their teaching certificate.
If her critique of the more outré antics of US identity politics is more convincing than Murray's, it is partly because it is always more effective to be censured by one's sympathizers than by one's adversaries.
Michael Cohen's legal advisor on Thursday called for President Donald Trump to be censured by Congress for "witness tampering" one day after Trump's ex-lawyer postponed his congressional testimony due to "threats" against his family by the president.
But the disgusting slogans on display in Warsaw and the fictions and paranoia behind them must be relentlessly exposed for what they are and condemned, and the right-wing, populist governments that condone them must be censured, not embraced.
Janusz Korwin-Mikke, a right-wing Polish member of the European Parliament recently punished for anti-migrant statements and making Nazi salutes, may be censured again — this time for stating that women earn less money than men because they deserve to.
On the other hand, many Kaep supporters will point out, probably without surprise but perhaps with some relief, that a Supreme Court justice doesn't think he should be censured, jailed, deported, or otherwise quieted for standing up for his beliefs.
Counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway said it looked as though Pelosi "was reading The Cheesecake Factory menu all night, going through every single page," and called for the speaker to be censured by Congress or slapped with a resolution of disapproval.
White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwayGeorge Conway: We might have to impeach Trump again Democrats seek to drive wedge between Trump, GOP on whistleblowers Trump claims Pelosi ripping speech was 'illegal' MORE told Fox News on Wednesday that she believed Pelosi should be censured.
"He will be acquitted forever beginning today," White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE countered on Wednesday.
In the wake of the Office of the Special Counsel recommending that White House counselor Kellyanne Conway be fired for violations of the Hatch Act, it's worth noting that she's not the first Trump administration to be censured as a result of the law.
When the disciplinary committee of the Appellate Division of State Supreme Court in Manhattan ordered him to explain why he should not be censured, suspended or disbarred, Mr. Bolan's response, in character, contrasted strikingly with that of Mr. Cohn when Mr. Cohn was faced with the same situation.
White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE declined to comment on reports charter flights will depart China for the United States on Monday.
Conway, the husband of White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE, founded a political action committee last month solely focused on making Trump a one-term president.
EST: White House press briefing with Senior Counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE, Office of National Drug Control Policy Director Jim Carroll and Assistant Secretary of Public Health ADM Brett Giroir.
Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffOvernight Defense: Trump lifts sanctions on Turkey | 'Small number' of troops to remain by Syrian oil fields | Defense official's impeachment testimony delayed five hours after Republicans storm secure room Graham walks back 'that's nuts' comment on GOP congressmen storming impeachment hearing GOP lawmaker shares audio of phone call he made from highly classified SCIF room MORE should be censured.
"The House of Representatives censures and condemns Representative Adam Schiff for conduct that misleads the American people in a way that is not befitting an elected Member of the House of Representatives; Representative Adam Schiff will forthwith present himself in the well of the House for the pronouncement of censure; and Representative Adam Schiff will be censured with the public reading of this resolution by the Speaker," the resolution says.
The most credible Republican case against impeaching President TrumpDonald John TrumpRepublican group targets Graham in ad calling for fair Senate trial Democratic presidential candidates react to Trump impeachment: 'No one is above the law' Trump attacks Schumer at fiery rally in Michigan MORE is that while he improperly tried to get Ukraine to smear a 2020 political opponent while holding up military assistance, he should be censured rather than driven from office.
Former House Speaker Newt GingrichNewton (Newt) Leroy GingrichMORE (R-Ga.) on Wednesday called on current House Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiPelosi, Schumer praise Romney after impeachment vote Senate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga McCarthy to submit copy of Trump's SOTU address to House Clerk for archives MORE (D-Calif.) to be censured for her actions in ripping up a copy of President TrumpDonald John TrumpSchiff: Bolton 'refused' to submit affidavit on Trump's involvement in Ukraine controversy Yang congratulates Romney for 'voting his conscious and character' in convicting Trump McConnell 'disappointed' by Romney impeachment vote, but 'I'm going to need his support' MORE's State of the Union address after his speech Tuesday night.
White House counselor Kellyanne ConwayKellyanne Elizabeth ConwaySenate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga Gingrich calls on Pelosi to be censured: 'Disgusted' by 'viciously partisan action' Kellyanne Conway denounces Pelosi for ripping up Trump's speech MORE excoriated Speaker Nancy PelosiNancy PelosiPelosi, Schumer praise Romney after impeachment vote Senate acquits Trump, ending impeachment saga McCarthy to submit copy of Trump's SOTU address to House Clerk for archives MORE (D-Calif.) on Wednesday for ripping up President TrumpDonald John TrumpSchiff: Bolton 'refused' to submit affidavit on Trump's involvement in Ukraine controversy Yang congratulates Romney for 'voting his conscious and character' in convicting Trump McConnell 'disappointed' by Romney impeachment vote, but 'I'm going to need his support' MORE's State of the Union speech on the dais a night earlier, suggesting Pelosi be formally censured for her actions.
