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"deferential" Definitions
  1. deferential (towards somebody) showing that you respect somebody/something, especially somebody older or more senior than you

644 Sentences With "deferential"

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

According to our statistical analysis, with respect to both strategy and tactics, conservatives were more deferential to the military than liberals, older respondents were more deferential than younger ones, hawks were more deferential than doves, and men were more deferential than women.
Yachty is deferential around Lee, but Lee, rather touchingly, finds ways to be deferential to Yachty, too.
"Courts can be deferential on national security, but they tend to be more deferential when there's an emergency," he said.
Overall, respondents who were deferential on questions of tactics were very likely to be deferential on questions of strategy: Respondents' views were in agreement 71% of the time.
We do not have to be deferential to that degree.
Trump had long been deferential toward Mattis, saying on Sept.
The majority opinion "distorts the deferential Batson inquiry," he wrote.
The official response in South Korea has been more deferential.
They were as polite and deferential as teammates could be.
Following the committee's vote, Trump cast a more deferential tone.
Deferential to the privileged, including the man who chose him.
I understand why you were deferential in 2017 and 2018.
It is deferential, humbled and in touch with the gods.
But Obama's recovery program was extremely deferential to Republican financial priorities.
Bear in mind, too, a changing, less deferential, mood from below.
In public, Mr. Davutoglu has largely been deferential to Mr. Erdogan.
There was no reason for anyone to be deferential to him.
"Women have to sound 'womanly' — caring, maybe deferential, soft," she said.
"The Speaker has been very deferential to the Chairman," said Rep.
But he's very much deferential and isn't seeking attention or power.
The language in that 212(f) authority is very, very deferential.
Asked about the country's weak testing protocols, Wlaschin was surprisingly deferential.
Or a mostly deferential Republican in a capital full of them?
Even places hostile to L.G.B.T.Q. locals are often deferential to visitors.
Her voice at times was high, her manner deferential, even solicitous.
But navigation systems are deferential to the authorities; algorithms are squares.
Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia are no longer deferential to the Kremlin.
Here is a Mr. Haggard not often heard: lovestruck, sweet, deferential.
The judiciary is generally deferential toward the executive's claims of privilege.
Pete was relatively quiet and deferential; Chasten was funny and animated.
Democrats had been more deferential to the Fed's judgment under Yellen.
The White House aides have plenty of ideas but are largely deferential.
Indeed some people believe Facebook is being overly deferential to conservative voices.
But she is deferential to the state that protected her in 1980.
We hear Trump has cooled on McMaster because he's not sufficiently deferential.
For once, the people refused to play the role of deferential children.
He became increasingly deferential, stepping down to let me take the lead.
President Donald Trump, meanwhile, is becoming an increasingly deferential ally to Netanyahu.
But Trump may like Shanahan for one simple reason: He's very deferential.
And why should they have to be more deferential than anyone else?
Many were schooled under strict Soviet regimes and are still deferential towards teachers.
In short, this shy, deferential, uncharismatic man invented New Orleans rock and roll.
In many shows, these characters remain static: funny and deferential to their superiors.
However, in public and to the press, Mattis was unfailingly deferential to Trump.
The top court has been deferential to the president's authority in immigration matters.
Some deferential French people may say they want the guidance of their immortels.
AND I THINK -- AND I WANT TO BE VERY DEFERENTIAL TO THEIR PROCESS.
Britain is a much less deferential and rigid country than it was then.
Beside him, four aides nodded and pressed together their palms in deferential emphasis.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis was seen as deferential to the chain of command.
Administration officials dismissed the notion that the deferential vice president was upstaging Trump.
"We want to be deferential," one of the group's organizers, Maine Republican Sen.
Amazon was long accustomed to highly deferential treatment from localities across the country.
Service was old-fashioned and deferential, and swing music drifted from hidden speakers.
Wealthier respondents were also more deferential, as were veterans of the US armed forces.
Overall, it was a deferential and apologetic performance that didn't feature any major gaffes.
Like electorates elsewhere, today's Britons are less deferential and tribal than they once were.
This deferential attitude solidified quite some time ago and is not particularly shakable today.
But the British press, always more deferential to royal sensitivities, has not aired them.
They should not be deferential at all when it comes to the confirmation process.
Google has, in essence, been too deferential to everybody else in the Android ecosystem.
Her prospective husband was well dressed, deferential to her parents, inquisitive about her interests.
Some Senate Republicans, however, worry that Ryan's successor will be more deferential to Trump.
During confirmation to a lower court, he promised to be deferential to the precedent.
While the building will dominate the skyline, it is more deferential on the street.
So I'd be more deferential to Paul, and what Paul wants me to do.
The president-elect was deferential and gracious as the media entered the Oval Office.
Over the years, this deferential circle of correspondents became his most important sounding board.
And Barack Obama faced constant, scurrilous accusations of being too deferential to foreign rulers.
But the national intelligence director struck a more deferential tone in his Saturday statement.
Pinto sees most soccer journalists as deferential to the sport's powerful broadcasters and sponsors.
As for Gorsuch himself, he's a rather standard right-of-center, religiously deferential judge.
Nancy Cook: President Trump is being very, very deferential to the Senate right now.
Nicola Luisotti's stylish but deferential conducting just called more attention to Mr. Grigolo's volatility.
The most deferential standard requires only a "reasonable" relationship to a legitimate government interest.
All ISPs know that Pai and his cronies are deferential to what the industry wants.
No more business as usual, no more deferential or courteous acceptance of these phony platitudes.
Senators are typically extremely deferential to their colleagues who are up for an administration position.
Tribulation is deferential to extreme metal's traditions, but is also hungry to elevate the genre.
Despite this multilevel success, or perhaps because of it, Byrne remains resolutely curious and deferential.
DOJ's new sentencing filing is quite deferential to Flynn, especially compared to its last one.
While Tuesday's Senate hearing contained tough questions, the lawmakers were generally deferential to the executive.
Today's sceptics also use the word to denounce Westerners who seem excessively deferential to Islam.
She must be smart yet deferential, firm yet perpetually pleasant, and competent yet self-deprecating.
Second, everyone has both rebellious and deferential tendencies in different measure and in different contexts.
Trump was gracious and deferential as he met with survivors, doctors, nurses and first responders.
The movie can be frustratingly deferential toward Watson, but it is never less than urgent.
Its vision of development based on harmonious rural life and a deferential hierarchy is fantasy.
As the newcomer in the room, Manafort was deferential but also pointed in his observations.
Trump, willing to denigrate just about any world leader, has been eerily deferential to Putin.
Biden was largely deferential in his speech and appeared to offer Sanders an off-ramp.
While Dr. Blasey was deferential, even solicitous, Judge Kavanaugh was bristling with outrage and grievance.
On Mexico, private frustration and confrontation Trump's interactions with world leaders are not always deferential.
Supportive, deferential and someone who wasn't afraid to try and keep the president in check.
In her testimony before the committee, she was calm, even-tempered and at times deferential.
"The culture of the workplace is in many ways deferential to employer decisions," he said.
Mike Pence The vice president is all smiles, nods and quiet, deferential loyalty in public.
There's no question that Kavanaugh's highly deferential and empathetic when it comes to presidential power.
He seemed deferential, almost reverent, something I'd come to learn was true of most clients.
The reason Trump likes Shanahan, though, may come down to one very simple thing: He's deferential.
Traditionally less deferential to front-runners than Republicans, Democrats have repeatedly held wide-open nomination fights.
It's expensive and unwieldy and yields binding decisions entitled only to deferential review by the courts.
Another worry about the new court is that it may be too deferential to executive power.
Pliant researchers provided shoddy science; deferential regulators at the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) bought it.
And yet, until very late in Monday's game, the Raptors' play felt deferential to the Cavs.
But an overly deferential standard unreasonably limits a court's discretion to look more closely when appropriate.
These contributions back up Mr Romer's complaints about economics, but not his gibes about deferential economists.
The end result of so many distinct talents of similar value is a smooth, deferential approach.
Until then Congress had been largely deferential to Nixon's and Lyndon Johnson's conduct of the war.
Perhaps Mr. van Zweden was trying too hard to be supportive and deferential to his singers.
Fudge started off quiet and deferential to her elders — very much unlike the vivacious Tubbs Jones.
He is also more careful and more reserved than Mr. Cohn — and more deferential to lawmakers.
It would be one where Oman and Qatar are increasingly deferential to Iran, if not allies.
McDavid was deferential, saying the transition had gone well because of vocal teammates who contributed leadership.
Further, the analysts said, Mr. Xi did not want to appear too deferential to Mr. Trump.
"Betsy has been very polite and deferential to these Democrat senators," he wrote in an email.
The answers include: They are too busy, they are self-doubting and deferential, they fear harassment.
He bows his head, not as a deferential gesture but to indicate what lays before him.
Once in favor of keeping financiers in check, Democrats became much more deferential to the industry.
"They were transgressing the idea that black people should always be deferential to white men," Ramey said.
President Donald Trump showed Sunday where his deferential respect for military officers stops: when they criticize him.
Throughout her life, Bernhardt ignored 19th-century conventions that idealized women who were deferential, passive, and chaste.
He is the mildest-mannered of the talkative group; he leaves tantalising, sometimes deferential, pauses in conversation.
Everyone — even uber-aides Jared and Ivanka, and economic adviser Gary Cohn — is being deferential to Kelly.
When asked what it means to be the first woman to lead the Corps, she is deferential.
The defendants were deferential to the sheriff, Jerry DeWitt, whose living quarters were attached to the jail.
He has been notably deferential to executive agencies and is seen as reluctant to second-guess experts.
European governments, traditionally deferential to Volkswagen, one of the region's largest employers, have joined in as well.
She has a reputation for being deferential to prosecutors in the field rather than dictating from Washington.
The Shalane Effect dismantles it: She is extraordinarily competitive, but not petty; team-oriented, but not deferential.
It is the voice of a mild-mannered civil servant — cerebral, courtly, deferential and exquisitely self-conscious.
This practice may explain why journalists are so deferential to the tournament—it's their meal ticket, too.
In the past, the DC Circuit Court has been quite deferential to the EPA on regulatory issues.
Though McConnell has expressed support for the Mueller report's release, he's been fairly deferential to the Justice Department.
The Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum in Atlanta is deferential and understated, like the man it honors.
The editorial team's behaviour — once respectful and deferential — was now insolent and even — dare I say — anti-royal.
Bound up in the way female youth is packaged are ideas of innocence and inexperience, a deferential guilelessness.
But he and Joe Hill, his son who co-wrote this novella, are very deferential to the filmmakers.
The senior Iraqi army generals at the briefing were highly deferential, clearly the junior partners in the operation.
Trump aides and executives are unerringly deferential around him but aggressive when they do battle on his behalf.
Bush was indeed awkward in person—wooden and deferential—and his campaign was struggling out of the gate.
But then McIlroy, likable and normally deferential, addressed the worldwide news media and stomped on Olympic golf anew.
They were overly deferential, too respectful to adhere to a pecking order, swing-passing late into shot clocks.
Rosenberg admitted she had a preconceived notion that Muslim women were supposed to be solemn, conservative and deferential.
He also claimed Francis was deferential to a so-called gay "network" in the Vatican that ignored abuse.
