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971 Sentences With "derided"

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

Ronald Reagan regularly derided bureaucrats and they in turn derided him.
Ms Warren similarly derided insurance companies, and derided politicians who offered "small ideas and spinelessness".
" Trump has derided the media throughout his presidency derided the media, labeling coverage he dislikes "fake news" and describing certain organizations as the "enemy of the people.
The Worm The actual strike at the end of much-derided Scotty 2 Hotty's much-derided finisher likely works in the same way that Cena's Five Knuckle Shuffle does.
The president derided the two senators as "weak" on immigration.
He also derided what he called the "fake news" media.
Apple already has derided the findings and started an appeal.
Now it is widely derided as "Brexit in name only".
Trump has frequently and bluntly derided Walker in recent days.
Mr Tusk derided it as a pick 'n' mix approach.
Russia's foreign minister has derided OST as a "narcoliberal" idea.
Which is what makes them instantly devourable and easily derided.
He has been heralded and derided in the public sphere.
The Clinton campaign derided the accuracy and the turnout model.
Republicans defended the premise of the hearing, which Democrats derided.
Dr. Barbara Reynolds, who derided today's activists for their approach.
Mr Trump publicly derided both Mr McMaster and Mr Bolton.
The show of friendship has been derided by rights activists.
" Competitors derided the mostly female reporting staff as "Rappler-ettes.
The idea was widely derided on late night talk shows.
" Trump has long derided the investigation as a "witch hunt.
The Taliban derided the delegation, likening it to a "wedding party".
Scalia often attacked Kennedy's legal reasoning and derided him as pretentious.
Republican lawmakers have derided Obama's preliminary framework for closing the prison.
"Many critics derided [Palin's] speech as 'rambling' and 'insane,'" he notes.
Trump has derided NATO, while his agency heads have praised it.
" The Washington Post reported that Trump had derided Sessions as "Mr.
Wu has been derided for her clothing, body, race, and gender.
He praised a convicted criminal, Mr Manafort, and derided federal prosecutors.
As for the language in the debate story – "derided" for Mrs.
Those who had derided Indian democracy as a sham seemed vindicated.
But this remains a fringe view, sometimes derided as "galactic imperialism".
Early on, MoviePass was derided as too good to be true.
Enes Kanter, derided for his defense, had three off the bench.
His approach, widely derided by GOP hawks, remains the right one.
Some conservatives have derided the payments as bailouts for insurance companies.
" There was booing during Trump's speech when he derided "fake news.
Trump derided the Times for its handling of their private discussion.
Several Democratic and Republican lawmakers have derided the comments as racist.
His tenure is widely derided as the worst in Fed history.
They mocked and derided all people's protests from Occupy to #NoDAPL.
But the Turkmenistan is widely derided for its human rights record.
On Tuesday in Tourcoing, Mr. Macron derided the program as ineffectual.
May, 62, has plenty of experience being derided and conspired against.
It endured national scrutiny and was derided by many as racist.
Romance Romance is both loved and derided for its formulaic nature.
" — SOMINI SENGUPTA First he derided North Korea's leader as "rocket man.
We're frequently derided (I'm looking at you, Mike Pompeo) and assaulted.
While critically derided, the exhibition set attendance records at the museum.
The unique texture of their hair was immediately derided and weaponized.
I can speak from experience about the much-derided Canadian system.
He has derided US judges for decisions with which he disagrees.
The haiku style examination of Ford was wide and correctly derided.
Trump has long derided the deal and threatened to abandon it.
" The Republican National Committee derided it as "a socialist wish list.
For her reticence, Clinton was derided as phony, controlled and inauthentic.
But the Sanders campaign derided a new television ad released by Mrs.
President Donald Trump derided it as "one of the worst deals ever".
" He derided the Supreme Court as a "rubber stamp for the president.
At that time, Tillerson championed diplomacy, a path the president publicly derided.
Facebook's Free Basics program specifically has been widely derided by internet advocates.
The much-derided "information deficit model" has proven a failure in practice.
Flash and Java were long derided for their perpetual state of insecurity.
Sex and the City 2, in particular, is often derided among fans.
Fernandez refused to negotiate with the creditors, who she derided as "vultures".
DIGITAL media are often (fairly) derided for playing to short attention spans.
"Those who once derided Nixon now rushed to his defense," she added.
But a number of other business leaders derided it in forceful terms.
Even some center-right Republicans are derided as Republicans in name only.
Scottie Pippen and a cast unintentionally derided as "supporting" won 55 games.
I am not the type of super-wealthy person derided by Sens.
" He nonetheless derided their fruitless efforts as a symptom of the "E.
The museum also underwent a $230 million rebranding, which was widely derided.
But the symbolic move was derided on both sides of the aisle.
While industry has historically supported the process, it's been derided by environmentalists.
But the veterans derided the move for contradicting the country's egalitarian ethos.
Caucuses in particular have been derided as old-fashioned, opaque or inaccessible.
Catalina, the latest version of the OS, is widely derided right now.
Capitals fans derided the notion that such an incident could be scripted.
Legal scholars across the ideological spectrum derided the state's argument as nonsensical.
Trump derided Bolton's penchant for pushing military action and intervention on occasion.
That said, "Christopher," from Season 4, has been widely — and rightly — derided.
Beloved by his patients, Sarno was also derided by his medical peers.
Researchers blame central planning for the widely derided response to Hurricane Katrina.
France's sports daily newspaper L'Equipe, derided that decision, describing it is "incomprehensible".
Since then, Trump has derided Wolff and former top strategist Steve Bannon.
When he presented as female, other gamers sexually harassed and derided his gender.
Privacy advocates have long derided cell-site simulators because they operate in secrecy.
That's pretty good news in an area long derided for not paying artists.
In a genre that has been derided for being repetitive, Chucky stands alone.
Other party leaders derided the plan during a televised debate on September 17th.
The characters themselves were derided, and it was very specific to geek culture….
One rejiggered voting districts so drastically that the opposition derided it as gerrymandering.
Eden Valley, Australia, $19 Viognier is sometimes derided for its lack of acidity.
A European breakaway might be derided by fans, and it might never happen.
WASHINGTON – Roy Moore lunched with the Senate Republican establishment he has repeatedly derided.
And increasingly, Facebook is being derided for addicting people to mindless feed scrolling.
The idea that living abroad allows you to "find yourself" is often derided.
Though much derided, the "trickle-down" effect of growth on poverty is real.
The government of Binyamin Netanyahu, the prime minister, is often derided as chauvinist.
New York, we all know, is often derided as a mere commercial capital.
He has compared intelligence officers to Nazis and derided FBI agents as corrupt.
He derided the rival event, insisting that only 35,000 people had showed up.
He also derided the Obama administration's regulations of the energy and healthcare industries.
The much older pro-Park crowd derided the decision as a political one.
Modernism lauded the abstraction of white forms and derided earthy verisimilitude in sculpture.
Trump has occasionally derided McCain since his death for voting against the effort.
" T-Mobile's chief executive, John Legere, derided the deal as a "slippery slope.
Remember 25, when electric cars were commonly derided as highway-legal golf carts?
State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert derided the vote as a "so-called" election.
We became the entertainment, not whatever clumsy dialogue or plot twist we derided.
It was completely derided by our core audience and they were completely wrong.
Pussy-centric feminism is rightly derided as cis-sexist, reductionist, and simply tired.
He has derided that funding as a Republican giveaway to the insurance industry.
Years ago, an NAACP branch member derided him for what he was doing.
" In lambasting the book a day earlier, Trump derided Bannon as "Sloppy Steve.
Of all the major awards shows, the Emmys are often the most derided.
Moore has denied the allegations and derided the Post story as "completely false."
The theory has been derided by economists from the left and the right.
Africans with darker skin are taunted and derided as "burned" by Libyan smugglers.
DealBook Critics have derided WeWork as overvalued and vulnerable to the next downturn.
Rather it is remembered as a widely-derided post-Brat Pack ensemble piece.
For decades, they were derided as bourgeois house pets that wasted scarce resources.
Trump touted Handel in his NRA speech, and derided the Democrat, Jon Ossoff.
" He pointed to the press section and derided "all those sleazebags up there.
Electric cars were derided as wimpy golf carts before the company came along.
Trump has frequently derided Warren as "Pocahontas" at campaign rallies over the years.
The picture went viral on social media and was endlessly derided by conservatives.
Nobody deserves to be publicly derided for going excessively large three years ago.
The resulting tabletops of hedges and grass are derided by residents in nearby hollows.
In 1977, President Jimmy Carter derided them as a luxury, yet the practice continued.
Launched in 1985, Clive Sinclair's much-derided Sinclair C5 was discontinued after minimal sales.
Several veterans of immigration policy in Washington have derided the "cabal" now in charge.
Photoshop, in 2018, is often derided as a tool that bolsters unrealistic beauty standards.
From conception, it's been derided as half-baked, artificial, and void of mental nutrients.
Republicans derided the much more modest Obamacare as spendthrift socialisation of American health care.
Taxes: He has derided business tax cuts and opposed 2017's GOP tax overhaul.
People who believed in Musk celebrated his generosity; people who didn't derided the effort.
That's ironic given that Apple was widely derided when it first unveiled the phone.
Last week, Trump derided NAFTA during remarks in Wisconsin meant to highlight American manufacturing.
Remember, the Democrats mocked and derided him for even talking to Kim Jong-un.
As a candidate for president, Bush had famously derided the concept of nation-building.
Her enemies -- including allies of her ex-husband, Prince Charles -- derided her for it.
His recent comments on abortion and nuclear security have been derided by both parties.