Rep. Jody HiceJody Brownlow HiceRepublicans storm closed-door hearing to protest impeachment inquiry Several GOP House members call to continue to withhold international conservation grants until oversight measures implemented House Republican: Schiff 'should not be leading this whole inquiry' MORE (R-Ga.) on Tuesday doubled down on his calls for House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffOvernight Defense: Trump lifts sanctions on Turkey | 'Small number' of troops to remain by Syrian oil fields | Defense official's impeachment testimony delayed five hours after Republicans storm secure room Graham walks back 'that's nuts' comment on GOP congressmen storming impeachment hearing GOP lawmaker shares audio of phone call he made from highly classified SCIF room MORE (D-Calif.) to be censured and removed from the Democratic-led impeachment inquiry against President TrumpDonald John TrumpSchedule for additional depositions in impeachment inquiry revealed Sondland attorney disputes key portions of Taylor testimony: report Impeachment inquiry might be public by mid-November: report MORE.
Gossett (1986), p. 46. Nelson feared that the officer of the watch would receive a death sentence for his conduct. Nelson assured Layman that "You will not be censured." However, Nelson had misjudged the situation.
No Scot would be censured or persecuted for signing the National Covenant. The Scottish "incendiaries" considered responsible for precipitating the crisis would be prosecuted in Scotland. Scottish goods and ships captured during the war would be returned. Publications against the Covenanters would be suppressed.
In a 1873 scandal, Milwaukee newspapers accused Washburn of forcing a Wisconsin businessman named Wheeler to pay the police department $200 for the return of stolen goods. While he was eventually cleared of any criminal wrongdoing, a select committee of the Chicago City Council recommended he be censured.
Newt Gingrich (R-GA) was one of the leaders of the calls for the expulsion of Crane and Studds. At the beginning of the debate, Rep. Crane said, "I want the members to know I am sorry and that I apologize to one and all." When he was called to be censured, Rep.
BBC presenter Jonathan Ross was required to apologize on air for the expletives used by Collins and Johnny Borrell of Razorlight and vowed to give them a "talking to". The offensive language used by performers at the event and broadcast live before the watershed caused the BBC to be censured by media regulator Ofcom.
During a California Association for Behavior Analysis conference in 2018, Malott gave a keynote address in which he used derogatory gender-based and race-based language. Following the conference, the ABAI released a statement condemning the address. A change.org petition calling for Malott to be censured was started shortly after, and amassed over 2,500 signatures.
Murphy told his American monsignor who was serving as Murphy's secretary during the meeting, "Write down that he said Pius XI was feeble-minded." The archbishop, worried he would be censured for the remark, simply walked out. Murphy was free to go. The quest by the church to discover the true identity of "Xavier Rynne" continued.
The video for the latter was very controversial as it showed a woman masturbating on a bed for the whole length of the song. The video’s director Cristian ‘Titán’ Pozo hit back against the critics by commenting that it is possible to see images of dead people on television but one showing masturbation had to be censured.
Browne, pp. 24–25. He wrote to his friends Francis Cottington and Thomas Wentworth enlisting their support for this new proposal, admitting the impression his abandonment of Avalon might make in England: "I shall rayse a great deal of talke and discourse and be censured by most men of giddiness and levity [sic]".Letter to Wentworth. Krugler, p. 102.
He subsequently apologized, adding "on occasion my mouth gets ahead of my brain". Nunziata wrote an open letter to the city's integrity commissioner, asking that Moscoe be censured for his comments.Jeff Gray, "'Sexist' slammed", The Globe and Mail, March 31, 2006, A13. See "It's Miller's time in pages of Vanity Fair", The Globe and Mail, April 8, 2006, A12.
Censure, a lesser punishment which represents a formal statement of disapproval, has been more common in the 19th century. Although censure carries no formal punishment, only one senator (Benjamin R. Tillman) of the nine to be censured has ever been re-elected. Unlike the House of Representatives, which also disciplines by reprimand, a censure is the weakest form of discipline the Senate issues.
He nevertheless recognised the necessity of appeasing their wrath by inflicting a severe punishment on Gookin. The offence, he declared, would bear a "deep fine", and Gookin, being "a very rich man", was well able to pay it. Order was accordingly given by the king and council "to find out and transmit this audacious knight" to be censured in the council chamber. cits Strafford, Letters, i.
In case of refusal, Eric would be censured by the Church. This did not have the desired effect, and in 1210 Sverker invaded Sweden in an attempt to reconquer the throne. However, he was defeated in the Battle of Gestilren in July 1210. This time Sverker was killed at the hands of Folke Jarl and his party; however, Folke was also slain together with many Folkungs.