As a general matter, then, courts are very deferential to executive action when it is endorsed by Congress.
Those lessons that begin at age 7 teaching us to be courteous and deferential are partly to blame.
KABUL, Afghanistan — The senior security official in northeastern Takhar Province was deferential when he telephoned Commander Bashir Qanet.
But in Mr. Moayed's performance, he's also an unusually well-behaved Hamlet, deferential to the point of meekness.
In response to a diversity statement, some critics accused the organizers of being deferential to left-leaning politics.
"It's fucking mindblowing ... that she has the presence of mind to be deferential to the policeman," Noah said.
Bolton's defenders argue that while he has long-held views on Iran, he is deferential to the President's views.
Ludicrously, the letter exhorts investigators to provide the accused with deferential treatment because of her many achievements and awards.
" Smeal argued Republican senators made a show out of being polite and even deferential to Ford, calling her "Dr.
The relevant question, though, is whether Trump will be incrementally less deferential to the Supreme Court or radically so.
One amazing thing about William was just how deferential and appreciative he always was about Jack's being Randall's father.
But while there were some tough questions during his hearing, senators were largely deferential and skirted the experience question.
Executives at state television channels, which are deferential to the Kremlin, controlled who had the chance to pose questions.
Sheikh Hasina, lacking a popular mandate (elections in 2014 were deeply flawed), has become increasingly deferential to religious conservatives.
The President, who arrived at University Medical Center of Southern Nevada trauma center on Wednesday, was gracious and deferential.
Q: Why was the court so deferential to corporate power and less vigorous enforcing the rights of African-Americans?
She's good at her job, and she's deferential to her new boss, a captain with a pernicious whiskey habit.
There's evidence that Kavanaugh would apply a similarly deferential and expansive view of presidential power on the Supreme Court.
It lists incidents dating back two decades in arguing that the Knoxville-based institution gave male athletes deferential treatment.
He confidently answered questions, patiently explained the same thing over and over, and was deferential yet decisive with critics.
While rejection is possible, it's just as likely that Brussels will view the time limit's deferential language as acceptable.
For Western readers, it exposes the untruths that have characterized Muslim women as deferential beings in need of rescue.
But many conservatives see little use in being deferential when, they argue, the Democrats play by no such rules.
To the Editor: Ruth Whippman contends that men need to be taught to be less assertive and more deferential.
Some liberals and mainstream media analysts have accused the president of being too deferential to Chinese President Xi Jinping.
And yet he sensed little life in Westminster, with its deferential committees and its warren of smoke-filled bars.
She had a huge smile, but her eyes were downcast, in the manner of a competent and deferential nurse.
Historically, Congress has been very deferential in exercising its immunity powers in order to avoid interfering with criminal investigations.
Speaker Ryan is notoriously deferential to his committee chairmen, and many House Republicans share Hensarling's concerns with the bill.
But it's still a standard that scholars say is quite deferential to agency preferences, once regulators do the work.
He is highly deferential to presidential power more so than Kennedy but some things have been reported incorrectly and unfairly.
If Denholm can act independently and not look deferential to Musk, that further strengthens Tesla's position in the ongoing investigation.
He contends that we ought to be less deferential and more critical and skeptical of billionaires giving away their fortunes.
Activist rulings resulting in liberal political outcomes, and, conversely, deferential rulings favouring conservative policies, are based on recent political alignments.
The Raptors were also deferential to James' dominance and the Cavaliers' standing as defending champs leading up to the series.
Republicans say Comey's conduct shows he was far more deferential to Clinton's team than he was with the Trump campaign.
"She knows how to be deferential to some of these older men, but yet still be very forceful," Robbins said.
I hope that he joins Justices Gorsuch and Thomas in a project to make judges less deferential to administrative agencies.
And when that rule is handed down, it's likely that the Court will be very deferential to public health officials.
A trivial fine would mean the government isn't just deferential to Facebook, but that it doesn't truly understand its power.
Many of them still support a deferential judiciary, but growing numbers seek control of the courts to promote conservative ends.
The two skiers, however, share some sponsors and sometimes even make appearances together, occasions when they are amiable and deferential.
This might demonstrate that Libra sees itself as deferential to the American economic system and government Facebook must answer to.
President Karzai wrote King Abdullah, who had ascended to the throne in August 2005, a deferential letter requesting his intercession.
Ms. Buechner dispatched the elaborate runs with crispness and fluidity, while Ms. Chase brought poise to the deferential violin part.
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against them last year, adopting a deferential level of review toward the city.
"Some of the black folks in southern Delaware were much more deferential in the face of white people," Howard said.
Until very recently, Asian-Americans have been politically quiescent and largely deferential to a status quo that works against them.
Throughout the travel ban cases, the Supreme Court has been a little more deferential to the administration than lower courts.
The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals reviews a district court's preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion, a limited and deferential standard.
And speaking of Sansa, he hasn't exactly been as deferential to her as he should be, considering her superior political intellect.
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) wants Congress to start working together and to stop being so deferential to President Donald Trump.
Worries over "threatened litigation over DACA's validity...was so implausible that it fails even under the deferential arbitrary and capricious standard".
He was perhaps the avatar for Obama's overall approach to domestic policy: careful, cautious, and deferential to experts and quantitative research.
Research on temporary workers has found that they are often expected to be deferential, owing to the status of their job.
But Risch is a Trump loyalist who is seen as much more likely to be deferential to the president than Corker.
Nothing like a three-hour deposition under oath to turn an excitable conspiracy theorist into a man subdued, deferential and humbled.
Mr. Trump himself has not publicly criticized the Russian arms buildup, in line with his generally deferential approach toward Mr. Putin.
In the Pool they are reserved, poised, deferential and seem to have been directed not to show any warmth or wit.
But here's the thing, courts have been very deferential to government agencies when they put the work into creating an EIS.
Our deferential relationship of the last century needs to be replaced with a mutual respect that recognizes a new world order.
Trump was later greeted with  bipartisan criticism  of the meeting, foncusing on whether he&aposd been too deferential to the Russian leader.
I guess I don&apost understand, A, what he wants here and, B, why he&aposs so deferential to a horrible person.
The question this time is whether the justices will be as deferential to Mr Ross's authority as they were to Mr Trump's.
H.R. McMaster, had been deferential to Mattis and called him "Sir" or "Secretary Mattis" — conscious of his 3 stars to Mattis' 4.
Jurors are unaware of of their own importance because the jury system is designed to beat them into feeling submissive and deferential.
In the book, Ms. Coddington is very deferential to the photographers she worked with, citing them as the starting point for everything.
Sulzberger, who asks most of the questions in this transcript, adopts a deferential but persistent stance in defense of a free press.
Leading organizations that oppose and support abortion rights both expect Kavanaugh to be more deferential to state and federal restrictions on abortion.
"What he's criticizing in Brett's sports articles is Brett is too deferential to the subjective understandings of the original coaches," Eskridge said.
Members of Congress and the courts generally have been quite deferential to presidents who have made national emergency declarations in that context.
I watch as he dutifully signs t-shirts and game boxes, posing for selfies and receiving compliments with a gentle, deferential demeanour.
Kim Yong Chol is known to be difficult to work with, sarcastic and not sufficiently deferential to his superiors, Leadership Watch said.
Their position coach, Aubrey Pleasant, acknowledged Peters and Talib have "dominant, very flamboyant" personalities but have been deferential around the returning players.
The arrangement, reached during a hastily arranged trip to Ankara, is remarkably deferential to Turkey, with the U.S. also dropping threatened sanctions.
Mr. Trump is, by all indications, the Siberian candidate, installed with the help of and remarkably deferential to a hostile foreign power.
In the main dissenting opinion, Judge Paul Niemeyer said the courts should be deferential to the president on matters of national security.
Needless to say, if a future appellate court employs a similarly deferential approach, the Restoring Internet Freedom order passes in a cakewalk.
And if "Beautiful" never acquires the flashy momentum of "Jersey Boys," it may come in part from the deferential gentleness of its heroine.
Post-war Britain was class-divided, deferential, militarised (with armed forces of 863,000 compared with under 150,000 today) and, at least formally, devout.
Being male still hinges on being seen as not female — not soft, or deferential, or sensitive to the needs of others around you.
Women are supposed to be thin, polite, hot, and, most importantly, deferential to men in all aspects of life, if not outright subservient.
When I met him at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, though, I was struck by how shrunken and almost deferential he seemed.
" She and other female members of the administration went on to describe their approach to giving the president advice as "respectful" and "deferential.
Still, the members insist they are making an effort to be deferential to leadership, by leaving one bill open to the speaker's choosing.
There are still a number of other authorities the agency could exercise, and none is as flexible or as deferential to state authority.
But for the most part, Egypt got gentle scoldings from time to time from senior administration officials, who were unduly deferential to Cairo.
"She was very deferential to Agnes, and Agnes relied and cared for her," said Ted Chapin, president of the Rodgers and Hammerstein Organization.
Bossy toward the children but deferential toward white adults in Lee's account, she serves in the play as Atticus's foil and needling conscience.
The composer Matthew Aucoin is deferential to Sarah Ruhl's text, in a Los Angeles production that comes to the Met Opera next year.
In general, courts are deferential to the means that Congress chooses to exercise its Fourteenth Amendment powers against state intrusions on civil rights.
They praised the Republican president's first address to a joint session of Congress, both for its familiar content and his newly deferential tone.
I think that there was a kind of deferential attitude toward Silicon Valley at the time, you know, they were the golden goose.
But liberal groups will face an uphill battle, because the courts are relatively deferential to FCC decisions about how to apply telecommunications law.
He testified to a packed room, and some found his studiously prepared testimony bland and deferential — as if designed to avoid going viral.
On the flip side, May has faced persistent criticism at home for seeming too deferential to Trump during a White House visit in January.
" -- just five minutes later than billed -- he was a deferential and pleasant presence between songs and an energized, brooding one during them," Sutherland said.
Still, the deferential treatment seems to be the norm no matter who you are, and staffers take pride in going out of their way.
Members of the auditing profession would love nothing more than to see their P.C.A.O.B. audit quality inspections get a little softer and more deferential.
"Moreover, courts are often more deferential to immigration executive actions than in other areas because immigration touches on sovereignty and national security," he said.
In 2014, This American Life and ProPublica released secretly recorded conversations in which bank examiners were far too deferential to the banks they supervised.
Mr. Winterkorn and other top managers were used to deferential treatment by government officials in Germany, where it is one of the largest employers.
I'd heard her speak several times before that panel, and assumed that she, like antitrust experts in both parties, was deferential to big business.
"Venture capitalists that serve on boards have gotten more and more deferential and, I would say, have become more cheerleaders than actors," he said.
All took the path of least resistance, in great part to keep their jobs, remaining deferential to Secretary of Defense McNamara and civilian leaders.
But then, as I said before, at least in other contexts where the national emergency language is used, the courts have been fairly deferential.
Richard Blumenthal, a member of the Judiciary Committee, said he expects Roberts will be "properly deferential to his limited constitutional role" during the trial.
Never one to upstage the boss, be it the president or secretary of state, Mr. Biegun is mild-mannered and deferential, the anti-Pompeo.
Visited there not long after she had a stroke in 2015, Ms. Yang said she was happy to be living surrounded by deferential soldiers.