But the ban was derided by critics on Wednesday as a public relations stunt.
The board did, however, knock a few of Trump's proposals and derided his temperament.
It's enough to make the otherwise derided pantsuit look like the … well, smart choice.
Critics inside and outside of Washington have long derided McGahn as a Trump lackey.
Musk, on the other hand, derided companies that didn't put out semi-autonomous technology.
But Mr. Cuomo has derided the progressive proposal as impractical in its potential cost.
The app was immediately derided by the film and TV industries when it launched.
Once derided as merely practical, puffer coats are now a bona fide "it" item.
He even created a widely derided commission that was supposed to prove this point.
Transit advocates have long derided the subway information officials provided as inadequate and misleading.
The proposal, widely derided as a "dementia tax," raised such an uproar that Mrs.
Healthcare-themed TikToks that have gone viral as of late have been widely derided.
He has reportedly derided Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross as "past his prime" in meetings.
Bennie Thompson, the chairman of the House Homeland Security committee, derided the department's turnover.
Bennie Thompson, the chairman of the House Homeland Security committee, derided the department's turnover.
He promoted an offbeat corporate culture derided for sometimes emphasizing drinking beer and tequila.
The White House derided the court decision as a danger to the nation's security.
The proposal, widely derided as a "dementia tax," raised sufficient enough protests that Mrs.
He derided trade deals despite an Iowa economy that relies in part on exports.
" Hoekstra has also derided past US presidents for calling Islam a "religion of peace.
It has been derided as kitsch, but the sound is earnest, sincere and important.
The OMB also derided the policy of notifying countries that were subject to cyberattacks.
Because of her father, many South Koreans long derided Ms. Park as a princess.
He derided John, then called Hillary Clinton a "criminal" and taunted his former opponents.
Video games have long been derided for their blatant sexism and objectification of female characters.
Though she is widely derided by liberals, her endorsement holds considerable sway among hardcore conservatives.
But, when these particular readers do that work, they are derided as pitchfork-wielding hysterics.
C., chairman of the influential conservative House Freedom Caucus, openly derided the compromise approach Wednesday.
Mr Bullock derided their "wish-list economics", but neither backed down from their ambitious plans.
Shankar Sinh Vagela, one defector, derided Congress as a "rudderless ship" unable to win elections.
Trump has derided the WTO as a "catastrophe" and his administration is ratcheting up tariffs.
Now in prison, he was derided by Sheikh Hasina in an interview as "mentally sick".
The solution the legacy airlines settled on was basic economy, sometimes derided as "last class".
Trump, who has frequently derided Mueller's probe as a "witch hunt," has denied any wrongdoing.
The Spanish artist's then much-derided late works, Mr Rosenthal felt, were ripe for reassessment.
Trump also derided what he cast as a drift toward "socialism" in the Democratic Party.
They were derided as Gold Brickers, after the single gold bar that denoted their rank.
It was written hastily—literally at lunch on Thursday—and derided by several Republican senators.
It's been derided as a fad that panders to the weaker facets of human nature.
He derided female comedians and bristled at criticism of his approach to the MDA telethon.
He's also gone after networks, including CNN, which he has derided as dishonest and partisan.
Trump has derided the protests as unpatriotic and insulting to U.S. service members and veterans.
They and others like them are derided by the public, and uniformly condemned by conservatives.
In Washington, even simple communication with an adversary is often mindlessly derided as a concession.
He views a free, unbiased news media as an enemy to be derided and tamed.
He helps the companies, sometimes derided as middlemen who don't add value, navigate Washington policymaking.
Its angular and blocky design is being widely derided on Twitter and across the internet.
"She's derided by the President because she stands up for all of us," he said.
Macron also derided his Socialist opponent's proposal to tax robots to protect low-skill jobs.
She is famous for frivolity, derided by some peers for her obsession with boldface names.
Gucci called it an "homage" after a number of critics derided the design as appropriative.
He once derided the United Nations by citing its 38-story headquarters in New York.
John Kelly, his chief of staff, derided Dreamers who did not register for protected status.
They also derided him for what they said were his attempts to divide the military.
Critics have derided the law as awkward, "purely symbolic" and irrelevant to an applicant's qualifications.
Mr. Trump has derided her previous service in the Bush administration and questioned her loyalty.
Mr. Trump has derided the book and has threatened legal action to halt its publication.
She is often derided in Mexico as a traitor to her people, a colonial sellout.
There was a day when Republicans like Mr. Ryan derided President Barack Obama as inexperienced.
Gold, once derided as a relic, is up 40 percent in the past few years.
Derided as the "prison of nations," the sprawling, multiethnic state was in fact surprisingly progressive.
They're often derided by investors as a last resort for sketchy companies to go public.
But Elizabeth Warren, the Democratic senator from Massachusetts, derided the nominee during his Senate confirmation.
Into this maw strides Roseanne, once derided as evidence of a society slouching toward Gomorrah.
Mr. Bloomberg derided Mr. Trump as a lawless leader and quoted Mr. Spencer's resignation letter.
Some of the most derided fees and rules of airline tickets are coming to Amtrak.
Elliott has derided that claim as a company-created liability meant to entrench the board.
One of Mr. Mélenchon's top aides derided the candidate's critics in a telephone interview Tuesday.
Twitter's algorithmic feed has been loathed and derided by users since it started in 2018.
Many have predictably derided the move as idiotic, telling her to stay in her lane.
Arkansas senator Tom Cotton derided WeWork founder Adam Neumann&aposs leadership at a Tuesday hearing.
The media derided President Trump's assertions that millions of illegals voted in the 2016 election.
The billionaire has derided the cryptocurrency as a "fraud," useful only for criminals and murderers.
Providing power-ups through microtransactions is often derided as a "pay to win" business model.
They have been lauded as innovative and convenient in addition to being derided as sowing inequality.
Brushing off Mr. Rubio's pugnacious turn, Mr. Christie derided it as a fake, consultant-driven performance.
Watt ran the ball but lost a yard, a play that was widely derided on Twitter.
Once derided as a silly novelty, emojis are coming into their own as a communication tool.
After Trump derided his presidential rival as "Low energy Jeb Bush," the nickname appeared to stick.
Back in the 1950s and 1960s, King was repeatedly derided by his opponents for inciting violence.
They&aposre derided as "Bengalis," and many in Myanmar believe they are illegal migrants from Bangladesh.
He has curbed the religious police, who enforced Sunni supremacy and derided Shias as kuffar (infidels).
While AirPods were once derided for resembling toothbrush heads, nobody's really cracking jokes about them anymore.
She's derided by critics as shrill and unlikeable, and applauded by supporters as principled and uncompromising.
Conversely, it has transformed Congress's leader, Rahul Gandhi, from a derided princeling into a credible challenger.
Publicly derided the 9th Circuit based in San Francisco, which has repeatedly challenged his administration's actions.
Prince Andrew and his ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, were derided as "Airmiles Andy" and "Freebie Fergie".
As far back as the ancient Greeks, humans have derided the "less divine" sense of smell.
This chart was put together by clowns, not competent statisticians, and deserves to be appropriately derided.
At home, he was both loved and derided, while in France, he became a comic icon.
Tsongas, in turn, derided the middle-class tax cut as originating from pollsters and not economists.
" Kennedy asked Dwight Eisenhower, a retired Army general whom he'd once derided as a "cold bastard.
This is typical behavior and is often derided as the reason patents can hold back innovation.
Cruz has derided Rubio for "screaming liar" when Cruz brings up his record, including on immigration.
It's been unjustly derided, and now is as good a time as any to change that.
Ivanka failed to meet basic apparel industry standards, which critics have derided as already low enough.
Sometimes in popular culture, things that are comfortable are derided for being simple or low-brow.
Obama's much-derided anti-ISIS military plan for Iraq and Syria is still essentially in place.
Trump has repeatedly derided the media's coverage of his campaign, arguing it is biased against him.
He was most recently re-elected in March, in a vote that critics derided as rigged.
And it's not just the result of students taking courses through oft-derided for-profit providers.
Derided by some as "quota sampling," it nonetheless overcomes the low response rate of telephone polling.
There were no reports of complaints about the AirPods widely derided electric toothbrush head design, either.
The president derided the media during an appearance at the Conservative Political Action Conference earlier Friday.
Just a few years ago, the idea of a $15 minimum wage was derided as impossible.
He derided the "corrupt elites" that ruled under the government of then-prime minister, Manmohan Singh.
Another Cirque curse, since we're on the subject, is an oft-derided affection for cloying whimsy.
Both were derided over the years — as vulgar, as adolescent, as exploitative and finally as anachronistic.
U.S.A. Gymnastics, the sport's governing body, has been widely derided for its handling of the scandal.
Put out a steady stream of unremarkable content and risk being ignored or derided as boring.
Russell Westbrook, who is sometimes derided for his defense, did particularly heroic work covering James Harden.
Democrats also derided the administration because no CBP officials responded to the committee's call to testify.
Trump has denied participating in any collusion and derided the idea that he has obstructed justice.
He and his administration have repeatedly derided the First Amendment's protections of speech and the press.
Republicans derided the whistleblower as a "dissident" lurking inside the government who sought to undermine Trump.
Over the past week, Biden derided any candidate who is a "planner" rather than a doer.
The challenge was derided as "slacktivism"—a way for people to feel virtuous without doing much.
He did it again yesterday in a public speech-- derided you as a low-IQ individual.
Schiff's comments came shortly after Republicans derided the impeachment inquiry as a farce built on hearsay.
Fisher contrasted Tesla with Toyota which, though sometimes derided as boring, makes changes and updates cautiously.