The senate must convene by 1:30 pm each day a session is scheduled. Two thirds of the senators must be present for the session to begin. Senators must be present at each session unless they are explicitly excused by the president-pro-tempore. Members who are not present can be forced to attend the session or be censured and expelled from the body.
Any member of the Senate or House of Representatives found guilty disorderly behavior or neglect of duty can be censured or impeached. Any member can be pardoned for any words that he may have said during a general session. Any member can also be pardoned of any crime while he is away on their respective house sessions, unless the crime includes any form of treason, felony, or breach of peace.
Stiftsbasilika in Waldsassen J. B. Steane reviewed the soundtrack of the film on CD in Gramophone in December 1991. The disc's opening item, he wrote, Ave verum corpus, was "lovingly played, seamlessly sung". Leonard Bernstein's conducting of it was remarkable tender, yet also at times forceful – his response to Mozart's crescendos and decrescendos was "ready and one might almost say eager". This was not something that deserved to be censured.
Cobbett's Parliamentary History of England, Commons 5 George II, 1099. Viscount Percy, wondered whether he would be censured, having allowed his son to remain cashier during the frauds, particularly as the son's post was worth £600 per year to him despite the salary being only £150. Robinson was paying £100, evidently to hide his roguery.Diary of Viscount Percival (afterwards 1st Earl of Egmont) I (Historical Manuscripts Commission, 1920), 270.
Billot's support for the deeply conservative movement Action Française eventually created tension between him and the Holy See. Pope Pius XI believed that the movement used Catholicism for its own political ends and placed the movement's newspaper on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum which meant that it was banned from all Catholic homes. Billot expressed strong disagreement with the decision, saying that the political activities of monarchist Catholics ought not to be censured by Rome.TIME Magazine.
Livingston as a major loss for anti-abortion advocates, ALRANZ welcomed the ruling for upholding women's access to abortion services. WONAAC also successfully appealed to the Medical Practitioners' Disciplinary Committee for Wall to be censured on the grounds that he had violated patient confidentiality. Wall was also fined NZ$1,500. While Wall had the censure revoked, the Medical Council found him liable for professional misconduct and added $500 in costs to the original amount.
359-79 However, against eighteen insubordinate priests, professors of theology at Pontifical Catholic University of Chile, and the ensuing conspiracy of silence practiced by the Chilean Episcopate, which had to be censured by the Nuncio in Santiago at the behest of Cardinal Gabriel-Marie Garrone, prefect of the Congregation for Catholic Education, triggering eventually a media conflict with , Plinio Corrêa de Oliveira expressed his affliction with the lamentations of Jeremiah: "O ye all that pass through the way…" ().
At a pro-choice rally outside the Supreme Court in March 2020, Schumer stated "I want to tell you Gorsuch, I want to tell you Kavanaugh, you have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. You won't know what hit you if you go forward with these awful decisions". Chief Justice John Roberts subsequently issued a statement describing Schumer's comments as "threatening", "inappropriate" and "dangerous". Senator Josh Hawley also moved a motion calling for Schumer to be censured.
The most extensive estate they possessed in one place was 'the Nouneclose,' consisting of 216 acres. The house seems to have been dissolved soon after 31 July 1537, when the inventory was made. There was a prioress and three nuns, and none were accused by the commissioners in their notorious “Black Book”.In 1536 the agents of King Henry VIII wrote in a black book the names of those to be censured or punished, specifically "sinful" English monasteries (whose lands Henry wanted to acquire).
Epiphanius asked John, the bishop of Jerusalem to condemn Origen as a heretic. John refused on the grounds that a person could not be retroactively condemned as a heretic after the person had already died. In 393, a monk named Atarbius advanced a petition to have Origen and his writings to be censured. Tyrannius Rufinus, a priest at the monastery on the Mount of Olives who had been ordained by John of Jerusalem and was a longtime admirer of Origen, rejected the petition outright.
The municipalities of Rötsweiler- Nockenthal, Siesbach, Gerach, Veitsrodt, Kirschweiler, Hettenrodt and Mackenrodt were each to receive an offer of amalgamation. The district administration in Birkenfeld then got involved, and it was decided by the district assembly (Kreistag) that Idar-Oberstein's amalgamation policy, which was deemed to be reckless, should be censured. Since a certain disenchantment with all these amalgamations had meanwhile set in both in the outlying centres and in the town of Idar-Oberstein itself, all further initiatives either got nowhere or were shelved.
Epiphanius asked John, the bishop of Jerusalem to condemn Origen as a heretic. John refused on the grounds that a person could not be retroactively condemned as a heretic after the person had already died. In 393, a monk named Atarbius advanced a petition to have Origen and his writings to be censured. Tyrannius Rufinus, a priest at the monastery on the Mount of Olives who had been ordained by John of Jerusalem and was a longtime admirer of Origen, rejected the petition outright.