MBS believed that Hariri was too deferential to Hezbollah, which is a significant political force in Lebanon, as well as a client of Iran.
Elijah Cummings in a deferential tweet that diverged markedly from the racially charged insults he had hurled at the Democratic lawmaker over the summer.
Under the extremely deferential standard of review for presidential national security decisions, the court held, President Trump had ample justification for the travel ban.
Mr. Ryan was also exceedingly deferential to the president, casting him for days as the consummate closer and a winner of the highest order.
"Congress has been too deferential to the intelligence community generally," says Mandy Smithberger, the director of defense information at the Project on Government Oversight.
If he can't have a deferential government in Kiev, he can grab Crimea and try to engineer the next best thing, a dysfunctional Ukraine.
" Ms. Levy is deferential to her ex-spouse, whose alcoholism arguably tanked the relationship, though Ms. Levy said, "We made a fine mess together.
A lingering suspicion over motives tends to mitigate uninhibited sharing, especially in people raised from birth to be deferential to a ruling White overclass.
Congress has for decades been what Ross K. Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University, calls a "constitutional weakling" — excessively deferential to the president.
Amazon's investors have been famously deferential to the company's management, but with rising institutional support for environmental and social resolutions, this time could be different.
Neil Gorsuch, installed on the Supreme Court by the GOP last year, is an enthusiastic and vocal proponent of this sort of non-deferential judging.
Other technology companies, including Microsoft, Google, Facebook, and Uber have also expressed concerns about the executive order — so far in measured and even deferential statements.
It happens when people who are staunchly opposed to the proposal are removed or sidelined and people deferential to the president given the reins instead.
The Supreme Court must be "deferential" to administrative decisions, he wrote, but "we cannot ignore the disconnect between the decision made and the explanation given".
Another area of inquiry is how deferential the FAA was to Boeing in allowing the aerospace giant to self-certify much of the aircraft's production.
They instead tell the appeals court it was too deferential to the university in its review and ask the lower court to reconsider its ruling.
They tend to be younger than their predecessors, and even though they admire Ms Suu Kyi, they are not as deferential as the old guard.
Sometimes being the only woman on a project means everyone is deferential to me and other times it means I'm left out of the conversation.
I think they would have gone ... If there had been a 55-year-old who was only worth $10 million they wouldn't have been deferential.
Meyers is deferential when it comes to the discussion, often handing off his platform to someone who might be more equipped to talk about it.
"Historically courts have been exceedingly deferential to governmental actions in the immigration area," said Jonathan Adler, a Case Western Reserve University School of Law professor.
Developers and the federal government said they followed the law — and were deferential to the tribes — during the permitting and construction of the the pipeline.
When viewed in proper light, the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution define a default government position as deferential to individual privacy.
Gorsuch has criticized the decision (a view that I share) and has indicated that he would prefer a less deferential approach to agency decision-making.
"That's the risk you always run with someone with that type of notoriety, is that people would be highly deferential to him," Mr. Wolfe said.
But more even than the kindness of the Senators or their deferential questions, I was just struck by how little they seemed to understand Facebook.
Recently Trump introduced a bit of personal petulance to this dynamic, suggesting that governors who aren't sufficiently deferential should be ignored by the White House.
In the run of cases, the Court's decisions would likely be far more deferential to the democratic process and far more tightly linked to precedent.
Far from having a pattern of disrespect, he has been deferential to women's boundaries — and instrumental in women's rights — throughout his personal and professional life.
Rights groups have accused Egypt's judges of being deferential to the government of President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi since he came to power in 2013.
She's deferential and self-sacrificing, with a suppressed strangeness that manifests in odd tics — like surreptitiously flicking raw eggs off a table, one by one.
Mr. Mueller mostly testified in the courtly Senate, and in a deferential environment, which is not what the current House Judiciary Committee is known for.
EXCESSIVELY DEFERENTIAL Few foresaw an investing revolution when Jack Bogle of Vanguard introduced the first index fund, now called the Vanguard 500 fund, in 1976.
Mr. Trump has been deferential to Mr. Mattis, who has quickly established himself as a top aide whose advice the president is willing to take.
Paul Walter Hauser, as the titular character, lumbers onto screen, physically commanding if almost boyishly deferential to Bryant, played with irritating bombast by Sam Rockwell.
Instead of being deferential to a singular preferred candidate, many listed a top tier, considering they felt fondly about several members of the presumed field.
And those deferential to law enforcement don't believe that public knowledge is terribly relevant to getting the job done — or can even be detrimental to it.
Thom Tillis of North Carolina, have danced around the issue, arguing border security is critical and that they would remain deferential to Trump on the issue.
But some rank-and-file Egyptian Christians feel their spiritual leader has been too deferential to the president and too slow to articulate the community's complaints.
The only way to create a bond between leaders and followers in a post-deferential and post-industrial era is to restore officeholders' reputation for competence.
Under the deferential standard employed at the appeals court, the justices noted in an unsigned opinion, states may regulate how aborted fetal tissue is disposed of.
By following this pragmatically deferential policy—which came to be known as "Finlandisation"—Finns conceded what they had to, but would not compromise over their independence.
The Citigroup and JPMorgan proposals "are more deferential to the boards in asking them to study the vicissitudes of a breakup," Naylor said in an interview.
Meanwhile, a partisan tug-of-war is building on the House intelligence committee over how deferential they should be to Mueller, according to Democratic committee sources.
And in some instances, hyenas may even take things a step too far: Males are expected to be not just respectful of females but absolutely deferential.
"I am a young man, and she's an icon of incredible work who has broken so many barriers, so I was very deferential," Mr. McCraney said.
In particular, The Daily Express, a top newspaper at the time, was actively deferential to the royal family in reporting on their affairs in the 1950s.
Until Brazilians can elect a new president in 2018, he could honor the country's democratic process by remaining reasonably deferential toward the platform they last endorsed.
In fact, many within Clinton's own party have vociferously maligned the Democratic National Committee's process as being too deferential to the former senator from New York.
Nonetheless, the record indicates that as a justice, Kavanaugh would be a reliably deferential voice for President Donald Trump and his successors for decades to come.
Judge Bork's writings strongly suggest that his presence on the court would have produced a ruling far more deferential to legislative efforts to address gun violence.
Burwell decision limited Chevron by excluding the class of cases that pose "question[s] of deep economic and political significance" from its zone of deferential treatment.
This quote amounts to a declaration of war, coming from a legal team that has always told Trump to be deferential to and compliant with Mueller.
His tone was often deferential, in contrast to the occasionally confrontational approach that colleagues like conservative Justice Neil Gorsuch and liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor sometimes take.
But the recessions of the 1970s dented the era's confidence, and subsequently a knowing, sophisticated, and — at least in its initial phase — deferential postmodernism took hold.
"Off camera, I'm, like, chill and very laid-back," Mr. Paul said, speaking in the polite, deferential tones of a student talking to a guidance counselor.
"I didn't even have my own checkbook until I opened the gallery," she said, smiling, speaking in a deferential sotto voce that belies an uncompromising tenacity.
He brought out the slyness beneath the demure surface of the second movement, which opens with a lofty melody over a deferential accompaniment with pizzicato strings.
That could be politically fatal in South Korea, where the public, across the political spectrum, is wary of the country appearing too deferential to big powers.
Employing the time-tested tools of pop-science journalism — chatty tone, self-deferential personal anecdotes and real-world examples — she animates all the various research findings.
"The Supreme Court reaffirmed that facially neutral policies are subject to only limited, deferential review and may not lightly be held unconstitutional," the DOJ brief said.
The company of five — which includes Lizbeth MacKay as the school's not-so-deferential dean and Crystal Lucas-Perry as Marks's invaluable roommate, Felicity — is impeccable.
Hays's posture among his all-white superiors is deferential, bordering on passive, and he is more inclined to work the case than engage in any politicking.
It's unlikely that the "very liberal Ninth Circuit" (as Trump and his administration usually refer to it) is going to be more deferential to the president.
Republicans have long been more deferential to Trump on China -- a country they agree should be held accountable for intellectual property theft and other unfair trading practices.
And in Chechnya, journalists who are insufficiently deferential to local strongman Ramzan Kadyrov are often persecuted by government forces or fall victim to suspiciously timed criminal attacks.
Rubio, a onetime rival to Trump for the Republican presidential nomination, said he would not be so deferential regarding Trump's other nominees for top State Department posts.
The person said editors were too deferential to Moody due to his longevity at the network, so they didn't put the column through a proper vetting process.
Some women&aposs groups, including the Hollywood activist group Time&aposs Up, accused the Democrat of being too deferential to Weinstein and too dismissive of his accusers.
Obama faced claims he was overly deferential after he appeared to bow to Abdullah -- who by then was King -- during a summit meeting in London in 2009.
In life we want independent thinking and risk-taking, but the G.P.A. system encourages students to be deferential and risk averse, giving their teachers what they want.
Wartime review of presidential action was deferential, but the court insisted that action taken pursuant to delegated authority must have a factual basis and an adequate rationale.
In the past, the Senate has been largely deferential to a president's Supreme Court nominees, and a man like Gorsuch would likely have received substantial bipartisan support.
Unlike Dev, who was politely deferential to his own harassed co-worker, Tig is insistent on holding the men in her office accountable, regardless of Kate's feelings.
And while it's one thing for Trump to be overly critical of America's friends, as he undoubtedly has been, it's another to be overly deferential to Russia.
And even in trying to backtrack and ease the flames, Mr. Obama invited more criticism, this time from African-Americans, who believed he was being too deferential.
"Federal courts too often have been cautious and overly deferential in the arena of environmental law, and the world has suffered for it," Judge Ann Aiken wrote.
In a break with the often deferential tradition of French presidential interviews, Macron took questions from two famously combative journalists to mark his first year in office.
But Mr. Pence's friends do not expect to him to push his role beyond what is expected, and they say he remains very deferential to Mr. Trump.
Initial Russian triumphalism after the summit turned sour however as anger over what some U.S. lawmakers saw as an over deferential Trump performance galvanized a new sanctions push.
It has to do with the economic crisis, globalisation, automation, immigration, stagnant wages, social media and a less deferential culture; albeit in drastically varying proportions in different countries.
Based on these reasonable findings and our highly deferential standard of review, it was not arbitrary for the Commission to conclude that fixed broadband providers face competitive pressures.
On January 9th the supreme court, which has been deferential to the president, forwarded to congress a request to strip three constitutional-court judges of immunity to prosecution.
Meanwhile: Another strand emerging from the accident investigations concerns how deferential the FAA was to Boeing in certifying the MCAS system and other aspects of the plane's certification.
The laws have been enforced harshly as the establishment sought to control new, less deferential political forces and as dissent has found avenues of expression through social media.
The ruling on Tuesday was largely unexpected, because the Egyptian judiciary has long been considered to be deferential to — and, critics would say, complicit with — the country's leadership.
A federal appeals court on Thursday adopted a less deferential standard of review when considering appeals of benefits denials under employee benefit plans, overruling one of its precedents.
More women than men are in jobs that require emotional labor, and the emotional labor expected of women is more likely to put them in a deferential position.
By appearing there, the President gets to set the agenda for the new session of Congress in a forum where all of Congress appears deferential to the Executive.