U.K. punk magazines derided them as "Typical Typical"; their singles floundered at home while charting overseas.
His attendance had been widely anticipated as he had derided OPEC as a "toothless tiger" in 2014.
Players derided Rizal for not looking Filipino enough and for cribbing so blatantly from her country's iconography.
But Trump shut that idea down at the infamous meeting where he derided immigration from "shithole" countries.
" She derided Macron as "Hollande's heir" and said "it's time to free French people from arrogant elites.
Dozens, then thousands, of messages a day derided me as bad at my job, crazy, an embarrassment.
In thousands of tweets across the country, the people of Grimsby were derided as dummies and hypocrites.
In 2017, Trump budget director Mick Mulvaney derided deficit-spending on government programs as "theft" from taxpayers.
The company has recently been derided for several new features, including Moments and changing 'Favorites' to 'Likes'.
North Korea derided South Korea as a "puppet warmongers" in a statement about the Red Flag exercises.
Politicians on both sides have derided the draft as aimed at entrenching the power of the military.
Critics have derided Allred as media-obsessed, in an effort to disparage her work along political lines.
People of color were treated as chattel, derided as "savages" and enslaved and degraded at every turn.
In 2002 America's then Secretary of Defence, Donald Rumsfeld, was derided for his talk of "known unknowns".
Though often derided as "tracers" or "shaders," comic book inkers are a vital part of the process.
But the animation studio Gainax sought redemption from the fans who derided the anime's heavily philosophical finale.
" Trump has long derided Mueller's probe, calling it a "witch hunt" and suggesting his team is "biased.
Conservatives also derided the Cures Act for its mandatory "autopilot" nature given the ordinary discretionary budget process.
He has repeatedly derided the Obama administration for failing to reach a denuclearization agreement with the country.
When he began his White House bid in June 2015, pundits and political professionals derided his chances.
Earlier Tuesday, before calling for unity in his speech, he derided the Senate minority leader, Chuck Schumer.
HERCULANEUM, Italy (Reuters) - The rightist Northern League once derided southern Italy as a crime-riddled, parasitic wasteland.
The president has repeatedly derided the probe as a witch hunt, saying that there was no collusion.
Escort Theory: An often-derided suggestion that incels should just see escorts to relieve their sexual frustration.
Clinton at a hearing in October, which even some conservative commentators derided as a waste of time.
A similar, painstaking process yielded the Iran nuclear deal which Trump derided and withdrew from last month.
Several Democratic lawmakers, as well as multiple GOP congressmen, have derided the comments as xenophobic and racist.
Democrats have derided the GOP investigation as simply part of a witch hunt against the healthcare law.
Its membership swelled to more than three million paying customers, but critics derided the model as unsustainable.
This trend is spurring the return of the oft-derided conglomerates that came about in the 1960s.
"  He then derided the Puerto Rican people, who he claimed "want everything to be done for them.
Tom Steyer derided frontrunners Warren and Biden for not saying climate change would be their top issue.
Current US President Donald Trump has derided his predecessor's deal, but it appears to be moving ahead.
Trump also repeatedly derided the Mueller investigation as a "witch hunt" throughout the nearly two year probe.
Since taking office, Trump has privately derided the younger Bush as "genius" for entering the Iraq War.
Trump's policies on trade, immigration, and even abortion were universally derided by GOP elites during the campaign.
The sound of snap music, controversial and derided despite its popularity, has proven immensely influential over time.
During the election campaign, pundits frequently derided Donald Trump as an online comment section come to life.
In 2017 and 2018, many Republicans derided the proposal as a "bailout" of the Affordable Care Act.
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel defended Snapchat's much-derided redesign in an interview with the Wall Street Journal.
Young draftees derided antiwar demonstrators as "draft dodgers," notably those who escaped the draft using college deferments.
They derided the deal as a capitulation by a leader who they had trusted to stand firm.
They derided the idea that those strangers would be nice enough, or honest enough, to respect properties.
The president has derided her previous service in the George W. Bush administration and questioned her loyalty.
Mr. Trump has regularly derided the European Union as an unfair trading partner to the United States.
In July 3.4, Mr. Trump, then a long-shot candidate, derided Senator John McCain's captivity in Vietnam.
The ads have long been derided for being at best male-focused and at worst blatantly sexist.
Democrats blasted McConnell for setting up what they derided as a "fake" vote on the Collins amendment.
It was a movement that in a previous generation might have been derided as corny, or Mormon.
Although often derided as fringe figures, many of the aspiring opposition candidates were poised to win seats.
If there was one group Mr. Trump repeatedly derided on the campaign trail, it was the establishment.
But Arab politicians derided Netanyahu's appeals, and his promises of direct flights to Mecca for Muslim pilgrims.
John McCain voted no on a health care bill that had been widely derided as being terrible!
They derided him for spending more time on the golf course than he did in the office.
Democrats have derided the investigation as a GOP effort to distract from and undermine the Mueller probe.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions, publicly derided by Mr. Trump as "VERY weak," refused to resign under pressure.
Airlines, which pay about $20183 million apiece for the Max, were derided as incompetent, their questions unreasonable.
Trump has throughout his presidency derided the media, often singling out specific reporters and organizations for criticism.
Democrats have pounced on Mnuchin, however, arguing he embodies the very Wall Street insiders Trump derided. Sens.
Trade experts have derided that strategy as an affront to the norms of the international trading system.
The band members, three women punk rockers, derided Putin in a protest in the country's main cathedral.
He derided the effort as a "stunt" since Trump has already said he would veto the legislation.
Mr. Lepage is an international art star, a celebrated and sometimes derided director, actor and scenic innovator.
Critics have derided the NRC&aposs exclusive use in Assam as a way of stoking religious tensions.
Derided as "junk insurance," the plans had very low premiums but often came with five-figure deductibles.
It was derided on the right as "amnesty" for offering a pathway to citizenship for the Dreamers.
Trump has worked to alter the Obama-era nuclear agreement, which both he and Netanyahu have derided.
Wildlife experts and conservation groups derided the decision that is expected to damage the dunes in the area.
Those who say they will join "the resistance" to Trump are often derided as out-of-touch troublemakers.
Anti-semites have long derided it as a "Jewish newspaper," citing the religious roots of its family owners.
Trump took credit for the Arab world's blockade of Qatar, which he derided as a supporter of terror.
Hours before polls closed in that race, Trump derided Sanford on Twitter and endorsed his rival, state Rep.
Little wonder the point guard has divided fans; admired for his relentless play, derided for his dirty tactics.
Despite his physical brilliance, Nijinsky was derided by some, and Diaghilev took it upon himself to educate him.
President Trump has also appealed to our love of country, an affection often derided by his political opponents.
Her stepfather, a successful businessman, was an alcoholic who derided Gaston's Jewish heritage and allegedly sexually assaulted her.
The move was derided as little more than symbolic at the time, and so it has largely proved.
It is smart of Mr Trump, who once derided her for her criticisms, to try to harness that.
Hannity derided the rush to judgment against Moore, but he bluntly asked Moore about each of the charges.
Its supporters derided Patreon as "welfare" for undeserving (and usually female) artists even as they joined in droves.
Still, the once highly respected Mueller is now widely derided by Trump allies in and out of government.
Many of those companies touted "pro-forma" profits that were derided as excluding everything but the kitchen sink.
Congressional Republicans, unable to break free of their no-new-taxes-ever stance, have derided the oil tax.
In a television interview earlier, Zuma derided the decision and said he had been "victimised" by the party.
I derided the unattractiveness of Apple's AirPods when they were first announced, only to later eat my words.
" He accused them of bringing drugs and crime with them across the border and derided them as "rapists.
Millennials are often derided, wholesale, as lazy, entitled, and unwilling to learn what it takes to work hard.
It is led by ex-Labour and Liberal Democrat staffers who have derided Mr Corbyn in the past.
Clinton derided these and other positions, promising she would do a better job keeping the United States safe.
Thomas has been derided by many liberals, including from the black community, as a puppet of Justice Scalia.
Trump also derided Biden in his remarks and skewered other Democrats vying to be the party's 2020 candidate.
Fans derided the company for neglecting to include the central character in the initial set, so Hasbro backpedaled.
" Vice President Joe Biden derided the airport in 2014 when he compared it to "some third-world country.
Trump derided The Boston Globe as "stupid" and "worthless" in response to the special edition of the paper.
Trump was derided for talking about the crowd size, but it might be a decent indicator of enthusiasm.
Belinelli provides no resistance whatsoever against Tony Allen, long derided for his own deficiencies on the offensive end.
Trump—derided, distrusted, and singularly ineffective—is a weak president, but more important, he is weakening the presidency.
Members of this much-derided sign are often described as gossips, manipulators, and other not-so-complimentary names.
Long derided as the obsolete propaganda of a collapsed state, GDR-era art is now experiencing a revival.
Trump has derided the congressional probe as a political smear, and Giuliani has said he would not cooperate.
Trump has repeatedly denounced the investigation and more recently derided reports about the possible questions Mueller might ask.
Lincoln might be derided as a poor woodsman, but he was also valorized for his log cabin roots.
Trump has derided scientific studies asserting a correlation between man-made greenhouse gases and a dangerously warming planet.
ONLY a few years ago, economists derided offshore wind as a ludicrously expensive way of cutting carbon emissions.
" The Strategic Defense Initiative was derided by Reagan's political opponents and some self-styled experts as "Star Wars.
Trump has frequently derided CNN and other media outlets, arguing their coverage of him is biased and dishonest.
But FOIA is derided nowadays as a "Freedom From Information Act" that begets merely a mirage of transparency.