In the season 9 episode "Cold", Donnelly calls Novak to her office and informed her that she would be censured and suspended for possibly a year or more for violating Brady rules. Novak asks her what she should do, and Donnelly replies, "Something else." In the season 10 episode "Persona", Donnelly takes a leave of absence from her role as a judge to act as prosecutor on a cold case she was involved with in the 1970s, when a battered woman (Brenda Blethyn) murdered her husband. She admits to Det.
A second argument advanced here asserts that censures that are merely "scandalous", "offensive to pious ears" or "seductive of simple minds" strongly depend upon a particular context of certain historical or cultural circumstances. A proposition that causes scandal or offense when it is advanced within a particular context "may not necessarily be so noxious under different circumstances." Even if a proposition is essentially true but poorly worded or advanced in a particular context with the intent of provoking scandal or offense, it may be censured as "scandalous" or "offensive to pious ears".
The court martial on 9 March 1805 ordered Layman to be reprimanded severely and sentenced him to loss of seniority. The court martial minutes include a note by an Admiralty official that, "Their Lordships are of the opinion that Captain Layman is not a fit person to be entrusted with the command of one of H.M.'s ships." There was one member of the court martial who was particularly adamant the Layman be censured. Layman may have annoyed some senior officers with his outspoken suggestions for improvements to the Navy and its ships.
The original, he claimed, was in the handwriting of Laud's secretary, William Dell, and it was addressed to Nathaniel Brent. In this Laud appeared to prejudice the visitation by singling out Richard Lee. :And that you take speciall notice of one Mr Lee, a Prebend there who hath been the Author of much disorder thereabouts, And if you can fasten upon any thing, whereby he may justly be censured, pray see it be done, and home, or bring him to the High Commission Court to answer it there, &c.
Meanwhile, the Alliance for Chile requested the creation of an investigative commission regarding the corruption in the Chamber of Deputies. The commission was originally headed by Nicolás Monckeberg, of the opposition, but the Concertación members of the commission requested that Monckeberg be censured for his supposedly "overagressive" interrogation of the chairman of Chiledeportes, Catalina Depassier. Monckeberg denied that he mistreated Depassier and the Alliance accused the Concertación of trying to halt the investigations. When Monckeberg was finally replaced by Enrique Jaramillo (a member of the Concertación), the Alliance withdrew from the commission in protest.
To remedy this fact, Shirky states that media companies now tried to break consumer's computer hardware to create the illusion that the media they purchased was indeed uncopyable. Whereas DMCA was "surgical," SOPA is "nuclear" since the law stipulates any sites pointing to "illegal" content may be censored. Ultimately, Shirky points out the public- at-large is by far the largest producers of content and they are the ones which will be censured. They will be presumed guilty until they can prove the content they published is not illegal.
On 25 November 1615, the Inquisition decided to investigate the Letters on Sunspots because it had been mentioned by Tommaso Caccini and Gianozzo Attavanti in their complaint about Galileo.William R. Shea & Mariano Artigas, Galileo in Rome, OUP 2003 p.62 Copies of the text were issued to the Inquisition's theological experts on 19 February 1616. On the morning of 23 February they met and agreed two propositions to be censured (that the Sun is the centre of the world, and that the Earth is not the centre of the world, but moves).
Speaker Romanoff and Minority Leader May convened a bipartisan six-member panel to investigate and made recommendations concerning the incident; on Friday, January 18, the panel recommended 6-0 that Bruce be censured by the House for his actions, and 5-1 that a formal apology be requested from Bruce. Although Manzano testified before the panel, he declined to press criminal charges against Bruce. Romanoff elected to pursue the censure recommendation, and, on January 24, the full House of Representatives voted 62-1 (with only Rep. Kevin Lundberg opposed) to censure Bruce.
Collins's use of the word "fuck" in the song (which he had done since 1992) in front of millions of television viewers at 2pm resulted in an apology from British presenter Jonathan Ross, who vowed to give Collins a "talking to", though some questioned his sincerity. Collins was one of several performers at the event whose offensive language caused the BBC to be censured by the media regulator Ofcom. The song has never been performed in its original key in concert. On initial tours, the song was tuned down a half-step to prevent strain on Collins' voice.
Hays did not inform his colleagues on council of the announcement, besides Alderman Jack Leslie, and would be censured by in a following council meeting. Despite the rebuke by his peers, Hays was defiant noting "You will be getting these projects from me as long as I am in the chair (Mayor)", to which his fellow councillors reacted by capitulation to the comments, recognizing the power and influence Hays held. The CPR redevelopment scheme would eventually fail to materialize by June 1964. Harry Hays would also prove to be an ardent supporter of the Calgary Municipal Airport and its continued growth.