Trump has been widely criticized for his performance in Helsinki, Finland, at which he was deeply deferential to the Russian leader and lashed out at his own country.
But she faced a mostly deferential Senate Homeland Security Committee, a sign that she is likely to be easily confirmed as the sixth person to lead the agency.
"The courts historically have been very deferential to the president on issues of immigration," said Adam Winkler, a professor at the University of Los Angeles School of Law.
The unusual scenario — the nation's top law enforcement official pressed by normally deferential Republican lawmakers — was a reflection of the extreme partisanship that has taken hold in Washington.
The courts have generally taken a deferential approach to evaluating how the president makes use of such delegated authority and have not required Congress to be more specific.
Indeed, the book is also a study of a daughter's love for her father — reverential, deferential, apt to make an agnosticism for wine seem like a significant betrayal.
The state's arguments have some force, but their premises might have limited appeal to judges deferential to executive power in matters involving immigration and allegedly implicating national security.
He&aposs been unprecedentedly deferential to the American people, and restrained in his use of the commander in chief power, more than any other president in my lifetime.
He&aposs been unprecedentedly deferential to the American people, and restrained in his use of the commander in chief power, more than any other president in my lifetime.
This system was intended to prevent a president from picking a deferential top law enforcement official, since that person oversees corruption inquiries involving elected officials, including the president.
Since the president has used executive power to implement his progressive agenda through those agencies, selecting someone who most likely will be deferential to his actions seems natural.
Before, he said, service here was stuck in an old-fashioned mode: either too deferential and formal (at expensive restaurants) or indifferent bordering on neglectful (at cheap ones).
Senators from both political parties were deferential to Ross at his nearly four-hour confirmation hearing, which was much more subdued than the confirmation hearings of other Trump nominees.
According to the Justice Department's brief, the Commerce secretary easily met the extremely deferential standard accorded to his department over census decisions, which requires merely that they be rational.
"Federal courts too often have been cautious and overly deferential in the arena of environmental law, and the world has suffered for it," wrote Judge Aiken in her ruling.
Herrick's lawyer Tor Ekeland said in an interview he was "disappointed but not surprised" by Wednesday's decision because courts are "extremely deferential to big tech" when interpreting the CDA.
Regulation in Ireland, which was described as "timid" and "excessively deferential" in an official 2010 report, has since been overhauled and new rules brought in to ensure no repeat.
"Trump has already demonstrated both deferential behavior towards Russia and a willingness to lash out at congressional Republicans when things aren't going his way," said Congress watcher Molly Reynolds.
"SUPINE" and "deferential" have been some of the adjectives applied to the Intelligence and Security Committee, the nine-member body of MPs and peers which oversees Britain's spy agencies.
Brought up on the Bible, protected from the worst abuses of slavery, and coached by his fearful mother (Aunjanue Ellis), Turner becomes canny enough to stay deferential around whites.
The "necessity" standard being proposed by California lawmakers would rework that legal calculus to be less deferential, only allowing officers to use deadly force to prevent imminent physical injury.
This may have been an excuse; Trump, while recently deferential to Kim, despite his reputation as a murderous strongman, has doled out his share of insults in the past.
Democrats this week have attacked Kavanaugh on many fronts, criticizing him as someone who would be overly deferential to Trump's presidential powers and hostile to gun control measures. Sen.
In that post-Watergate era, the White House was very deferential to the Justice Department, Mr. Barr said in a 2001 interview with the University of Virginia's Miller Center.
"Some of it is deferential, so you obviously try not to hurt the other person's feelings," Nafis Ahmad, 51, who is from Karachi, explained the day before the party.
For the most part, he is completely deferential to her, but in a scene at the end of Episode 4 he appears as a threatening presence in her bedroom.
Taking Mr. Deng's lead, China played the junior partner, if not always deferential then at least soft-pedaling its ambitions and avoiding conflict with the much stronger United States.
"Congress has been more and more deferential to the president when they're of the same party," said Joshua C. Huder, a senior fellow at Georgetown University's Government Affairs Institute.
The bill represents a compromise after Democrats complained at an earlier energy and power subcommittee meeting that the bill was too deferential to the oil and natural gas industry.
Lawmakers interviewed by The Hill said Trump, who is known for his swagger and bravado, was polite, professional, deferential, and willing to listen to their concerns about his candidacy.
That might be enough for the ban to be upheld by the federal courts, which are as a rule very deferential to presidential actions on immigration and national security.
The president's comments came just a day after his summit with Putin and raised concerns among some critics that the president is being too deferential to the Russian leader.
But the service was, again, annoyingly deferential, and when you've been made to wait alone at the bar for almost an hour, nothing tastes as good as it might otherwise.
As a deferential seeing eye dog who shepherds solid-to-spectacular offense without overreaching for attention, Morris represents a vintage NBA archetype that's since been phased out of the league.
Trump in 2010: WikiLeaks 'disgraceful,' there 'should be like death penalty or something' US officials familiar with the briefings said Trump is for the most part professional, deferential and polite.
Defenders argue that this would make the court more deferential to precedent, and any one judge less able to spend years cutting a partisan path across the nation's highest court.
And since then, it's been extremely cooperative — even deferential — with the US. Metering only works because of Mexican officials stopping asylum seekers before they can set foot on US soil.
So I also may come into that relationship — no matter how great that individual guy is — and have some fear or be deferential in ways I'm not even conscious of.
Ilya Shapiro: Garland record: too deferential to government This is a surprising nomination, and I still can't decide whether it's politically savvy, regardless of the merits of the nominee himself.
That threshold almost always benefits the police, since judges and juries tend to be extremely deferential when assessing whether an officer was acting reasonably in the heat of the moment.
Rebukes and demands from China's civil aviation officials led to two pilots being sacked, deferential statements from Hogg and new protocols for crews flying in and over the country's airspace.
On "Reputation," Swift has once again teamed up with the producers Max Martin and Jack Antonoff, who helped imbue "1989" with a modern but deferential take on eighties synth-pop.
Mr. Trump seems to be becoming aware of his own divided-party challenges, with his deferential reference to "Senator Cruz," rather than "Lyin' Ted" in his New York victory speech.
She has already taken responsibility for the crime—she says that White pressured her into it—but struggles to recall the details and, like a deferential student, asks for help.
Still, a senior White House official said Mulvaney is more deferential to Trump's whims than Kelly was, and holds his tongue on more issues than the President's son-in-law.
"He has made a good initial impression by being deferential to career people instead of imposing things," said Bob Litt, who served as ODNI's general counsel in the Obama administration.
Her experience is as a wealthy donor who is used to people being deferential to her, so she's not good at addressing confrontational questions from journalists or members of Congress.
The new tower, which is expected to be completed in 2022, will be deferential to the landmark, but not derivative, said Gregg Pasquarelli, a principal at SHoP Architects, the designer.
That the F.T.C. is negotiating what appears to be a trivial fine, suggests that the organization isn't just deferential to Facebook, but that it doesn't truly understand the company's power.
Courts at all levels need to be less deferential to regulatory schemes that — in contrast to environmental or labor regulation — have no justification other than the protection of incumbent interests.
Thickly bespectacled, deferential, gently overweight, and meek of manner, he spoke in a civil murmur, a kind of clerical stutter that unfailingly cast a sleeping spell over the entire nation.
While Congress is usually deferential to a president's foreign policy, Trump is so irrational and dangerous that the House and Senate must reassert their power to check the executive branch.
" Bates concluded that the argument that a Texas court would have likely immediately halted the program "was so implausible that it fails even under the deferential arbitrary and capricious standard.
This standoff is already frustrating appropriators in the House, who are complaining that the Republican-controlled Senate is being too deferential to Trump and procrastinating on solving thorny funding issues.
Democrats have criticized Kavanaugh as being deferential to presidential authority and expressed concern that he could protect Trump from any legal woes brought by Mueller or prosecutors in New York.
But civil rights groups are concerned that Barr, who has earned a reputation for being deferential to executive authority, could act on Trump's wishes in a way that hurts potential voters.
And UC Davis's Johnson, at least, expresses some hope that the courts would be a little less deferential to the executive branch than they were in the wake of 9/11.
In the past, courts have often been deferential to federal agencies in these situations, but they've occasionally been more skeptical when the law has vast economic implications, as this one does.
Despite having no official management power, it was obvious that 500 staff weren't completely aware of the gravity of the situation and continued to be deferential and even supportive of him.
In the House, where Dorsey appeared alone to answer more than four hours' worth of lawmakers' questions, the tone was often sharper — but members of Congress were ultimately just as deferential.
That entirely reasonable act inflamed long-simmering British resentment of China's refusal to open its doors more than a crack to foreign products, and to be suitably deferential to British greatness.
Barring an unlikely departure from this deferential pattern, the GOP will continue to abet the most dysfunctional administration in modern American memory, portraying calls for accountability as liberal hysteria run amok.
From the outside, at least, Nintendo is a study in contradictions, at once devoted to the constant development of new gaming experiences, while remaining deferential and staunchly loyal to its past.
" Mark Knoller, who has covered the White House for CBS since Gerald Ford's Presidency, said of Pence, "He's the most publicly deferential to his President of any V.P. I can remember.
Despite his interest, Romney allies are being extremely cautious and deferential to Hatch -- concerned that any inartful wording would suggest that they are trying to push him out of the race.
But instead of chastising Mr. Trump, Mr. Peña Nieto treated him like a visiting head of state at a news conference, with side-by-side lecterns and words of deferential mush.
From the White House's ability to fire federal officials to whether its occupant can face lawsuits while in office, Kavanaugh has articulated an extraordinarily deferential stance on presidential powers and privileges.
He is an observant and deferential narrator for the most part, and in love with Karin, the daughter of a wealthy Jewish industrialist for whom his father has worked for decades.
Anti-abortion activists and Christian conservative leaders have remained one of his most loyal and deferential constituencies, even as he faced accusations that would have been the undoing of other politicians.
During one class, students debated whether players should have been more deferential to the wishes of team owners and the league, or whether the league should have supported players more vocally.
"In general, courts are extremely deferential to managers who say they need to pay bonuses," said Jared A. Ellias, a professor at the University of California's Hastings College of the Law.
On each trip, Mr. Kim, 34, was deferential to Mr. Xi, 65, a gesture that probably helped ease tensions between the two leaders that had existed for years, Chinese analysts said.
For years the City Council was more deferential to top commanders, and police officials fell back on the notion that they needed to enforce minor crimes to stave off serious disorder.
Defenders say Mr. Barr feels emboldened to criticize Democrats because he believes they crossed a line during his confirmation hearings when they accused him of being blindly deferential to Mr. Trump.
A person familiar with the network's internal structure said Moody's title is only a formal one and editors were "too deferential" to vet the story using the usual checks and balances.
Hawaii concerned the admission of aliens from abroad and was thus reviewed at most for rational basis, the court recognized that deferential review may apply 'across different contexts and constitutional claims.
Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, said the administration has legal precedent on its side, with the courts generally deferential to executive action on immigration.
As soon as the words came out, I realized I'd done something wrong: I should have delivered an answer that was more deferential, one that showed more recognition of his position.
But a reckless anti-deference decision, sweeping broadly beyond the narrow facts of this unusual case, would lie about like a loaded weapon just as much as an unduly deferential ruling.