Some of the foreign policy experts who derided Mr. Trump's campaign could also end up joining his administration.
Moore additionally derided the Clinton campaign for keeping her illness secret, saying it provides ammunition for her critics.
For something that critics derided as a tech fad that would soon evaporate, that's a rather impressive accomplishment.
He has derided federal workers as "Deep State" actors who seek to bureaucratically undermine his policies and presidency.
The president has repeatedly derided the investigation as a "witch hunt" and a "hoax" driven by partisan aims.
On Tuesday morning, he derided the deal as a "ridiculous" agreement that gives away too much to Tehran.
It actually started two weeks ago when Trump again derided CNN as "fake news" at a press gaggle.
The failures of the critically derided films "Catwoman" in 2004 and "Elektra" in 2005 were used as proof.
His spite toward anything everyday — what in last week's episode he derided as "ordinary" — is visceral and explosive.
American officials have derided the European effort, calling it impractical, overly complex and unlikely to produce much trade.
Wade decision was "settled law" — a comment that Democrats and abortion rights advocates derided as a meaningless dodge.
Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz launched a (widely derided) campaign last year but suspended it due to back problems.
And India is resisting the dominance of companies like Facebook — derided as "tech colonization" — with coming tough regulations.
Mr. Trump has derided this approach, calling it "appeasement," but no mention was made of that on Thursday.
Mr. Trump also derided the media for focusing on his tweets, which are his preferred form of communication.
Both ideas were so roundly derided that they never made it past the point of a news release.
" Medicaid Expansion received some funding from the Fairness Project, derided by conservatives in the area as "California money.
In October, one of the company&aposs ads was derided for being tone deaf, Business Insider previously reported.
Why work a job where you are underpaid, overworked and derided as lazy and undeserving all at once?
That a greater proportion of afflicted Americans are now receiving treatment should be applauded rather than implicitly derided.
In a subsequent torrent of comments from followers of either men, Schopflin was mostly derided for his remark.
Justice Kennedy was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, who was unfairly derided for being anti-gay.
Critics have derided the change as both a watering down of the event and a brazen money grab.
Amy Klobochur (D-Minn.) derided Bloomberg, the former New York mayor and a late entrant in the race.
McCabe was fired by Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Friday night after being long derided by the President.
Trump has long derided the U.N. as an ineffective and incompetent organization teetering on the verge of irrelevance.
Supreme Court confirmation hearings are justly derided for the scripted questions from senators and the nonanswers from nominees.
They used that rationale to justify last season's Glenn-anigans as well as the much derided culminating cliffhanger.
The fruit has been hailed as a superfood and, more recently, derided as a signifier of millennial excess.
At U.C.L.A. he derided colleges that accepted older foreign athletes and intimated that other coaches were breaking rules.
He has been derided as out of touch with common folk and is fighting a slump in popularity.
Photos showed Kim talking amicably with Trump, a man he once derided as a "mentally deranged U.S. dotard".
Comey has long been derided by both Democrats and Republicans for his handling of the Clinton email scandal.
Such tickets, which strip out those few remaining comforts that economy passengers enjoy, have been derided as "last class".
If true, this would help explain events such as Mr Holt's interruptions of Professor Hubeny, often derided as "mansplaining".
Trump and his allies, who derided the Mueller probe as a political "witch hunt", portrayed the report as vindication.
Jonathan, though derided as a traitor by many in Canada, got to play in the 2014 FIFA World Cup.
Mnangagwa's opponents from Grace Mugabe's ousted G40 faction derided the line-up as old wine in a khaki bottle.
Republicans have campaigned for years on repealing the law that they've derided as a government takeover of health care.
Obama was derided as the "deporter in chief" by immigrant groups for his own role in deporting undocumented immigrants.
One of the remaining parliamentarians derided allegations that the CNRP had been involved in planning a US-backed coup.
The dialogue was continued and renamed under President Barack Obama and has since been derided by Trump as ineffective.
In the months leading up to the midterm elections, Trump derided his attorney general in a series of interviews.
" In August 2015, he derided the tech contingent who flocked to Burning Man as "a fucking joke" and "dystopian.
But we knew about him because of a much-derided and feminized way that women gain knowledge: celebrity gossip.
That same year, Bennifer hit the big screen in Gigli, which was widely derided by critics and fans alike.
On the other end of the spectrum, historically, darker-skinned black women have been derided for wearing red lipstick.
He derided Trump's remarks as reflective of an unpresidential attitude, declaring again that the Republican nominee's temperament was disqualifying.
Jackson wasn't taken seriously — only 300 protesters showed up, and Whoopi Goldberg derided the ribbons during her opening monologue.
In 2014, she wrote an essay for The Wall Street Journal in which she derided streaming as a medium.
Democrats and feminists defended Bill Clinton against allegations of sexual assault, which one aide memorably derided as "bimbo eruptions".
The dialog was continued and renamed under President Barack Obama and has since been derided by Trump as ineffective.
But the article derided them as "al-Qaeda-affiliated," and concluded that the chemical weapons attack allegation wasn't true.
On Pro Football The N.F.L. is sometimes derided as the No Fun League for its oh-so-serious ways.
True, it abandons much-derided plans for an army-led "crisis panel", empowered to topple elected governments at will.
Its early adopters, "Explorers" who spent $1,500 for the privilege, were derided as "Glassholes," widely mocked, and sometimes abused.
But while many people loved his work, some derided Blunt's lyrics, and as a result the artist pulled back.
That much-derided policy tool was suspended after only a week after sending jitters throughout global markets in January.
SARAH PALIN has been absent from the spotlight for many months and is derided by many in her party.
The president's remarks were widely derided and some, though not many, of his fellow Republicans spoke out against them.
Courtroom sketches of the superstar singer are being derided on social media for not quite capturing her famous visage.
"  Pompeo on Sunday derided the Iranian government, comparing its leaders to a "mafia" and calling them "hypocritical holy men.
Critics derided his platform as "Chavismo Lite," but it worked: he came within one percentage point of the Presidency.
Trump derided the deal as an embarrassment that gave the regime dollars at the same time it sponsored terrorism.
They also derided his decision to sign the nuclear deal with Tehran, believing it would embolden the Islamic republic.
Critics have derided that scheme as unwieldy and unlikely to work, no matter what tracking technology comes to market.
While critics derided the Singapore summit last year as a total disaster, it should be considered a real success.
He is often derided as an ascetic crank, pond scum, or inversely, revered as a back-to-nature saint.
Mitt Romney, the 2012 GOP presidential nominee, derided the New York business mogul for several failed ventures last week.
NBC's much-derided decision to tape-delay the broadcast of the ceremony by an hour — starting at 8 p.m.
This is a response to the errant season two, a much-derided foray into urban policing, corruption, and masculinity.
In January 2018, The Washington Post reported that Trump derided immigrants coming from Haiti, El Salvador and African countries.
The decision was derided by Democrats, many parks and conservation groups, and even some Republicans who support the program.
Former Vice President Joe Biden was derided online after using an unfortunate choice of words to condemn domestic violence.
If Pelosi is hated by the right, she's also derided by the left for being a typical establishment politician.
"I hated that speech," Youssef al Hosseiny of ONtv said, referring to Mr. Sisi's much-derided remarks last week.
" Trump, in a combative mood, derided the FBI officials who launched the probe as "known scoundrels" and "dirty cops.
He played on "On the Corner," one of Mr. Davis's most difficult and, in its day, critically derided albums.
The brutally derided "Cats" has been nominated in seven categories at the 40th annual Golden Raspberry Awards on Sunday.
Latvia's finance minister, Dana Reizniece-Ozola, a chess grandmaster well versed in elaborate gambits, derided Mr. Rimsevics's conspiracy theory.
He has also derided U.S. sanctions on himself and other Venezuelan officials as ineffective and a badge of honor.
He derided The Washington Post after the paper published a report that recounted the controversies that dotted his summer.
Although Trump had reportedly offered encouragement to Alexander in a private phone call, he derided the deal in public.
Foreign critics have long derided the National People's Congress, China's legislature, as a rubber stamp for the Communist Party.
After one heated exchange, Mr. Trump derided Mr. Cohn as a "globalist." transcript Those tensions have not entirely subsided.
Foreign critics have long derided China's legislature, the National People's Congress, as a rubber stamp for the Communist Party.
Trade experts have derided his approach as an existential assault on the concept of a rules-based trading system.
Following is a look at ideas both celebrated and derided from companies like McDonald's, KFC, Taco Bell and more.
He had long derided the civil rights movement's focus on structural racism and its corresponding calls for structural remedies.
The other, an offhand comment about how it would be better if some people couldn't vote, was also derided.
These types of challenges are only addressed by people who are first derided as "radical" or "utopian," he said.
At stake is the effectiveness of a bureau that Mr. Trump has publicly derided: The stakes were already high.
Trump isn't planning to linger in California, a state he's derided for its policies on immigration and the environment.
In a public address Thursday, Putin accused Canada of playing "unconstructive political games" and derided Browder as a criminal.
People living in the sprawl surrounding the island of Manhattan are often derided as the bridge and tunnel crowd.
Parliament passed measures on Monday including reduced salaries for officials, but protesters derided this as too little too late.
Mr. Bacus, for instance, said Nafta, while much derided by Mr. Trump, had been a boon for beef exports.
" He also derided the literary styles of works like "Just Mercy" and "Between the World and Me" as "mediocre.
Mr. Trump appears to be backing off his threat to abandon Nafta, the North American pact he once derided.
He derided impeachment as a "hoax" and a "disgrace," but did not mention it at all during his remarks.