Plenary hall of the conference building Major debate centered around the question of whether Soviet policies in Eastern Europe and Central Asia should be censured along with Western colonialism. A memo was submitted by 'The Moslem Nations under Soviet Imperialism', accusing the Soviet authorities of massacres and mass deportations in Muslim regions, but it was never debated. A consensus was reached in which "colonialism in all of its manifestations" was condemned, implicitly censuring the Soviet Union, as well as the West. China played an important role in the conference and strengthened its relations with other Asian nations.
On December 7, the Hartford Courant's editorial page called on Gaffey to be censured for his role in this affair, despite a letter from the Office of State Ethics refuting all conflict of interest allegations. Both Gaffey and Rennie had stories in the December 9, 2007, Courant. Gaffey said there had been nothing improper in his relationship with the university lobbyist, citing his record of support for state colleges. Rennie's article alleged self-dealing by Gaffey, including getting Final Four basketball tickets from the university at a low price and using his political action committee to pay personal expenses.
Brands observes that Jackson's reputation declined after the mid-20th century as his actions towards Indians and African Americans received new attention. After the Civil Rights Movement, Brand writes, "his unrepentant ownership of slaves marked him as one to be censured rather than praised." Further, "By the turn of the present [21st] century, it was scarcely an exaggeration to say that the one thing American schoolchildren learned about Jackson was that he was the author of the Trail of Tears." Starting mainly around 1970, Jackson came under sharp attack from historians for his Indian removal policies.
Robson's defence was that his allegations of corruption should not be interpreted as allegations against any individuals, but rather as allegations of general maladministration and disregard for the principles of good government. The Select Committee's report, presented on 13 June, found that Robson's statements reflected on the character of Members, and found no evidence of the alleged corruption. The question of the validity of Robson's defence was left to the House. Following the presentation of the Committee's report, Charles Moran gave notice of motion for the following day, declaring that Robson should be censured by the Speaker unless he gave an "unqualified withdrawal of the charges".
Following the revelation that Prime Minister Golding had sanctioned the initiative for the Jamaica Labour Party to hire US lobbying firm Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, and his handling of the extradition request for Christopher "Dudus" Coke, members and groups of civil society, church groups and political parties called for his resignation. With the backing of his party, the Prime Minister maintained that he would continue his term as Prime Minister. This prompted the opposition People's National Party to table a motion of no confidence. The opposition leader, Portia Simpson-Miller, led the debate in Parliament outlining the arguments for Golding's removal from office and moving that he be censured.
Robert David Steele, a former intelligence officer associated with the open- source intelligence movement, issued a press release praising McCarthy's actions in leaking information, stating that "There is absolutely no question that Mary acted in the finest traditions of the Republic, helping reveal and reduce terrible violations of international law and human rights by the CIA." Steele added, "Mary McCarthy should accept her firing with pride—she served the Republic, and has been fired by individuals who will eventually be censured if not impeached. America owes her a vote of thanks.""OSS CEO Praises Mary McCarthy, Calls for Censure of DNI & DCI", PRNewswire via yahoo.
Garland was ordered to bring a suit in the name of the United States to invalidate the Bell patent, breaking their monopoly of telephone technology, but refused to do so. However, while Garland was on vacation in the summer, Solicitor General John Goode authorized the suit. A year-long congressional investigation and constant public attention affected his work as Attorney General, however, despite having to serve under a cloud of suspicion, he was supported by President Cleveland. Garland was also the first, and to date only, United States cabinet secretary to be censured by Congress when, in 1886, Garland failed to provide documents about the firing of a United States Attorney.
The Wall Street Journal opined against Hall's impeachment in a May 11, 2014 op-ed. Although the committee left open the possibility of revisiting impeachment, an August 11, 2014, vote passed 6–1 to recommend that Hall be censured, bringing a close to the more than year-long process. In response to the censure vote, Governor of Texas Rick Perry issued a statement defending Hall's actions, saying that he believed his appointee acted in the best interest of Texas. Meanwhile, UT System chancellor Francisco Cigarroa asked UT Austin President Bill Powers to resign or face termination at the July 10, 2014, The University of Texas System Board of Regents meeting.
Bruce be censured for his actions. The censure resolution passed 62-1. Mr. McNulty introduced legislation that eliminated antiquated rules for the submission of development plats, increased transparency in campaign contributions, increased a focus on the use and availability of hydroelectricity, required that those registering to vote show proof of citizenship first, and made state funding available for Colorado National Guardsmen attending state colleges and universities. He also addressed minimum bond requirements designed to keep drug dealers off the streets and pushed for divestment of state pension funds from companies doing business in Iran, a move which led to new rules governing Colorado's Public Employees Retirement Association investments.