Judges have already been less than deferential to the administration in emergency lawsuits filed around the country to prevent the detention and deportation of people who've entered the US since Friday.
It's not crazy to think that this hurt her poll numbers at the margins, especially since May had faced persistent criticism prior to the vote for seeming too deferential to Trump.
GUTFELD: We&aposve got to run, but Walter, do you think that he&aposs being too deferential or is this an obvious sales pitch that we all know what he&aposs doing?
As I approached the computer, my companion Parvati, who at this point in the game is largely deferential and carefully chooses when to speak up, pulled me aside for a quick talk.
But Mr Raisi has shrugged off his image as an obscurantist and deferential protégé of Mr Khamenei by appearing at rallies with pop stars, better known for their raucous Tehran high life.
Among them is the fact that courts are "generally more deferential to immigration actions by the executive branch than in other areas, because immigration touches on sovereignty and national security," he added.
In September, he published a deferential translation of Anne Carson's "Antigonick" — a project that began almost as a whim, but also as a corrective to her virtual nonexistence in France — for L'Arche.
Mattis was highly respected by lawmakers in both parties for the perception he stood up to Trump, and his departure left some fretting his replacement would be too deferential to the president.
Until the surveillance revealed by the National Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden, many American tech companies were also more deferential to the American government, especially its requests for law enforcement help.
French President Emmanuel Macron successfully wooed his American counterpart with deferential displays of French grandeur, including a Bastille Day parade in Paris last year that Trump now hopes to emulate in Washington.
Ignorant of how the legislative branch works, he let the Republican leaders set the priorities and was surprised that even though his party had the majority, Congress wasn't more deferential to him.
Hagel also emphasized listening to military leaders in an earlier answer, a tendency of his that reportedly irked some within the Obama administration who thought he was too deferential to Pentagon brass.
That's not exactly a keen insight, but the reason I can't stop thinking about it is that even in 2020, too many people are weirdly deferential to the idea of an app.
Soon after Duterte was elected President, Sison released a recording of a Skype call in which an unusually deferential Duterte chats with him about ongoing peace talks with the New People's Army.
He can become frustrated While deferential to leader like Putin and North Korea's Kim, Trump can become frustrated with other world leaders, as he did with then Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull.
And there is a valid debate to be had as to whether the US is too deferential to Turkey, which is hostile to Kurdish groups due to its country's own Kurdish rebellion.
"Federal courts too often have been cautious and overly deferential in the arena of environmental law, and the world has suffered for it," she wrote in Thursday's decision not to dismiss the case.
A Southern gentleman who could counterbalance Trump's bombast, he was deferential to the president and never humiliated the White House with a scandal over ordering furniture that costs more than a steelworker's salary.
The first was that booing the vice president-elect is inappropriate and rude, and that the citizens of America should be more deferential to one of the men entrusted to lead their country.
The first two sections of "A Love Supreme" were played with a slashing focus largely unchecked by deferential care — a refreshing situation, for a work typically handled in the manner of a sacrament.
Now, though, she has to contend with an unruly Democratic opposition no longer willing to be deferential to those in power—not just the man in the White House, but their own leadership.
Japan's political opposition has fallen into disarray and its news media has grown ever more deferential, leaving a widespread feeling in the country that there is no alternative to the sitting prime minister.
"Bernie seems startled that people aren't more deferential," observed one Senate Democrat, who noted that Sanders was waiting for colleagues to come to him instead of going to them to initiate friendly chatter.
The case is about an idiosyncratic law, one that affects only the citizens of New York City, and one that might be difficult to justify even under the most deferential standard of judicial review.
In cases of that type, courts tend to be particularly deferential to the president in light of his superior access to information gathered by intelligence agencies and his awesome responsibilities to protect the nation.
Trump's deferential, admiring tone with China's leader Xi Jinping, gave Beijing exactly what it wants, an apparent acceptance by the US that China has a claim to global leadership on a par with Washington.
The sustained scrutiny in Politico, addressed to an international, English-speaking audience, rankled many in Belgium's famously parochial establishment — as the more deferential members of the country's French- and Dutch-language media looked on.
But Feldman noted that Kavanaugh was part of the two 5-4 majorities that overturned its own precedents last term, suggesting he may not be "particularly deferential" to the 2016 Whole Woman's Health precedent.
President Xi Jinping has stirred up nationalism as part of his effort to consolidate power—worryingly for American firms seen as insufficiently deferential to China's line on Hong Kong among other sensitive political topics.
Anger over what some U.S. lawmakers saw as a too-deferential performance by Trump and his failure to confront Putin over Moscow's alleged meddling in U.S. politics galvanised a new sanctions push against Moscow.
Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut said in a statement, calling on Grassley to subpoena Kushner and Trump Jr. Feinstein said she still wanted a public hearing with Don Jr., though she was deferential to Grassley.
And in a lengthy, passionate, desk-side monologue, Mr. Stewart had gone after Fox News and its hosts like Sean Hannity, who he felt had been too deferential to Mr. Trump during the campaign.
Exaro reports that Smith criticises the BBC for a "very deferential culture", with many BBC employees telling the review that they had heard about Savile's predatory reputation but feared reporting their concerns to managers.
The National Secular Society (NSS), which campaigns for an end to religious privilege, said that the report contained some steps in the right directions, but that it was still much too deferential to religious communities.
Those candidates didn't always win office, but their successful primary bids certainly struck fear into the hearts of many other GOP incumbents, and made many of them more deferential to the concerns of conservative voters.
We're told Lynne is deferential to Britney, while Jamie is walking a tightrope ... trying to give Britney freedom, but understanding too much freedom can trigger the type of episode that almost killed Britney in 2008.
The elite rarely mix with ordinary folk, apart from maids, chauffeurs and deferential farm hands who have worked for generations on the vast haciendas of the landowners (such as the clan the Aquinos married into).
But mostly he was in receiving mode—the deferential host of a discussion on "ReCentering the Experiences of Black Women to Achieve Economic Justice" at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's annual legislative conference in Washington.
"Last week, President Trump held a summit with Vladimir Putin, someone who has violated the most fundamental international norms ... in the summit's aftermath, we saw an American President who appeared submissive and deferential," Corker said.
Ms. Lynch, who was the first United States attorney promoted directly to attorney general in nearly 200 years, has a reputation for being deferential to prosecutors in the field rather than micromanaging them from Washington.
"President Trump held a summit with Vladimir Putin, someone who has violated the most fundamental international norms ... in the summit's aftermath, we saw an American President who appeared submissive and deferential," committee chairman, Republican Sen.
Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who as a peer was at times deferential in strategic discussions to Mr. Mattis, one the most storied Marine generals of his generation.
Having witnessed and withstood many of the horrors of the Holocaust and its aftermath, Mr. Hilsenrath un-self-consciously challenged more conventional and deferential post-World War II accounts about the victims of Nazi atrocities.
Asked if he would defer to the White House, Munoz said that "I fly to both places and I am deferential to our customers, and again this is not something I am going to solve".
Asked if he would defer to the White House, Munoz said that "I fly to both places and I am deferential to our customers, and again this is not something I am going to solve".
A more than 40-year veteran of the legislative and executive branches, he is deferential to his party's current leaders and does not want to complicate their already difficult tasks at a moment of crisis.
A more than 40-year veteran of the legislative and executive branches, he is deferential to his party's current leaders and does not want to complicate their already difficult tasks at a moment of crisis.
Even before the letter emerged, Ms. Feinstein had found herself criticized by liberal Democrats who believed she had been too timid and deferential in her treatment of Judge Kavanaugh, President Trump's second Supreme Court nominee.
From Ed Walz, Washington, D.C. Garland too deferential for bench An examination of Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland's published decisions reveals a jurist who shows tremendous deference to the fourth branch of government: executive agencies.
" Declared Roberts, quoting the late US Appeals Court Judge Henry Friendly, for whom he once worked, "Our review is deferential, but we are 'not required to exhibit a naivete from which ordinary citizens are free.
Shiffrin is deferential to Vonn and spends most of her time focusing on the many ways she believes she has matured since she became the youngest Olympic slalom gold medalist at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.
Many of these complaints revolved around the belief that Guyger has been given deferential treatment by law enforcement over the course of the investigation, with critics arguing that Guyger should have initially been charged with murder.
Instead, anger about what some U.S. lawmakers saw as a too-deferential performance by Trump in Helsinki and his failure to publicly confront Putin over Moscow's alleged meddling in U.S. politics may have made things worse.
While Pelosi has other Democratic detractors in Congress, some of whom contribute to the small rebellions against her leadership that gain headlines and then fizzle every two years, Vela isn't as deferential about it as most.
"I think it's fair for members to ask whether your relationship is routed in a candid, healthy, give-and-take dynamic, or whether it's based on deferential willingness to go along to get along," he said.
"The courts historically have been very deferential to the president on issues of immigration," Adam Winkler, a professor at the University of Los Angeles School of Law, told VICE News after Trump issued his third ban.
The comment came during a heated exchange between Trump and CNN's Jeremy Diamond, who asked the president about a comment he made at a White House press briefing on Friday about deferential treatment from state officials.
As the president backtracked on his deferential comments at Monday's meeting with Mr. Putin and asserted that he really does accept that Russia intervened in the 2016 election, allies assumed that this, too, would blow over.
He was determined not to become an arrogant grant-maker who believed that people were deferential toward him and invited him to things and laughed at his jokes solely because of his own charm and intelligence.
Ben: Gorsuch is no flippant choice — he is highly qualified, well educated, and while his record leans conservative, he is actually less deferential to police officers and government agencies in his decisions compared to Merrick Garland.
Trump went so far as to call Xi a "very special man" in a joint briefing on Thursday, and seemed so enthusiastic that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was asked if Trump had been too deferential.
Mueller could make a legal argument to get around those rules, but it would likely end up in front of the Supreme Court, which has proved largely deferential in recent years to presidential claims of executive authority.
A Duke University law professor, described the agreement to the Times as "deeply exploitive," and said that judges are "far too deferential" to vaguely worded contracts that require patients to pay whatever mystery amount the provider demands.
You won't easily find a political figure in Washington more deferential to the cause of black lawmakers than Angela Rye, the celebrity political activist and commentator who was executive director of the CBC during the 112th Congress.
Not only were these images a deferential remembrance of the deceased, each was often placed with the best clothing, flowers, toys and jewelry, showcasing the family's wealth, and what the deceased individual valued when they were living.
In more than two hours of conversation, from November 2015 to June 2016, an oddly deferential and courtly Bannon deployed an arsenal of leading questions, shameless flattery, and subtle prodding to ingratiate himself with his future boss.
The first section of the novel is set at an unnamed Southern school, where the protagonist, a student, runs afoul of the president, Dr. Bledsoe, who is as dictatorial toward blacks as he is deferential to whites.
"You have structured your take-over to ensure that the transaction is reviewed under the lower, more deferential 'business judgment' standard, as opposed to the enhanced, more stringent 'entire fairness' standard," the investor said in a letter.
Generally speaking, judges and justices with that combination of characteristics tend to be more skeptical of the benefits of government regulation and less deferential to agencies than are judges and justices who do not have those characteristics.