He has derided calls to end coal mining as "reckless," prioritizing economic interests and loyalty to a powerful lobby.
The 7th Congressional District, in particular, has been derided as "Goofy Kicking Donald Duck" for its bizarre, twisting outline.
The decision, which was derided by Democrats, comes in a fight to win Wisconsin in the 2020 presidential election.
Mnuchin and other members of the administration have frequently derided the CBO, which is currently headed by a Republican.
CNN, which Trump has frequently derided as "fake news," added strict rules for its Russia coverage following the retraction.
Critics have derided the program as essentially a legal way for immigrants to buy their way into the country.
" Then, newly elected Trump derided judges who ruled against his Muslim travel ban, calling one a "so-called judge.
In October, weeks before his ouster, Attorney General Jeff Sessions derided the rise of "judicial encroachment" on executive priorities.
Unbelievably, Pelosi — long a G.O.P. target for her unalloyed liberalism — is derided by the far left for her pragmatism.
Unbelievably, Pelosi — long a G.O.P. target for her unalloyed liberalism — is derided by the far left for her pragmatism.
CEO Jamie Dimon has derided the digital currency as a "fraud" and said he'd fire employees for trading bitcoin.
It was described as a "Sanskrit sect" by The New York Times, while critics derided it as a cult.
In that world, a UBI would become a form of welfare, and its recipients would be pitied and derided.
Politicians often find themselves derided by the public, but in Australia, memes from The Simpsons are used to criticise them.
North Korea has derided Abe's government as a "cult" bent on derailing Pyongyang's diplomatic outreach in recent state media comments.
It is not just that Mr Whitaker has repeatedly derided the investigation; he has denied that Russia interfered at all.
That view, held by Defense Secretary James Mattis and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, was derided by some Republican lawmakers.
The Grammy Awards are often derided as mere showbiz, and that was hard to argue with Sunday night as well.
Critics had derided it as reminiscent of a bicycle helmet or drooping oyster and out of sync with the neighborhood.
But many online critics derided Kuomintang politicians' expressions of support as hypocritical, given the party's push for closer China ties.
Joe Lieberman, Gore's 2000 running mate, derided rivals Howard Dean for opposing the war and John Kerry for expressing ambivalence.
Widely derided at the time of its publication, it is now generally regarded as one of Mr Ishiguro's finest works.
If she has any regrets from the breakup, coining the much-derided phase "conscious uncoupling" is not one of them.
They derided Quinn's game development as basic, simplistic girl work and claimed she used sexual favors to get good reviews.
It lends itself instead to dystopian science-fiction, or to compendiums of scary science facts, sometimes derided as "climate porn".
The devotion to protocol that pilots see as integral to their professionalism is derided by some doctors as 'cookbook medicine.
Maybe they simply couldn't get past the fact that Williams is the cause of that long-derided Ed Sheeran cameo?
He posted bits of poems, derided journalists, and taunted short-sellers who were betting that Tesla's stock price would fall.
The main characters are four women, mostly in STEM fields, who have been ignored or derided for their groundbreaking work.
Trump said last week he would stop paying the monthly subsidies, which he has derided as a bailout of insurers.
Along with such figures as Jeb Bush, the former governor of Florida, Mr Kasich is derided as a quasi-Democrat.
Schemes that were once derided as unrealistic and dangerous are now being quietly put on the table, some scientists warn.
She derided the "political insider game and wonkiness and intellectual argument," without offering a clear picture of her practical alternative.
The final impact statement, in large binders no doubt similar to the ones Trump derided, was issued in December 1999.
That just might be true in the case of the resoundingly controversial and largely derided Leeds United chairman Massimo Cellino.
The laws have received strong support from health professionals and politicians, but have been derided by musicians and young people.
Indeed, there may be no group more derided by Trump, and none more vigorously despised by his supporters, than journalists.
By defending not what is derided as political correctness but doing what's correct -- the simple idea of treating everyone respectfully.
The same privacy advocates who once derided the Intelligence and Security Committee as a poodle are now cheering its resolve.
While some people praised her protest, many of those who derided her simply fell back on lazy, misogynist sexual innuendo.
Trump has since backtracked on the widely derided comments he made on Monday following a summit with Putin in Helsinki.
The conclusion of the investigation would likely be heralded as a victory by Trump, who has repeatedly derided the probe.
Trump has repeatedly derided the investigation as a "witch hunt," calling on Sessions to end the probe earlier in August.
Throughout his campaign and presidency, Trump has derided the media as "fake news" and even blocked reporters from certain events.
Trump has for years derided the "failing New York Times" in the media, on the campaign trail, and on Twitter.
After losing the vote the pair decided to halt operations in the Texan city, which some derided as sour grapes.
The Republican nominee has regularly derided tech companies and expressed little interest in tech policy while on the campaign trail.
Sanders derided Clinton for first calling the TPP a "wonderful agreement" before deciding to oppose the sweeping Asia-Pacific deal.
Trump has repeatedly derided the press as "fake news" and the "enemy of the people" in past speeches and rallies.
Despite being a revered figure, he was still mocked and derided for the flamboyance that made him a gay icon.
Trump has frequently derided the power wielded by wealthy special interests, arguing that their influence often runs counter to voters.
Last month, Iranian officials disqualified more than half the candidates for office, a move that was derided by rights groups.
" It was a frank and cutting personal insult directed at the man who Trump has previously derided as "rocket man.
Trump has regularly derided Mueller's investigation as a "witch hunt," saying there was no collusion between his campaign and Russia.
Trump once derided him as a "showboat," which -- even allowing for the source's obvious bad faith -- is hard to deny.
But as seriously as Klout seemed to take itself, it was largely derided by the technorati as shallow and cynical.
" Earlier in the week Trump told Texans that Cruz, who he once derided as "Lyin' Ted," was now "Beautiful Ted.
But he was derided by journalists and media critics, who say Breitbart doesn't meet the definition of a news organization.
Clinton had allied herself politically with a Miss Universe winner, Alicia Machado, whom Mr. Trump had derided for gaining weight.
When Buchanan left office in March 1861, he was widely derided by members of his own party as a traitor.
As tensions rose, the persecution of political dissidents, whom Maduro has derided to me as "counter-revolutionaries," grew more common.
While the commission's 1991 recommendations were widely derided as overly ambitious, most of them were enacted within a few years.
" Mr. Trump derided Heidi Klum, the German supermodel and entrepreneur, in a 2015 interview with The Times, saying: "Heidi Klum.
Most notably, Lena Dunham made a much-derided 2012 video for Barack Obama that compared voting to losing your virginity.
The decision is a preemptive attempt to curtail the president, who has publicly criticized Mueller and derided the Russia investigation.
Remakes, as a category, don't always have the best reputation, and are frequently derided as signs of Hollywood's creative bankruptcy.
House Speaker Paul Ryan derided the agency's Obamacare numbers as "bogus," speaking to reporters at an event in Massachusetts Thursday.
Instead the legislators who questioned him were derided as too old and out of touch to understand how tech works.
Those movies, often derided today as examples of the repressed sexuality of the '50s, were considered daring at the time.
I was raised in the urban "hell" of neighborhoods he probably avoided, alongside immigrants from countries he derided last week.
Certainly not in the way that the National Theater used to be derided as "Broadway-upon-Thames" in the 1980s.
They are derided as "Bengalis", implying they are illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, despite tracing their history in Rakhine back centuries.
Asked why his campaign accepted donations from a group he has derided, Mr. Cuomo said not all contractors were problematic.
It was a sly, dismissive reference to a widely derided comment Mr. Sisi had made at a recent youth conference.
Ms. Stefanik's clash with Mr. Schiff was derided as a stunt by many Democratic critics, as well as Ms. Cobb.
In the worlds of politics and the media, it sometimes seems as if figures often derided as mavericks, from Sen.
Even worse: Republican Senators have derided his accusers' statements, and, of course, the President added his appalling signature strategy: mockery.
Perhaps he was working as a schoolteacher, or as a much-derided civil servant in some corner of our government.
She said some of her friends have derided her for constantly wanting to act, when even the authorities seem resigned.
No longer derided or dismissed by their mainstream rivals, far-right parties now show themselves capable of winning nationwide elections.
Text messages introduced as evidence showed that Mr. Ellison had repeatedly derided Mr. Hernandez and Mr. Jordan as wannabe gangsters.
Trump has repeatedly derided the media as dishonest, leveling claims that reporters fabricate stories in order to undermine his presidency.
While Indian social media derided the news with #PakFakeClaim, the capture of Abhinandan Varthaman was confirmed by the Indian government.
Obama derided the current Republican strategy, to quickly repeal the law and put forward a replacement plan later, as irresponsible.
As a candidate, Mr. Trump derided Mr. Obama's anti-ISIS strategy as a disaster, though offering none of his own.
He is even using the same language as the president he once derided, calling for incentives that would facilitate negotiations.
He's been derided by politicians on both sides of the aisle, and some Republicans have called for him to resign.
Its target range of 22014 percent to 1.75 percent is still below pre-recession levels, a level that Doty derided.
Germany is admired for a stable economy and holding on to blue-collar jobs but derided for its persistent trade surpluses.
Marine Le Pen has derided NATO, said she would withdraw France from the EU, and recently met with Putin in Russia.
Five years ago, having dozed through the rise of social media and smartphones, it was derided as a doddery has-been.
At the Tin Roof BBQ outside Houston, the Republican derided O'Rourke for touting his poor rating from the National Rifle Association.
His head cocked, there were no outward signs of hard feelings as Donald Trump derided his tenure during his inaugural address.