This is done in order to remove all personal responsibility on part of the King, in keeping with Article 5 of the Constitution, which states that, "The King's person is sacred; he cannot be censured or accused. The responsibility rests with his Council". Another feature of this system is that the King, when having sanctioned a decision, is referred to as King-in-Council (Norwegian: Kongen i statsråd), meaning the King as well as his council. According to the Constitution, certain cases, such as appointments and dismissals of higher office, pardons, provisional measures, church ordinances and ratifications of treaties must be administered by the Council of State.
The party directorate subsequently recommended that McClintock, Parga, and de Castro Font be expelled from the Party, and that Arce, Padilla, and Díaz be censured and prohibited to run for re-election under the party's flag or logo. However, in August 2005 the party's General Assembly only took action to expel de Castro Font, leaving the status of McClintock and the other four senators in limbo after approving in August 2006 a generic censure resolution that did not name any officeholders by name. The sanctions were nullified by San Juan Superior Court Judge Oscar Dávila Suliveres on May 8, 2007. The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, in a 5-to-1 decision, affirmed the lower court decision.
Ervin was serving as an associate justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court when he was appointed in June 1954 by Governor William B. Umstead to fill the U.S. Senate seat of Clyde Hoey, who had died in office. He ran successfully for the seat in November 1954. Ervin made a deep impact on American history through his work on two separate committees at the beginning and ending of his career that were critical in bringing down two powerful opponents: Senator Joe McCarthy in 1954 and President Richard M. Nixon in 1974. In 1954, then-Vice President Richard Nixon appointed Ervin to a committee formed to investigate whether McCarthy should be censured by the Senate.
He notes that "her lifelong involvement with charitable work and her deep commitment to the public good was, and continues to be, a true testament of good leadership." In December 2017, it was reported that Victor Oh accepted trips to China paid for by the Chinese government or pro-Beijing business groups. In February 2020, the Senate's ethics watchdog found that Victor Oh the broke conflict of interest and ethics code by accepting and then failing to disclose an all- expenses-paid trip to China for himself and two other senators. On June 18, the Senate Ethics and Conflict of Interest Committee recommended that Oh be censured, and asked for him to apologize to the Senate.
Billson apologised to the Clerk of the House for the omission, but claimed his directorship was not concealed and there was no conflict of interest. Although cleared of breaching ministerial guidelines, an inquiry conducted by the House of Representatives' Standing Committee of Privileges and Members' Interests recommended in March 2018 that Billson be censured for failing to disclose receiving a salary for the FCA, and for undertaking work for the organisation through his consultancy business before leaving parliament. The Committee's report stated that Billson's "decision to accept the role with FCA while he was a member falls below the standards expected of a member of the house". On 27 March the House of Representatives passed a motion censuring Billson.
Senator Joseph McCarthy, one of ten U.S. Senators to be censured The U.S. Senate has developed procedures for taking disciplinary action against senators through such measures as formal censure or actual expulsion from the Senate. The Senate has two basic forms of punishment available to it: expulsion, which requires a two-thirds vote; or censure, which requires a majority vote. Censure is a formal statement of disapproval. While censure (sometimes referred to as condemnation or denouncement) is less severe than expulsion in that it does not remove a senator from office, it is nevertheless a formal statement of disapproval that can have a powerful psychological effect on a member and on that member's relationships in the Senate.
Agroecius was a 6th-century bishop of Antibes, and the addressee of one of the extant letters of the ecclesiastic Caesarius of Arles. As one of the most senior bishops in the province, he was the subject of some discussion at the Council of Carpentras in 527, as it was said he had ordained a cleric named Protadius who had not first undergone the required year of probation (conversus) as dictated by the Council of Arles (524). Agroecius did not attend the council, but was defended by the priest Catafronius in his stead. Nevertheless, it was determined that he should be censured, and he was forbidden from saying mass for one year.
McCarthy's wild and often false attacks against various government officials for being communist, including at one point targeting fellow Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower, eventually led him to be censured by his colleagues in the Senate in 1954, and also led to the creation of the term McCarthyism. By this point, public opinion throughout the country had generally turned against him. Back at home, the state Republicans' dominance of Wisconsin politics began to wane during the second half of the 20th century, with the party now regularly alternating and sharing control with the state's Democrats. Several Republican governors were elected during this time, most prominently Walter J. Kohler, Jr. and Warren P. Knowles, both of whom were of the more moderate wing of the party.
Directive 2004/48/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the enforcement of intellectual property rights (also known as "(IPR) Enforcement Directive" or "IPRED") is a European Union directive in the field of intellectual property law, made under the Single Market provisions of the Treaty of Rome. The directive covers civil remedies only—not criminal ones. Under Article 3(1), Members States can be censured in the European Court of Justice if their civil procedures on the infringement of intellectual property rights are "unnecessarily complicated or costly, or entail unreasonable time- limits or unwarranted delays". Otherwise the Directive harmonises the rules on standing, evidence, interlocutory measures, seizure and injunctions, damages and costs and judicial publication.