According to various accounts, Mr. Kadyrov captained the other team and either scored a hat trick or assisted on numerous goals in a 20133-2 victory against a defense that was generous to the point of deferential.
The pianist, almost like a singer, often plays a single melodic line in the right hand, shaping and ornamenting the "vocal" part, and adding a minimal accompaniment with the left hand, as the orchestra provides deferential backing.
"I think it's fair for our members to ask whether your relationship is rooted in a candid, healthy, give-and-take dynamic or whether it's based on deferential willingness to go along to get along," Corker said.
I suspect that the head of the business unit just wants to keep me under his thumb, and so as long as I maintain a smile and a deferential attitude in his presence, this too shall pass.
Mr. Trump has made a series of statements deferential toward the Russian president, Vladimir V. Putin, and the special counsel is examining whether the Trump campaign coordinated with the Kremlin to meddle in the 2016 presidential election.
McDaniel has largely been deferential to the president since becoming RNC chair in December 2016, including deciding to put RNC resources back into the 2017 US Senate special election in Alabama to support Republican candidate Roy Moore.
McCulloch's actions were also called into question at the time because when Officer Wilson testified before that grand jury, McCulloch's staff questioned him with a light and deferential touch -- also a deviation from the norm for a prosecutor.
Fairly or unfairly, there is a perception that outlets that cover entertainment may be too closely connected to — or even starstruck by — the people they're writing about, or that they may be too deferential to the PR machine.
When Richard Nixon, sitting in the show's makeup chair in 1967, said, "It's a shame a man has to use gimmicks like this to get elected," Ailes did not humor the former vice president with a deferential chuckle.
They argue that Guyger is receiving deferential treatment that a civilian suspect would not receive, noting that she was charged with manslaughter rather than murder, and that the charge did not come until three days after the shooting.
While the chief justice is widely said to be deferential to existing precedents — that was the crux of his statements on Roe before the Senate — he has also in his opinions helped to roll back existing case law.
A Seattle Times investigation, as well as other reporting, shows that the FAA may have been too deferential to Boeing in certifying that the MCAS system in particular, and the aircraft type in general, was safe to fly.
Schools that prize self-­regulation over self-expression may lift a number of children out of poverty, but may also train them to act constrained and overly deferential — "worker-learners," as the ethnographer Joanne W. Golann calls them.
But White House aides dismissed the notion that Kushner's sphere of influence would become an issue, describing him as "deferential" and a "team player" who is working in tandem with Cabinet secretaries, agency heads and White House staff.
Levin, who served as chief of staff to Reagan Attorney General Edwin Meese, went on to argue that presidents going back to Roosevelt had been deferential to Russian leaders while making major concessions when meeting with them directly.
That can't be ruled out, given the state of affairs in Russia, China, Hungary, and Turkey, but it seems more likely that Trump's bluster will merely motivate businesses to be deferential to him, in pursuit of favorable treatment.
She did not detail her reasons for dissenting, but complained in another case last month that the court was being too deferential to the government, particularly when it comes to granting emergency orders like the one issued Wednesday.
At the same time, Mr. Ashe's natural shyness and deferential attitude toward his elders and other authority figures all but precluded involvement in the civil rights struggle and other political activities during his high school and college years.
The fact that anyone is surprised shows how much President Donald Trump's deferential relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin has puzzled the world following allegations that Moscow's interference in the 2016 US election helped put him in power.
A longtime senator before he became vice president, Mr. Biden is deferential to congressional prerogatives and has resisted calling for impeachment, even as Ms. Warren and many of his other Democratic rivals have been outspoken in demanding it.
Liberal advocacy groups opposed to her nomination earlier this year expressed concerns that Rao's writings as an academic showed she would be too deferential to executive power, and said her dissent on Friday demonstrated those fears were founded.
The Civil Rights Division's police-reform group has lost a quarter of its staff attorneys during the Trump administration, and those who remain have told former colleagues they've grown more deferential in their dealings with local law enforcement.
"I understand the President wants his people and we want to be deferential as much as we can, but it would be nice to know some of the issues that come up after the fact, before the fact," Sen.
They were vocal even when they recognized the limitations on their ability to prosecute such violations under a body of Supreme Court precedent that is overwhelmingly deferential to police officers' assessment of the appropriate amount of force to use.
In an appearance on Fox News Tuesday, incoming White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer cast Trump as deferential to states' rights on pot and said he thinks Sessions is "well aware" his job would be to implement Trump's agenda.
Throughout the ensuing controversy and trial, the now 34-year-old seemed to relish the hate that was tossed his way in the press, but he (or his lawyer) wrote an uncharacteristically deferential letter to the judge last month.
GREENWALD: Yes, I think American journalism in general for a long time, it has been a critique of mine going back to the Bush years has been far too deferential to these intelligence operatives who operate in the dark.
The six-part miniseries, while deferential to Weir, is more of a return to the original source material: The famous novel by Joan Lindsay set in 1900 Australia follows the unexplained disappearances of three ladies from a finishing school.
WanJira Banfield, who served as director of marketing and promotions at WTPS during Reid's short stint there, came to Reid's defense in a Facebook post: "She was one of the most deferential professionals I've ever worked with," wrote Banfield.
Earlier in the day, The Wall Street Journal reported that top editors from Buzzfeed and HuffPost expressed concern that Facebook is "overly deferential to conservatives" at an off-the record meeting with publishers also attended by The Daily Caller.
Pompeo declined to answer repeated questions from Democrats related to the ongoing Russia investigations and was challenged at several points to break with President Trump, as lawmakers voiced concerns that he would be too deferential as secretary of State.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans on Thursday ruled that a lower-court judge should have applied a more deferential standard in evaluating the state's decision to terminate the affiliates' Medicaid provider agreements in 2015.
The term originated in Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin, but in the years that followed the book's publication, the meaning of the name changed, and was used to reference blacks that were seen as being too deferential to whites.
Robert Mueller's recent indictment of 22017 Russians for interfering in the last presidential election and Trump's deferential remarks toward Russian President Vladimir Putin at last week's Helsinki summit has the federal government scrambling into action and sounding the alarm.
Robert Mueller's recent indictment of 12 Russians for interfering in the last presidential election and Trump's deferential remarks toward Russian President Vladimir Putin at last week's Helsinki summit has the federal government scrambling into action and sounding the alarm.
Although he was known as a firebrand in the House who stood up to Republican leaders, he is deferential to Mr. Trump, calling him "boss," while making a point of spending off hours on the golf course with him.
Shedding his hoodie for a suit, and intensively coached, he appeared humbled and deferential to his congressional interlocutors, even when facing the types of technically unsophisticated questions that easily vexed Mr. Gates during his time in the hot seat.
The index fund firms are excessively deferential to the managers of their portfolio companies, he wrote, because that approach better serves their corporate mission to grow their assets-under-management - and the fees that come with managing those assets.
But initial triumphalism swiftly turned sour as anger over what some U.S. lawmakers saw as an over deferential performance by Trump and his failure to confront Putin over Moscow's alleged meddling in U.S. politics galvanized a new sanctions push.
Their fears stem in part from his administration's initial policy of separating refugee children from their parents and his seemingly deferential relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose nation interfered in the 2016 election, according to U.S. intelligence agencies.
"That's why I think it's fair for our members to ask whether your relationship is rooted in a candid, healthy, give-and-take dynamic or whether it's based on deferential willingness to go along to get along," he said.
For Amazon, long accustomed to highly deferential treatment from localities across the country, the phone call was a further indignity after weeks of relentless criticism from lawmakers, unions and progressive activists that the company feared was staining its reputation.
Played by Eddie Redmayne with an air of deferential leprechaun shyness that's not always as beguiling as it's meant to be, Newt successfully makes his way past security carrying a briefcase packed with shirts and, beneath them, his private menagerie.
Courts have historically been deferential in this area, and recent presidents from Jimmy Carter to Ronald Reagan to Barack Obama have used it to deny entry to certain refugees and diplomats, including nations such as Iran, Cuba and North Korea.
Democrats, for their part, began the hearing by calling for a vote to cancel it altogether and said the committee should be focusing on Russian interference in American elections, especially after President Donald Trump's deferential behavior toward Vladimir Putin on Monday.
Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao on Tuesday asked the department's inspector general to investigate the certification process that allowed the new aircraft into the sky, after a Seattle Times investigation revealed that the FAA may have been too deferential to Boeing.
Even though the Communists and (self-styled) Liberal Democrats are widely recognised as being deferential to the regime, they are nonetheless able to command a limited popular following, while liberal outfits such as Yabloko barely take a bite of the vote.
He and his father, who died in 2012, bonded later in life; Mr. Wallace has also borrowed bits of his father's interviewing style, prefacing tough questions with a polite "Forgive me," and occasionally placing a deferential arm across his chest.
A little deference from a youngish conductor to this orchestra in such repertory can only be a good thing, but Mr. Dudamel seemed altogether too deferential in an inviting first half, offering the "Academic Festival Overture" and the "Haydn" Variations.
The criteria were first used last year in his Supreme Court selection of Neil M. Gorsuch, an appeals court judge who became something of a hero on the right for chastising his fellow jurists for being too deferential to government functionaries.
Today, a new generation of political and social activists are inclined to speak of "allyship," by which they typically mean an arrangement where prospective allies submit to the direction of the marginalized group, like deferential guests in someone else's home.
The performance by Republicans, echoing Mr. Trump's own lines of attack, demonstrated just how far many in the party have moved since the days when they were seen as the party of law enforcement, deferential to its power and prerogatives.
This was in the early '90s, yet we hadn't really stopped telling them in a kind of deeper cultural way, in a more entrenched way, that they should see themselves as about their appearance and that they should be more deferential.
" In this particular era, Soon-Yi Previn as the young, deferential, daughter figure Allen himself has described doesn't translate as well, and so in Merkin's hands she becomes an independent woman who has "never been one to play it safe.
A long string of American presidents has been deferential to this oppressive regime because it is seen as a source of stability in the Middle East, and because it is sometimes willing to do dirty work in America's broader interests.
Taken aback at Mr. Bush's hands-off attitude, Mr. Barr made clear that he saw the president as excessively deferential — and invoked the notion, popular among executive power maximalists, that the president, not the attorney general, is the prosecutor in chief.
Traditionally, the Senate has been deferential to fellow senators — but Sessions's record on race and civil rights (which led NAACP leaders to hold a sit-in in several of his Alabama offices this week) is apparently enough to turn Senate Democrats against him.
"Our form of government, with a Senate that gives extraordinary power to rural states over urban states and is deferential to states' rights, makes it difficult to advance relatively modest gun-control measures, much less more sweeping measures," Webster told the Washington Post.
However, now that index funds and similar exchange-traded funds hold roughly $6.7 trillion, or 35 percent of long-term fund assets, concerns are rising that the products may reduce competition, distort markets, or prove too deferential to management and corporate directors.
Now, Trump's invitation to Putin to visit Washington will likely intensify the furious speculation as to why Trump is so deferential to the Russian leader, especially as special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into possible links between Trump aides and the Kremlin continues.
Zuckerberg remained calm and level-headed throughout, and senators were mostly polite and deferential as they sought to understand how Facebook had inadvertently allowed the profiles of up to 87 million people to be collected by the political data-mining firm Cambridge Analytica.