Amy Klobuchar likewise derided trolls while referencing Russia, which used social media in its attempt to influence the 2016 presidential election.
The president then derided "Tonight Show" host Jimmy Fallon after the comic apologized for "humanizing" the president during the presidential campaign.
WeWork: The company's ousted chief, Adam Neumann, derided and marginalized an employee after she became pregnant, according to a discrimination complaint.
The sexts were endlessly derided as making Weiner look like a "freak," as John Oliver, Republican lawmakers, and others put it.
Having derided Mr. Kim previously as "Little Rocket Man," Mr. Trump described the North Korean leader as "very honorable" this week.
Thirteen Republican senators joined all of the Senate's Democrats in voting for the treaty, although Republican opponents derided it as naive.
At one point, his name was so derided that audiences booed when his credit turned up in the trailer for Devil.
Shooting from the hip, as derided as that practice is by the so-called experts, is much more persuasive and effective.
Andy Barr, who derided her as a 'feminist' and 'radical:' "I'm calling B.S. on the usual way of responding," she said.
His vocal opposition to ECB asset-purchase programmes was reportedly derided by Mr Draghi as "Nein zu allem"("No to everything").
In her memoirs, published long after she was exiled from court, Sarah derided the Queen's character and painted herself a victim.
" But Congress went ahead and destroyed it anyway, a decision Gallaher derided as "Trying to save cents while making no sense.
Democrats derided the bill as a GOP gift to its wealthy and business backers at the expense of lower-earning people.
" Trump a day earlier derided Robart, who was appointed by former Republican President George W. Bush, as a "so-called judge.
He derided the way the video had become "fake news" and claimed "it was a joke" he pulled off with friends.
Trade Trump can act on his own to begin changing America's overseas trade agreements, which he derided on the campaign trail.
Its pregnancy test requirement for cabin crew jobs-- and the reason the airline cited for it -- was widely derided as sexist.
While Jackson was sometimes derided in the press with the nickname "Zen Master," some of his best players became mindfulness converts.
Russia has derided the measures as a hostile act, and is currently formulating a response, according to the country's Foreign Ministry.
Critics have derided the travel ban as a "Muslim ban" but the Trump administration has defended it on national security grounds.
Trump has repeatedly derided Mueller's investigation as a "witch hunt" and insisted there was "no collusion" between his campaign and Russia.
Activists hope that it will dispense with the much-derided national security waiver and properly link Egypt's military aid to reform.
She made it up," Trump said on Twitter in a post that derided his former aide as "Wacky and Deranged Omarosa.
But Obama, who frequently derided George W. Bush during his 2008 campaign, wasn't exactly best buds with the outgoing incumbent, either.
Bolton once derided Giuliani's work as a "drug deal" and said he wanted no part of it, according to previous testimony.
Chevy refrained from deploying too much of the flat gray plastic that I derided in the Enclave, the Traverse's corporate twin.
Stories set to music, which Benjamin had generated so guilelessly as a child, were derided as facile, hidebound, and decadently nostalgic.
Those controls were a widely derided result of the annual 41-nation Wassenaar Arrangement of which the United States is part.
Menendez derided her answer as missing issues such as North Korean nuclear proliferation, Libya's destabilization, China's growing influence and Iranian threats.
Back then, The Prodigy was sometimes derided as "kiddie-techno," because of their juvenile samples and because the teens loved them.
Another occasional telenovela face was Alicia Machado, the former Miss Universe who was derided by Donald J. Trump as being overweight.
CEO Oscar Munoz offered a half-hearted apology for having to "re-accommodate" Dao, a word choice that was widely derided.
Spencer's antics on the controversial Showtime program have been derided by many Republicans, including some who have called for his resignation.
" Trump last week derided Coulter as a "wacky nut job" who hasn't figured out that he is "winning on the border.
Immigrant rights activists derided Obama as the "deporter in chief" for ramping up the pace of deportations during his first term.
Instead, they added a much-derided "hardware check" that broke Revive and prevented people from playing those games on a Vive.
If you have a social media account, you're likely aware that Pepsi released a much-derided ad starring Kendall Jenner yesterday.
Don't needlessly insult or inflame particular cultural groups, don't take positions that are widely derided and, above all, avoid stonewalling. 5.
Those apparent concessions did little to mollify Netanyahu, who derided Kerry's speech as "biased against Israel" and "obsessively focused" on settlements.
If you have derided and stigmatized identity politics in an effort to keep the marginalized from organizing, you are no better.
The ad derided the Labour Party's tax plans, but was banned by Facebook because it didn't disclose who paid for it.
McCabe told CNN that Trump derided his wife, who ran unsuccessfully for Virginia state Senate in 2015, in conversations with him.
Yet today, these same judges are increasingly derided as an impediment to democracy by politicians looking to appeal to nationalist sentiment.
Men in the field derided support personnel as "remfs," or rear-echelon — well, you can guess the rest of the acronym.
Religious contemplation is at least plausibly derided in these paintings, although overly quoted as a nominal theme and source of imageries.
After its initial introduction at a preseason test in 2016, the halo was almost universally derided, in particular for its aesthetics.
Styles built his fame on his appeal to teenage girls, one of the most mocked and derided demographics in popular culture.
In 2013, Beyoncé released an autobiographical documentary called Life Is But a Dream, but critics derided it for being too controlled.
The move would ice out the network derided by critics as "state TV" from influencing the outcome of the Democratic primary.
Mr. Stewart derided suggestions from other candidates that Parliament might be suspended to bypass objections to an exit without an agreement.
Derided as a pampered lightweight ("Feather-Duster Roosevelt"), he was barely nominated on the fourth ballot at the 1932 Democratic Convention.
Birkenstock's two-strap Arizonas, once derided as hippie shoes, have been imitated by designer labels like Prada, Céline, Givenchy and Coach.
Everyone else is just out for themselves—for instance, the "experts" Gove derided for supposedly pulling the wool over people's eyes.
Living in Praised for offering the American dream of homeownership, the hamlet has also been derided for its cookie-cutter suburbia.
Mr. Trump derided the inquiry as an "illegal takedown that failed," and demanded that those responsible for it face additional scrutiny.
He'll be gone from this year's Golden Globes — denounced, derided, joked about — but his presence, and questionable legacy, will be everywhere.
Cartoonishly self-interested cabinet members and senior advisers were drawn from the corporate elite Mr. Trump derided on the campaign trail.
Except for Mr. Tower's recipes, he derided the saucy cuisine that California chefs and restaurateurs began exporting in the mid-1970s.
Mr. Trump also derided Michael Cohen, his former fixer, for "flipping" — pleading guilty to federal charges and implicating him in crimes.
What he had initially derided as Juul's pitiful wisp of nearly odor-free vapor turned out to be a great advantage.
In less than 24 hours after the shooting, Mr. Tsang was being hailed as a hero and derided as a thug.
Our publications have been derided as violations of the Goldwater Rule, "armchair psychiatry" and political bias dressed up as professional opinions.
Critics have derided the move as capitulation to Russia because the deal includes no timeline for a pullback of Russia's forces.
" Trump shared two photos from the meeting, which deteriorated after Democrats said the president derided Pelosi as a "third-rate politician.
In the decade since he left the company, Hughes has been alternately heralded and derided for his post-tech career choices.
Their stories offered a sharp counterpoint to President Trump, who has often derided immigrants as a threat to American national security.
The Grammys are often derided for being out of touch, but this year, the big categories skew younger and more pop.
The news media are dismissing the new White House communications director Anthony Scaramucci much the same way they derided Donald Trump.
Even before the platform committee completed its deliberations, Clinton had embraced two of Sanders's signature initiatives that she had earlier derided.
" As a case in point, he once derided the Astrodome for resembling "the working end of a gigantic rub-on deodorant.
In the past, drugmakers that have taken EQRx&aposs approach have been derided for manufacturing "me-too" treatments at high costs.
" Picking up on the nastier implications, various right-wingers over the years have derided Mr. Carter as "the first female president.
Bloomberg came in for abundant criticism last week after a debate performance in Las Vegas that was widely derided as dismal.
In particular fervor, Knight derided ceramic tile that he says he saw in all 30 stations he claimed to have visited.
A warm and witty person in private, he was often stiff in public and derided as a ditherer by his peers.
Its programming is scattershot: "Chasing U.F.O.s," a 2012 series on paranormal claims that included tales of alien abductions, was widely derided.
It seems awfully new age-y to me,' Peta said, referring to the company's derided mission statement in its IPO filing.
South32 was initially derided as a compilation of BHP Billiton's most unwanted assets, but it has frequently outperformed the parent company.
The administration's plans have been derided by critics as potentially devastating for traditional public schools, which would lose students and money.
Sarah Palin (R-Alaska) on Friday derided President Obama for pushing for more gun control after the mass shooting in Orlando.
In real time, people and events that are dismissed or derided can come to look better, and loom larger, in retrospect.
Some protesters had also derided the cybersecurity bill, which experts and activists say could cause economic harm and stifle online dissent.
Representative Mark Meadows, a North Carolina Republican who is one of the president's staunchest allies, derided Mr. McCabe's memoir on Twitter.
He'll be gone from this year's Golden Globes — derided, decried, joked about — but his presence, and questionable legacy, will be everywhere.
However, this flavor profile, derided as middle-of-the-road by chocolate connoisseurs, clearly appeals to large segments of the population.
Critics, including opposition Democrats in Congress but also some U.S. military veterans, have derided the troop deployment as a political stunt.
It's the type of ailment that's sometimes derided as "all in their head," or a diagnosis given when all others fail.