On 29 August 2008, Peters offered to stand down from his portfolios as Foreign Affairs and Racing Minister, pending an investigation by the Serious Fraud Office as to whether the donations from Sir Bob Jones and the Vela brothers reached New Zealand First as intended. On 10 September 2008, Winston Peters gave evidence to the Privileges Committee of the New Zealand Parliament in an attempt to refute evidence given by Owen Glenn. The Privileges Committee returned a report on 22 September recommending that Peters be censured for "knowingly providing false or misleading information on a return of pecuniary interests".Report of the Privileges Committee into Peters allegations, New Zealand Parliament, September 2008 Parliament passed a motion censuring Peters the following day.
According to Clarricoates' previously stated observations, the terms applied to boys imply positive masculine behavior, meanwhile the categories used for girls are more derogatory. This difference in teachers' reactions to similar behaviors can again be seen as contributing to the development of gender stereotyped behaviors in young pupils. Another element of linguistic sexism that Clarricoates identifies is the difference in the treatment of male and female pupils' use of "improper language" by their teachers; girls tended to be censured more harshly compared to boys, due to unconscious biases about gender appropriate behavior. While girls were deemed as "unladylike" for using "rough" speech, the same speech uttered by their male counterparts was regarded as a part of normal masculine behavior, and they were thus admonished less harshly.
Some legislators on the transparency committee sent a letter requesting that the Board of Regents delay any personnel decisions regarding Powers or other witnesses from the impeachment hearings. In a July 2014 op-ed, the Wall Street Journal commented that Powers' resignation would bring more attention and scrutiny to the political favoritism scandals at The University of Texas at Austin. The editorial board wrote: "The voters seem to understand, even if some legislators don't, that college admissions are supposed to be based on merit, not political connections." Although the committee left open the possibility of revisiting impeachment, an August 11, 2014 vote passed 6–1 to recommend that Hall be censured, bringing a close to the more than year-long process.
On 22 September, the committee determined that Peters had "provided misleading information" and recommended he be censured; this was done by the House of Representatives in a 62–56 vote two days later. The second allegation revolved around the party's failure to declare the use of a secret trust to funnel large donations into New Zealand First's bank account, even though no donations over $10,000 to New Zealand First has been declared, as the law requires. This case was referred to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation; on 11 October, New Zealand First was cleared of charges that Peters called a "waste of time" and on 24 October, New Zealand First was cleared of wrongdoing by the Electoral Commission, which was investigating donations that the party failed to declare.
Joseph Raymond McCarthy (November 14, 1908 – May 2, 1957) was an American politician who served as a Republican U.S. Senator from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death in 1957. Beginning in 1950, McCarthy became the most visible public face of a period in the United States in which Cold War tensions fueled fears of widespread communist subversion. For a history of this period, see, for example: ; He is known for alleging that numerous communists and Soviet spies and sympathizers had infiltrated the United States federal government, universities, film industry, and elsewhere. Ultimately, the smear tactics that he used led him to be censured by the U.S. Senate. The term "McCarthyism", coined in 1950 in reference to McCarthy's practices, was soon applied to similar anti-communist activities.
Henderson agreed to be censured; the Office of Government Ethics chose not to impose a fine. On April 12, 2017, the D.C. Office of the Inspector General (OIG) found that Henderson gave preferential treatment to some city officials and members of the public by granting permission for their children to enroll in schools outside the normal attendance boundaries. Henderson defended her actions, noting that District law gives the chancellor the sole discretionary authority to approve out-of-boundary registrations and that she granted only a limited number of registrations and only when circumstances warranted it. Henderson approved transfers for Rashad Young, the City Administrator, and Courtney Snowden, the Deputy Mayor for Economic Development, but declined the request from a Vietnamese family with a deaf child who sought to attend a school with sign language instruction.
Bruce also demanded to be sworn in in front of the full house, a request denied by both Republican and Democratic leadership. He acquiesced to an individual swearing- in ceremony on January 14 after House Republicans voted 22-1 to call for a representative to be named for District 15 if Bruce did not take the oath of office by the end of the day. On the morning before he was sworn in, Bruce kicked a Rocky Mountain News photographer who took Bruce's picture during the prayer; Bruce accused the photographer of "violating the order and decorum" of the house, and refused to apologize, describing his action instead as a "nudge or a tap." A six-member legislative panel recommended 6-0 that Bruce be censured by the House for his actions.