I know others who use "they," but with Melissa, rather than merely play the deferential ally, I'm determined to give my pal's pronoun my all, to use the "they" with gusto, and to put my linguistic skills where my convictions about identity are.
And each of their trips garnered criticism for being largely deferential to their Chinese hosts — though both presidents might argue that their decisions were part of a larger strategy to establish stronger relations with the United States' biggest competitor on the world stage.
Not all of the questioning was adversarial to the FBI director, but the bulk of it was, with the committee's ranking member leading the (bipartisan) charge—a surprising direction for a committee that has been relatively deferential to Comey in the past.
"It certainly was, in many ways quite a groundbreaking speech," said Nile Gardiner, an analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation, who praised Trump for his "assertive and aggressive" delivery and for breaking with the more "deferential" multilateral doctrine of the Obama administration.
READ: Singapore businessmen think Trump got one thing right about Kim Jong Un North Korean state media has also been far more deferential toward Trump in recent missives mirroring the U.S. president's own warm words toward Kim since the meeting took place.
And Trump's reversal again came amid fierce opposition from Republicans on Capitol Hill over the invitation which followed his deferential behavior when he met Putin in Helsinki last week, and warnings from US intelligence agencies that it is already targeting the midterms.
Senator Bob Corker, Republican of Tennessee and the chairman of the committee, opened the session by saying that Mr. Trump had been "submissive and deferential" to Mr. Putin in Helsinki, and derided the administration's foreign policy as an incoherent "ready, fire, aim" approach.
Making a tiny contribution of 18 Korean won (less than 2 cents) to a politician seen as insufficiently deferential to Mr. Moon is another (in Korean the number 18 can be an insult, pronounced in the same way as a common profanity).
Like many news organizations, The Journal has seen subscriptions soar since President Trump's election, but it has faced criticism from within and outside its newsroom for its coverage of the White House, which some have seen as too deferential to the president.
McKinnon reprised her role as Jeff Sessions, the former attorney general, who was quizzed by Jost about Sessions's plans to pursue a Senate seat in Alabama and about a kickoff campaign video that has been criticized as overly deferential to the president.
The judicial branch — which has been less than deferential to the Trump administration — might hold firm in decreeing that people have a constitutional right to be released from jail when they have posted bail or been cleared, regardless of their immigration status.
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A Russian media group which angered some in the Kremlin by reporting on the business interests of people close to President Vladimir Putin was sold on Friday to the owner of a tabloid that is deferential to the Russian leader.
While no proof has surfaced to corroborate the existence of the alleged "pee tape," Trump's ongoing deferential treatment to Vladimir Putin, on particular display at their recent summit in Helsinki, has helped fuel speculation that Russia has some sort of incriminating information on Trump.
The probe, which had not been previously reported or made public, is the first by an outside agency into the perception that government regulators are "captured" by and too deferential toward the bankers they supervise, so that Wall Street benefits at the public's expense.
Indeed, it's stunning to consider that Trump seemed more deferential and solicitous to Vladimir Putin (saying the Russian President has an 82% approval rating and that he's been a leader far more than our President) than he was prepared to be to President Obama.
When it comes to banking, though, the nation has often shown a deferential willingness to accommodate—one which, since laws introduced in the 231s made it a centre for offshore finance, has been extended to unsavoury characters and ill-gotten gains along with everyone else.
Laura Coates, legal analyst Given the Supreme Court's oft insurmountable deferential standard conferred to police officers in determining the appropriate level of force to use, will you ask Congress to legislatively change that deference and alter the way prosecutors investigate and assess police-involved shootings?
First, it seeks to lay a better substantive groundwork, reprinting excerpts from State Department terrorism reports plus Justice Department statistics on terrorist investigations, for maneuvering courts back into their usual highly deferential stance toward presidential actions on immigration, especially actions with national security overtones.
By doing so, they've taken a less deferential approach to the executive branch than the judiciary traditionally has — forcing the government to show that decisions were made in good faith, and using the president's own statements to conclude that his administration's policies were impermissible.
British and American officials said the White House had been deferential to 10 Downing Street in planning the trip, letting the British government set the program and avoiding demands, such as a presidential address to Parliament, which the hosts would have found difficult to grant.
That deferential attitude defined voting in races for governor, too: In South Carolina, Democrats picked James Smith, a state legislator and military veteran close to Joseph R. Biden Jr., to run for governor, giving him more than 60 percent of the vote against two rivals.
Kevin Werbach, an associate professor of legal studies and business ethics at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School, said it's unrealistic to expect that a company still aiming to make a profit would do a complete flip-flop and become totally deferential to regulators.
People coming of age in that era of inevitable evils tend to be conservative in their life-style ideals (if not yet in their politics), and might be called the Builders: having reached adulthood on unstable ground, they're opportunistic entrepreneurs, restless climbers, and deferential compromisers.
But Matthews — who for much of the town hall was almost embarrassingly deferential and flattering to Buttigieg — pressed on, insisting that Franken had been pushed out by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and others, and forcing Buttigieg to weigh in on the pressure effort.
On the other hand, we have President Obama, who is a smart and decent family man, a man who respects and honors his wife, who is thoughtful and deferential, and yet he's seen as effete and weak by 30 or 40 percent of the country.
The current conservative court is also a lot more deferential to Trump on immigration than the Ninth Circuit; the assumption is that the Court will not only consider the case, but rule in the administration's favor and allow Trump to shut the door on DACA again.
"The notion that, as Justice Thomas suggested, it is 'flabbergasting' that newly discovered evidence could prove racial bias on the part of prosecutors is itself flabbergasting, especially given the facts of this case, and an alarmingly deferential view for a Supreme Court justice to take," Vladeck added.
Judge Bybee pointed to the litigation history of the Bush registry as an example of how deferential federal appellate courts are supposed to be in reviewing presidential decrees on immigration – and it cannot be reconciled, he said, with the 9th Circuit panel's decision on the Trump order.
They say he has maintained a quiet, deferential presence around his older teammates, but they have embraced him as a colleague — even if Kyle Beckerman, a 34-year-old midfielder, could only laugh when asked what it was like to have a teammate half his age.
The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the NLRB misapplied its highly deferential standard for reviewing arbitration cases when it ruled that in waiving its members' right to picket, the union did not waive members' right to display pro-union signs in cars on Verizon property.
Democrats argued the proof for more funding is in the wake of 12 Russians military officials indicted for alleged election hacking and President Donald Trump's performance during a news conference with Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, Finland, in which he was largely deferential to the Russian leader.
"The point is they have to be cute and sexy and push all the buttons of the deferential and pure girl that appeals to guys," said Jeff Kingston, professor at Temple University in Tokyo and an author of several books on Japan and Japanese social change.
DALLAS — President Trump made a passionate appeal to the National Rifle Association on Friday to help him in the midterm elections, renewing his longstanding bond with the controversial gun-rights group just months after criticizing members of Congress for being overly deferential to the gun lobby.
The HHS lawyers also said they were "surprised and concerned" with Novartis' interactions with the agency, advising CMS innovation center officials that the agency was "unusually deferential" to the company's recommendations for evaluating the drug, including CMS signaling its intent to implement at least some Novartis' recommendations.
For Mr. Trump, the worry about approval ratings would be less about what it might mean for the next election, still years away, but about how such numbers are interpreted by members of Congress, who historically have been more deferential to popular presidents than unpopular ones.
The candidates are all deferential to the legacy of Obama while arguing that his signature achievement is either hopelessly flawed, completely inadequate and must be replaced as soon as possible with a government plan for everyone -- or at the very least in need of a major overhaul.
Tall and thin, confident and calm, Jared Kushner, rookie negotiator, made his debut in front of the world of veteran diplomatic hagglers on Sunday with a polite, deferential and purposefully bland appearance at a Middle East conference that was designed to pay respect but little more.
The president's tweets and speeches make it clear what he thinks about black Americans: Our role is to sit down and shut up, to remain deferential and grateful to him — about what I'm not entirely sure, since his policies attack our rights, livelihoods and physical safety.
But by claiming the problem is that the news is "false" rather than that it is journalists being insufficiently deferential to the interests of those in power, a regime is able to claim that the real problem is the journalists' unprofessionalism rather than its own intolerance for dissent.
Dr. Christine Blasey Ford literally came to their vaunted halls, submitted to their arbitrary hearing rules, answered every question on their agenda to the best of her ability, was deferential and helpful and apologetic and collegial and calm and smart and heartfelt and a little fragile, but not hysterical.
"I think some people in the White House think the agency should be more deferential and the core group at the EPA who have earned the administrator's trust don't trust people at the White House," said Matt Mackowiak, a Republican strategist who worked on the Bush-Cheney reelection campaign.
"Under our limited and deferential review, we cannot say that the Department failed to fulfill its obligations under [The National Environmental Policy Act] by declining to make specific projections about environmental impacts stemming from specific levels of export-induced gas production," the court wrote in the August case.
In a meeting with Speaker Paul RyanPaul Davis RyanEmbattled Juul seeks allies in Washington Ex-Parkland students criticize Kellyanne Conway Latina leaders: 'It's a women's world more than anything' MORE's (R-Wis.) leadership team on Thursday, the typically brash Manhattan billionaire was polite, professional and even deferential at times.
The winner of six Emmy Awards and a member of the Television Academy Hall of Fame, he was a leading non-leading man, a vivid second banana whose deferential mien and skill as a collaborator made him most comfortable — and often funniest — in the shadow of a star.
"I understand the President wants his people and we want to be deferential as much as we can, but it would be nice to know some of the issues that come up after the fact, before the fact," said John Thune of South Dakota, the Senate's No. 3 Republican.
Still, many Native Americans saw the president's swift decision to resume work on the Dakota Access oil pipeline — which President Barack Obama had halted after protests at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota — as a sign that the new administration would be less deferential to their sovereignty.
Sanders was taking the opposite approach, arguing that Israel was responsible for the decline in the US-Israel relationship and pushing for America to be firmer in its line and more publicly critical of Israel on the Palestinian issue, and less deferential to Israel on broader regional issues.
For the six years I did it, the Craigslist roommate experience was mostly fine — everyone washed their dishes in a reasonable amount of time, and we were all mostly deferential to the other shared indignities of living with humans whose shower schedules don't always line up with your own.
She's an avatar of confined feminine ambition, of the polite young women in Rebecca Solnit's 2008 essay "Men Explain Things to Me," appearing "deferential and mostly silent" in the face of the men who explain the world to her — before heading home to write down her own thoughts anyway.
Investigations by The New York Times have revealed that Boeing employees sometimes felt pressure to play down safety concerns and meet deadlines, that key F.A.A. officials didn't fully understand MCAS and that the F.A.A. office in Seattle that oversees Boeing was seen inside the regulator as excessively deferential to the company.
In particular, Cruz plans to investigate what agencies learned between the two crashes, how that played into the FAA's decision to delay grounding the plane until virtually every other affected country had done so, and how deferential the FAA was in allowing Boeing to self-certify much of the aircraft's production.
"Under our limited and deferential review, we cannot say that the Department failed to fulfill its obligations under NEPA by declining to make specific projections about environmental impacts stemming from specific levels of export-induced gas production," the court determined in an opinion written by Judge Robert Wilkins, an Obama-appointee.