While the United States likes to fancy itself a technological powerhouse, American broadband has long been derided for being decidedly mediocre.
They have been virtually irrelevant in Wales since the 21980s, derided as the party of coal- and steel-owners and English snobbery.
Either Macron caves in to the pressure and is derided by opponents as weak, or he puts down the dissent, Sliman said.
" Across the partisan divide – and also on Twitter – presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump derided the partnership as "Obama just endorsed Crooked Hillary.
Well he&aposs now being derided as a total monster because of how he might rule on abortion, ObamaCare and gun rights.
Buttigieg, who is derided by Sanders supporters as "Mayo Pete" and "Wall Street Pete," ran competitively with that group at 24 percent.
And a fifth follow one of three Sufi schools of Islam, an esoteric and mystical branch derided as apostate by hardline Salafists.
It was derided from the left as too weak, including by two Democratic senators with presidential ambitions, Cory Booker and Kamala Harris.
OPPOSITION to assisted dying is usually derided as being religious in nature, which is easier than confronting hard questions or inconvenient truths.
Her ineffectual leadership has been compounded by her scripted style; among her critics she was derided early on as "the notebook princess".
This is an interesting decision when you compare it to Archie's motives, which have nothing to do with Riverdale's most derided neighborhood.
It will get derided as the politics of empty celebrity, but no one has ever accused America of being immune to that.
Steve Bullock derided "wish-list economics" and warned that working people "can't wait for a revolution" like the one Sanders calls for.
Originally, it championed high-priced proprietary software; today, it has made a broad shift toward the open-source model it once derided.
In mid-2005, giddy from George W. Bush's tax cuts, he derided as "bubbleheads" those who foresaw problems in the housing market.
The Republican president has derided the investigation as a costly "witch hunt" and sought to characterize the report's findings as a victory.
That decision was widely derided for being a blatant violation of civil liberties, but Giuliani has increasingly leaned into it of late.
Hof, whose half a dozen brothels will be affected by the measure, derided the effort as political retribution tied to his opponent.
The Clean Power Plan was one of President Obama's most iconic environmental efforts, and has been derided by Republicans since its inception.
Beats headphones are widely derided for overemphasizing the bass in any recording and giving people what are commonly described as cheap thrills.
He derided US District Court Judge Gonzalo Curiel, hearing a fraud claims in San Diego against Trump University, for his Mexican heritage.
The boss derided the work of another employee Putting someone else down in front of you is a bad move, Hakim says.
OPG returned with a report that critics derided for its vagueness, evaluating two possible sites, labelled "crystalline" and "sedimentary," for the rock.
Last year's much derided "Fantastic Four" reboot fell 2000 percent and the divisive "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" dropped 219 percent in 7513.
Sour cream and yogurt are a part of nearly every Balkan dish, and for a long time I derided vegetarians and vegans.
Long derided by conservatives and centrists as socialist fantasy, single-payer health care (sometimes called Medicare for All) is having a moment.
A contingency of B-movie fans started the Church of Ed Wood, believing the famously derided sci-fi auteur was religiously significant.
Even the Democrats' oft-derided process leading to the Affordable Care Act involved many days of public hearings and committee mark-ups.
The socialist leader won another six-year term Sunday in an election derided by opposition groups and many in the international community.
Over the past 24 months, Trump has scorned judges, derided the American court system, and trampled on all manner of constitutional principles.
Mr Lieberman, who lives in a Jewish settlement in the West Bank, has repeatedly derided efforts to secure peace with the Palestinians.
Governments derided as elitist and out of touch find it hard to resist calls to submit controversial issues to a popular vote.
On Wednesday, Trump derided him as a "rude, terrible person" as he tried to ask him a question about the migrant caravan.
Clinton, the Democratic presidential nominee, derided Trump, the Republican nominee, during the first presidential debate of 2016 for repeatedly questioning Obama's birthplace.
Trump has repeatedly derided the probe as a "witch hunt" against him, insisting there was no collusion between his campaign and Moscow.
The Europeans, who had been cut out of the talks, derided the deal as toothless, but Mr. Obama learned from the experience.
The largest U.S. bank's CEO, Jamie Dimon, has publicly derided bitcoin as a "fraud" but Lake's public comments have been more measured.
Singal's take on the decoupling concept was, naturally, enthusiastic (as was a piece in Quillette, the much-derided hotbed of conservative ideas).
Astrid felt that Wim bullied and derided women, and that he was becoming every bit as abusive as their father had been.
Defeated by Donald J. Trump in the 2016 primaries and derided by fellow Republicans for his subsequent embrace of Mr. Trump, Gov.
During a recent segment, Oliver also derided Xi for censoring Winnie the Pooh, which Chinese internet users have compared to their president.
The president has long derided NAFTA, calling the landmark 1994 agreement a "disaster for our country" that has gutted America's manufacturing sector.
They unleashed an array of hashtags such as #StillSanders, #BernieorBust and #NeverHillary on Twitter as they derided the system for being rigged.
So much so that many have derided the U.S. military-industrial complex's posture as still geared toward that singular communist-era threat.
Under any circumstances, turning the La Guardia that Mr. Biden derided in 2014 into the "globally renowned, 21st-century airport" that Gov.
Information regarding more than 85033 million Americans was stolen, and the company's primary response, to offer credit monitoring, has been widely derided.
That puts the movie in sharp contrast to 2009's X-Men Origins: Wolverine, which featured a widely-derided depiction of Deadpool.
Obama may have run on "hope and change," but his policies couldn't fairly be derided by critics as pie-in-the-sky.
The initiatives were either little talked about, or derided in this pastoral region, whose residents are in many cases still in shock.
This is not even twice Mexico's paltry minimum wage that has long been derided as one of the lowest in the world.
But what critics have derided as a "Muslim ban" has been met with global protests, lawsuits, and dissent from State Department employees.
If Russia is a "nuclear-armed trailer park," as it is derided by some, its poverty makes it more dangerous, not less.
During that campaign, he was repeatedly derided in personal terms by the eventual nominee and now president, Donald J. Trump, prompting Mrs.
Although it has found its fans over time, "Empire Records" was derided by critics and only made $300,000 at the box office.
Reform-minded judges had called for an investigation even before Ms. Park was ousted, while others derided the investigation as politically motivated.
Some on the right sought to minimize the Imperial Army's actions, and derided Akihito's "apology tour," arguing that Japan had apologized enough.
He went searching for things to make them look bad, they claimed; he derided the revolution and in turn the Chinese people.
Some rabbis derided the health department's scientific expertise, and one respected rabbi went as far as to question the health department's statistics.
The reboot, which featured several internet personalities as hosts instead of one, was widely derided for being out of touch and confusing.
For T's inaugural online art issue, we'll be highlighting some of the things that give us hope in an often-derided industry.
The New New World HONG KONG — Once derided as a technology backwater and copycat, China is justifiably proud of its technology boom.
Kushner has been talking up his immigration plan with the aid of a PowerPoint presentation, which detractors have derided as laughably simplistic.
He derided reporters covering his campaign, Katy Tur of NBC and Sara Murray of CNN, in terms he rarely used about men.
SEOUL, South Korea — In China, the man threatening to fire missiles at the United States is often derided as a chubby brat.
Once derided as a goody-goody, the Seattle Seahawks quarterback has had to be perfect for his team to win this season.
Crowd work, the comic's chatter with the audience in between jokes, has long been derided as the cheapest way to get laughs.
Rusty Hicks, the chairman of the state party, derided the choice as "misguided" and a public snub of California and Latino voters.
Even today, he said, in a country where the Orthodox Church is dominant, Pentecostals often are derided as spies or cult members.
But Democrats derided the education spending blueprint for the 2018 fiscal year as tone deaf to low-income and working-class Americans.
He has repeatedly derided the case against Stone as a "disgrace," targeting the prosecutors and judge involved with the case in particular.
Much of that food is imported or packaged by the private companies once derided by Mr. Maduro as coup-mongers and parasites.
The proposal, derided as a "dementia tax," undermined her image as the champion of those "just about managing" to get by financially.
Hunger, for instance, is described as a presence, a motivating fire in the belly, but thirst is derided as a girly lack.
Cruz has repeatedly derided Trump's response this week, arguing that it represents "political correctness" run amok and bashing critics of the law.
Top White House officials derided President Donald Trump for his intelligence, according to claims in an upcoming book seen by NBC News.
" On Election Day, three progressives defeated incumbent aldermen, including a Democrat who had derided Mr. Sanders as representing "the fungus of socialism.
" Assange on Thursday derided the CIA for letting its files get hacked, accusing the agency of a "historic act of devastating incompetence.
The materials released include a document on ways to finance the single-player plan, which critics have previously derided as too expensive.
He quarrelled with most of his friends and well-wishers, including Hume and Diderot, and many people derided him as a madman.
And Trump derided the Florida senator as "Little Marco" and routinely mocked him for repeating a line during one of the debates.
Trump was derided in July for not publicly confronting Russian President Vladimir Putin about the election interference during a summit in Helsinki.
If they are successful, an idea derided as unthinkable can become so inevitable that it's hard to believe it was ever otherwise.
The dossier he produced, which Trump has derided as fiction, describes years of illicit connections between Trump, his business and the Kremlin.
For good measure, Netanyahu has also likened Obama to former US President Jimmy Carter, whom he pointedly derided as "hostile" to Israel.
In fact, according to Savyon, anti-US rhetoric was more severe during the Obama administration, which Iranian leaders typically derided as weak.
The policy had been derided as preferential, but advocates said it was still necessary to help those fleeing political persecution on the island.
There is long-simmering communal tension and animosity toward the Rohingya in Myanmar, most of whom are stateless and derided as illegal immigrants.