Although Franken had asked to be allowed to appear before the Senate Ethics Committee to give his side of the story, on December 6 Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer told him he had to announce his resignation by five o’clock or could be censured and stripped of committee assignments. On December 7, Franken announced his intention to resign his Senate seat. He called some of the accusations "simply not true" and said he remembered others "very differently". In his resignation speech he made comparisons to Republican politicians, saying he was "aware of the irony" that President Trump remained in office despite the comments Trump made in the Access Hollywood tape released a month before his election, and that the Republican Party supported Roy Moore's Senate campaign despite the many allegations of harassment and molestation against Moore.
After the interview was published, and following backlash from across the political spectrum, King issued a statement via Twitter stating that he was "simply a Nationalist", that he did not advocate for "white nationalism and white supremacy", and that "I want to make one thing abundantly clear: I reject those labels and the evil ideology they define." King said that The New York Times misunderstood his comments, and that he did not question why "white nationalist" and "white supremacist" were offensive terms. On Twitter he later stated: "As I told The New York Times, 'it's not about race; It's never been about race'." The House voted 416–1 to rebuke King's comments; Illinois Representative Bobby Rush was the lone "nay" vote, but only because he believed a rebuke was too lenient and that King deserved to be censured.
Censure is an action by the House of Commons or the Senate rebuking the actions or conduct of an individual. The power to censure is not directly mentioned in the constitutional texts of Canada but is derived from the powers bestowed upon both Chambers through section 18 of the Constitution Act, 1867. A motion of censure can be introduced by any Member of Parliament or Senator and passed by a simple majority for censure to be deemed to have been delivered. In addition, if the censure is related to the privileges of the Chamber, the individual in question could be summoned to the bar of the House or Senate (or, in the case of a sitting member, to that member's place in the chamber) to be censured, and could also face other sanctions from the house, including imprisonment.
Chicago, Illinois: Encyclopaedia Britannica. Elsewhere he emphasises this point by saying that 'the commands of them that have the right to command are not by their subjects to be censured nor disputed.'Hobbes, Leviathan, Part II, Chapter XX, p. 112 John Locke believed in the precondition that the right of violent insurrection could only be retained by those challenging tyranny, stipulating 'that force is to be opposed to nothing but to unjust and unlawful force'.Locke, Concerning Civil Government, Chapter XVIII, Section 204, p. 72 The right of revolution only gave a people the right to rebel against unjust rule, not any rule: 'whoever, either ruler or subject, by force goes about to invade the rights of either prince or people, and lays the foundation for overturning the constitution and frame of any just government, he is guilty of the greatest crime I think a man is capable of'.Locke, Concerning Civil Government, Chapter XIX, Section 230, p.
Brenton was in Boston by October 1633 when he was admitted to the church there, was made a freeman in May 1634, and later the same year was appointed to oversee the building of a jail house. He was a Boston selectman from 1634 to 1637, and in 1635 was appointed to a committee to consider the incident when Massachusetts magistrate John Endecott defaced the English flag, and to report to the court to what extent Endecott would be censured. Brenton was a Deputy in Boston from 1635 to 1637, but following the settlement of Portsmouth on Aquidneck Island (called Rhode Island) by the followers of Anne Hutchinson, he became a resident there, and in late August 1638 was directed to oversee work on the prison. It appears that Brenton was not a follower of Hutchinson, or of her brother-in-law John Wheelwright, as he was not disarmed, and he also returned to live in Boston at a later time.
"Autumn Day in Kui Prefecture" is a poem by 8th-century Chinese poet Du Fu (712–770). The full title of this poem is Autumn Day in Kui Prefecture, A Song Submitted to Supervisor Zheng and Advisor Li, in One Hundred Rhymes (according to title translation by Alfreda Murck). As a poem, "Autumn Day in Kui Prefecture" is an example of Tang poetry, which received considerable attention during the Song dynasty, in Song poetry, and later, even through modern times. During the Song dynasty Du Fu's "Autumn Day in Kui Prefecture" received particular attention, with the poem being subtly alluded to through rhyme-scheme referencing by Su Shi and his circle: in other words, Su Shi and the poets of his circle wrote poems which utilized the same rhyming words from Du Fu's poem, thus subtly referencing the sense and sentiment of Du Fu's line, but without overtly stating what might be censured as inappropriate.
The current constitutional system acquires a presidential character; highlighting on all the members of the Council the Prime Minister, who is the true center of parliamentary confidence and who exercises the political direction. The parliamentary system obliges the government to have at all times the confidence of the parliament and, in fact, the legislator established a constructive vote of no confidence to avoid the fall of the government without having another to allow the stability of the system. The role of the premier as the main character is evident in so far as it only concerns him to propose a vote of confidence to Parliament, only he can be censured by Congress and it is he, and not the government, who can present an appeal of unconstitutionality, among other faculties; or that if the premier dies or ceases, the government ceases with him. We are, then, back to the principles established in the Constitution of the Second Republic since the prime minister is not a simple primus inter pares.

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