If there was criticism of President Trump on this visit, it certainly was not coming from Queen Elizabeth herself, whose undisguised enjoyment of President Trump was apparent as his folksy but still respectful approach aligned with American values while still showing deferential respect to the figurehead of our closest political ally.
Just as Jefferson's republican championing of the people's liberties depended upon his acceptance of a permanent underclass of slave laborers, so does Hamilton's commitment to the success of the entrepreneurial self-made man depend upon his assumption that there would be a deferential political underclass to do the heavy work.
While the concurrence written by Scalia urged the Supreme Court to be very deferential to state election laws, Stevens's qualified opinion said only that the Indiana law had not been proven to be discriminatory on its face, preserving the possibility that other similar statutes could be shown to be unconstitutional.
It was the most deferential gunpoint exchange ever, starting off with a plaintive "Ay, my fault," followed by sincerities like "Appreciate it," and "I'd give you a ride home, but …" The guy may have succumbed to the wicked ways of Robbin' Season, but that's no reason to abandon his home training.
Perhaps that is a reaction to the enormous, bipartisan criticism he received after his seemingly deferential approach to Mr. Putin in Helsinki, Finland, last summer, when Mr. Trump once again appeared to be convinced by the Russian leader's denials that he had interfered with the 2016 United States presidential election.
Personally, I can remember going on shopping trips with my mom as a kid, during which she would lament that the deferential customer service of yesteryear — where store associates would do things like bring you shoes to try on while you dined at the in-store cafe — was gone forever.
But on Monday, while speaking before Parliament about how he disagreed with Trump but saw nothing to be gained from trying to "demonize" him, Johnson came under fire from all sides for being too deferential to the US. Yvette Cooper, a Labour member of Parliament, found Johnson's rhetoric to be too tepid.
It could be difficult to find a person with the standing to sue the state or the insurer for violating their rights under federal law and even if you did find such a person, the courts are generally deferential to federal agencies about how they choose to use the resources at their disposal.
But if the two leaders do get together, Mr. Trump will face pressure to more forcefully condemn Russian aggression or risk once again looking deferential to Mr. Putin as he did in Helsinki this summer when he seemed to accept the Russian's word that he had not interfered in the 2016 presidential election.
Republicans are worried, but it's unclear if this will spur action to prevent Trump from moving ahead with the tariffs: Republicans have been deferential to Trump in his trade war with China, but this is completely different —Mexico is one of our closest trading partners, and Republicans overwhelmingly support free trade with the country.
There's nothing wrong with covering what's happening in South Korea, but my email inbox is already being flooded with people calling me un-American for what they view as not being sufficiently deferential to the idea currently being floated that North Korea poses a grave threat to the national interests of the United States.
"Our form of government, with a Senate that gives extraordinary power to rural states over urban states and is deferential to states' rights, makes it difficult to advance relatively modest gun-control measures, much less more sweeping measures," Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research, told the Washington Post.
"Fuad as a person and Q-News as a publication could be summed up in four ways: as progressive, cosmopolitan, attentive to context, and respectful but never deferential let alone obsequious towards religious and political authority," Yahya Birt, a University of Leeds professor and another friend of Nahdi's, wrote in a Medium post remembering him.
The seven House Democrats tasked with prosecuting President Donald Trump in the Senate have noticeably shifted their demeanor over the last three days, carefully adopting a more deferential — and at times, outright apologetic — tone in their final attempt to convince even a single Republican of the breadth and weight of their case against the president.
But from Trump's point of view, he was deferential to the congressional leadership on the legislative agenda and the legislative strategy, with the idea that if he let them figure that stuff out, then they knew best how to push this stuff through and get it to him to sign, and everyone would be happy.
For me, the big difference that I felt a lot and I've been pushing this for a while is culturally there just seems to be this massive difference whereby — it sounds very patronizing and critical and I apologize in advance — but American journalists, especially political journalists, White House correspondents are way more deferential to people in power.
Kellermann, though, argues many of the bills simply create distractions for agencies who are supposed to be providing services and enforcing rules, and that the mayor is failing to perform an important duty required of his office by leaving legislative floodgates open without putting up more of a fight against a body that is highly deferential to local representatives.
In a series of tweets posted after the announcement on Monday, Sanberg sought to make the case that Feinstein had been too deferential to Trump, and that with deep-blue California " leading the resistance" on the state level, "we need representatives willing to do the same in D.C." He did not, however, make clear his own plans.
"Judge Kavanaugh's background as a partisan political operative seems exactly like the kind of man President Trump would want on the Supreme Court if legal issues from the Mueller probe arise, deferential to a fault to executive authority, and with a long track record of partisan politics," Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Tuesday during floor remarks. Rep.
The question is made all the more pressing in view of Mr. Trump's enthusiastic embrace of countless autocrats, among them Vladimir Putin of Russia and King Salman of Saudi Arabia, where he just paid a deferential visit and assured Sunni Arab leaders that "we are not here to lecture" despite their abominable records on human rights.
And if Amazon's going to build the thing, it might as well be in a place that didn't come begging and pulling P.R. stunts, like pretty much every city in the US. But a Puerto Rico deal would require the e-retail giant to forgo some of the practically extortionate tax incentives and deferential treatment being offered by those same cities.
"The safeguard you think is there in the National Emergencies Act turns out not to be there, or at least most constitutional scholars who have looked at that question closely think that the Supreme Court would never go for it, especially now that we have a Supreme Court with two new members who are unusually deferential to executive power," Scheppele said.
Sanders' comment yet again revealed the President's extreme sensitivity to allegations that he or his campaign in 2016 colluded with a Russian intelligence effort to put him into office, which appears to have become even more acute since his deferential behavior toward Putin in Helsinki last week, amid an astonishing public debate over whether he has been compromised by Moscow.
Trump himself has been increasingly deferential to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellRepublican 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 (R-Ky.) in recent days over the terms of a potential impeachment trial.
Even if the standoff does not end in Mr. Sessions's departure — and the conventional wisdom in Washington assumes it will eventually — the spectacle raised questions about the future of the investigation into Russia's election interference, led to criticism from conservative news organizations that are usually deferential to the president and left Republican lawmakers unsettled as they defended the attorney general.
On Twitter, a Paris correspondent for the Reuters agency called it "deferential journalism at its worst," echoing a widespread feeling here that the mainstream media have been too complacent toward Mr. Macron, a young and media-savvy president whom critics call the "president of the rich" and who has openly argued that a powerful presidency is needed to revive French greatness.
Suddenly, the Republicans were the wild reformists, coming with axes and dynamite for all the edifices of society and government that America had erected over the last 100 years, while the Democratic Party was the conservative party, which is to say: protective toward institutions, deferential toward established power, defensive around precedent, and deeply concerned that anything other than narrow tinkering at the margins represented a dangerous radicalism.
Across the room, the bounds of Morrocan propriety are broken through in Hicham Benohoud's "The Classroom" (1994–2000), as Marrakesh school kids adopt audacious, ridiculous poses amidst their oblivious classmates and in front of their photographer-teacher (the deferential student-instructor relationship riotously discarded, as the shutter clicks), while Boris Mikhailov's "I am not I" (1992) challenges and explores Russian masculine ideals by way of self-exposure.
It isn't as though scholarship and the market have ever spoken the same language, though I suppose that in the past the market was more deferential (for its own ends) to scholarship than they seem to have been here, despite some of the credible scholars and commentators (Martin Kemp, Walter Isaacson, etc.) who have accepted at least the involvement of Leonardo in the Salvator Mundi.
For example, the Democratic National Committee's "Fairness Commission" prohibited the use of winner-take-all delegate allocation in primaries in the 1980s, on the stated egalitarian principle that delegates should properly be awarded in proportion to the popular vote, while Republicans—who are less deferential to claims that internal procedures are undemocratic—continue to allow states to use winner-take-all rules if they hold primaries after early March.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE on Tuesday pledged he would "stand up for America" as he faces criticism for appearing too deferential to Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Congress has been deferential in exercising its immunity powers to avoid interfering with criminal investigations; we share the position of the chief White House ethics lawyers for Presidents George W. Bush and Barack ObamaBarack Hussein ObamaDick Cheney to attend fundraiser supporting Trump reelection: report Forget conventional wisdom — Bernie Sanders is electable 2020 Democrats fight to claim Obama's mantle on health care MORE, Richard Painter and Norman Eisen, respectively.
He performed poorly during congressional hearings and has gotten a reputation for being overly deferential to the White House — particularly toward National Security Adviser John Bolton, Politico reported last week: Even worse, Defense Department officials with direct knowledge of Shanahan's operations said, he has tolerated a practice by Bolton and the National Security Council staff of calling Pentagon underlings and inserting themselves deep into the chain of command.
Justice Neil GorsuchNeil GorsuchGOP senator to try to censure Schumer over SCOTUS remark Trump slams Schumer statement on Kavanaugh, Gorsuch: 'Serious action MUST be taken NOW' Schumer's office says he was referencing justices paying 'political price' MORE said he agreed with the court's decision not to take up the case but issued a four-page statement to express concerns that the lower court had been unduly deferential to the Trump administration.
While Obama discusses code-switching in the context of her interactions with girls in her neighborhood, the concept is more often raised in instances where a person of color must adapt their behavior to fit the expectations of white audiences, be it a black man adjusting his tone to be more deferential when interacting with police or a woman changing her natural hair before starting a job in an office.
While Sanders was addressing a small gathering at an arts center in Waterloo on Sunday, Faiz Shakir, his campaign manager, said that because Iowans take their caucus process so seriously, "I actually think there's a lot of Californians and a lot of Nevadans and a lot of South Carolinians who want to see who Iowans have decided," and while not necessarily following Iowa's lead, "give deferential weight" to the caucus result.
" And even though Noah himself began the segment by marveling that he had anything left to say about this situation, he managed to find a new level of disappointment within himself when faced with Diamond Reynolds's Facebook Live footage of the shooting's aftermath, noting that Castile's loved ones still had to have the presence of mind to be "deferential" to the cop who had just shot him, even continuing to call him "sir.
It fed followers of its main page with a diet of posts that aligned closely with the administration's own messaging: a live stream of Attorney General William Barr's deferential news conference; a quote from Barr's remarks saying that evidence of obstruction didn't hold up; footage of Trump leaving Joint Base Andrews for vacation in Florida; footage of Trump arriving in Florida; Sean Hannity's celebratory opening monologue; a quote from former GOP Rep.
Word of the Day adjective: humbly entreating noun: one praying humbly for something _________ The word suppliant has appeared in four New York Times articles in the past 10 years, including on May 22, 2008 in "Obama Declares Nomination Is 'Within Reach'" by Adam Nagourney and Jeff Zeleny: But most immediately, Mr. Obama faces the task of bringing the party back together, and finding the right tone to strike in being deferential to Mrs.
Pompeo declined to answer repeated questions from Democrats related to the ongoing Russia investigations and was challenged at several points to break with President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump pushes back on recent polling data, says internal numbers are 'strongest we've had so far' Illinois state lawmaker apologizes for photos depicting mock assassination of Trump Scaramucci assembling team of former Cabinet members to speak out against Trump MORE, as lawmakers voiced concerns that he would be too deferential as secretary of State.

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