The 285 classic "Forrest Gump," for example, won over 95 percent of audience members, but was derided by nearly 30 percent of critics.
"Residents and leaders derided him for insulting the city and the borough, only to come crawling back for votes," The Daily News reports.
What's derided as "red tape" are critical procedures designed to ensure that the state exercises its sovereign powers in a responsible, accountable fashion.
So Young, So Bad had the unfortunate distinction of coming out a day after Caged and was quickly derided as an inferior imitator.
Renewed interest in Klobuchar here has stemmed largely from the Friday debate, at which she derided Pete Buttigieg, the former South Bend, Ind.
"It seems that a product that was once derided has now become the must-have device," said Ramon Llamas, research director of IDC.
They're the much-derided "special snowflakes" that have college professors and pundits doomsaying about the rising threat of trigger warnings and safe spaces.
The effort — derided by critics as a pipe dream that would put priceless landscapes on the auction block — has achieved little so far.
Although Fitbits are frequently derided for ending up in the back of a drawer, people can be motivated to get off the sofa.
Then, as she gave thanks for the "honour of my life", a prime minister often derided as "Maybot" shed a tear and left.
He co-founded Blockchain Capital, and eventually the EOS Alliance as well as a much-derided "crypto utopia" in Puerto Rico called Sol.
Microsoft, the once-derided '6s monopolistic colossus, "now looks as friendly and benign as its founder, Bill Gates," at #9, up two spots.
Mao Zedong, who foolishly derided America as a "paper tiger", might have applied similar words to the southern adversary his country faces today.
As secretary of state, she supported and led the "reset" with Russia — a diplomatic effort that is still derided by Republicans as weak.
New banks, consumer advocates and lawmakers, however, derided the plans as relying too much on people's ability and willingness to use new technology.
" And after Kerry spoke, Netanyahu derided the speech as "skewed against Israel," arguing that Israel doesn't need "to be lectured by foreign leaders.
Donald Trump also publicly feuded with actress Meryl Streep after she derided his victory during her Golden Globes acceptance speech earlier this month.
Instead, Trump took up the very policy he had derided his rival Hillary Clinton of advocating: to punish Assad for human rights violations.
Almost all these interventions failed disastrously, losing billions of pounds for taxpayers without saving the companies; the strategy was derided as "picking winners".
Socialist leader Maduro won another six-year term on Sunday in an election derided by opposition groups and many in the international community.
During that time, President Trump has regularly derided the investigation, calling it a "witch hunt" and denying that his campaign colluded with Moscow.
In a recent video satirically announcing that he would run for President of the United States in 2020, he derided Trump's legislative record.
Maduro's pivot away from the dollar was derided by opposition lawmakers, who questioned whether the "petro" would ever see the light of day.
The emission targets that he put in place, derided as too low by environmental groups, remain in effect under his successor, Malcolm Turnbull.
Clinton and her party are using a 2014 Supreme Court decision that Democrats once derided to extend their fund-raising advantage over Republicans.
Some concluded that Amtrak had decided to destroy what they said was one of the few good things about the much-derided station.
But in 6900, the bank's authorization briefly lapsed amid opposition from conservatives, who derided it as crony capitalism that unfairly subsidized manufacturing giants.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York derided US senators for not having read the declassified version of the whistleblower complaint by Thursday afternoon.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York derided US senators for not having read the declassified version of the whistleblower complaint by Thursday afternoon.
Clinton "isn't afraid to say black lives matter," a phrase Mr. Trump and other Republicans have derided by saying that all lives matter.
" Trump also derided political correctness in his Wednesday remarks, complaining that the country is "so politically correct that we're afraid to do anything.
Trump derided Comey as "crazy" and a "real nut job," to top Russian government officials during a later meeting in the Oval Office.
Ambitious proposals that would cost a lost of money, like Bernie Sanders's "Medicare for all," are routinely derided for what they would cost.
By touting their exclusion, they are able reinforce their connection to their voters, to cast themselves as mocked and ignored derided—but righteous.
The move was, at the time, derided by some as pointless, akin to shooing criminals away from one neighborhood only to trouble another.
Modi could not be reached for comment but members of his party have repeatedly derided the opposition saying they were undermining national security.
The Little Hours had its debut at Sundance to critical praise and has already been derided as "pure trash" by the Catholic League.
He has derided the deal as a capitulation to Iran, arguing that it fails to address Tehran's destabilizing activities beyond its nuclear pursuits.
Russia has regularly blasted American efforts at "regime change" in Libya and derided the West for backing what it called "fascists" in Ukraine.
Like KiraKira and the Snapchat dog filter before it, HUJI is now derided as basic, mostly because the locals figured out it exists.
The book's focus was on the aesthetic virtues of the Las Vegas Strip, the kind of lowbrow environment that most academic architects derided.
The NFL had opted for innocuous arena-rock acts several years running, especially after Justin Timberlake and Janet Jackson's widely derided wardrobe malfunction.
And yet, 14 months after the president was inaugurated, nothing has happened (except for the release of a plan that was quickly derided).
In seemingly endless essays in recent years, they've been derided as lazy and narcissistic or defended as creative and committed to social change.
" Mr. Bolton has derided South Korea for trying to play peacemaker with Pyongyang, saying the South was "like putty in North Korea's hands.
His archetypical fan and buyer is often derided as a "hypebeast," a stereotype of a street-wear-obsessed millennial male with disposable income.
Business groups in the state had derided the bill as impractical and potentially disastrous for companies forced to move to green energy sources.
Last week it created an artificial traffic jam to test how to manage disruption at the border, an exercise that was widely derided.
Since the 1990s, researchers and planners have increasingly come to argue that dense urban environments, derided historically as diseased, can actually foster health.
Critics, latching on to the proposal to pave the way for citizenship for so-called Dreamers, have derided it as amnesty for lawbreakers.
Pigeons are often derided as rats with wings, largely because we mostly see them devouring our food scraps and flocking around dirty sidewalks.
In recent months, Mr. Trump has derided the program that his in-laws, Amalija and Viktor Knavs, used to become United States citizens.
Mr. Law derided Mr. Bannon for being focused mainly on "promoting his own brand," and discounted him as a major force in Alabama.
In his speech to the U.N. General Assembly on Tuesday, Mr. Trump derided "the ideology of globalism" as a threat to American sovereignty.
" • President Trump derided California as "High Tax, High Crime California" and urged voters to back "all of the great GOP candidates for Congress.
When the Labour Party floated the idea of an 8-pound hourly minimum wage ($10.33), it was derided as a job killer. Mrs.
Though often derided, the biopharmaceutical industry is full of scientists and researchers whose work has led the way to eradicate or prevent disease.
Li Peng, the former Chinese premier who was derided for his role in the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown in 1989, died on Monday.
As a high school student, he derided Latino classmates because they supposedly "lacked basic English skills" and were not in his honors' classes.
Earlier this month, Trump suggested a diplomatic meeting with Iranian leaders without preconditions—a position he derided as appeasement during the Obama years.
Government spokesman Phay Siphan derided the report by a group that has been investigating issues such as illegal logging in Cambodia for decades.
What many Republicans fear is that action on what they have long derided as Obamacare also matters a great deal to their base.
Internet activism is sometimes derided as "slacktivism"—a fair characterization when an online campaign tries to, say, cure AIDS or end child labor.
Local reporting did not clarify how the phrase was used there, but rather derided him for finding a way to blame the country.
Republicans have derided the Democratic message — personally developed by Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the new Democratic leader — as trite and ineffective.
Officials wanted to rebrand a place derided as a source of migrant laborers and unfairly tarnished as a land of thieves and counterfeiters.
Trump first derided the North Korean leader as "little rocket man" during a 2017 United Nations address -- a nickname he has often repeated.
And Mr. Trump's pick to head the C.I.A., Representative Mike Pompeo of Kansas, vigorously defended the intelligence agencies, which Mr. Trump has derided.
Some politicians from the ruling coalition derided the rally in the run up, saying they did not understand why the diaspora would protest.
Maguire and the White House denied the report, and Trump publicly derided it as a "fake article" in his press conference Wednesday afternoon.
He is an ideological heir of Pim Fortuyn, a right-wing politician who derided Islam, immigration and multiculturalism, and who was openly gay.
Key among those was his decision to scale back high-speed rail, which Republicans in the state have derided as an expensive boondoggle.
McConnell's support, for instance, is being derided by outsider Republican figures like Sarah Palin and Chuck Norris, both of whom are backing Moore.
It's hard to remember another group so widely and intensely derided whose first album debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart.
Such an assumption would fit with the conventional wisdom around Young Sheldon's parent show, which is often derided as one of TV's worst.
And after he derided Mr. Rubio as "the boy in the bubble," I'll be watching to see if he unleashes any other creative insults.
" For his part, Trump also derided Schultz's statement, writing in a tweet that the coffee mogul "doesn't have the 'guts' to run for President!
Those same "winning time" shots are now more commonly derided as selfish "hero ball" than lauded as evidence of character and will to win.
There was no mention of replacing horses with electric antique replica cars, a much-derided element of a previous plan floated by the mayor.
But online critics derided the city on Twitter and Facebook, turning news of the ordinance — and everyone's opinion about it — into a viral hit.
He now hopes to sell 6,23 of the jets over the next twenty years—a figure derided by veteran aerospace journalists as "wildly optimistic".
" Alyssa Mastromonaco, a former top Obama administration official, tweeted that Trump's accusation was "a fucking lie" and derided the president as "a deranged animal.
During their five years in power, the Taliban banned television to stop people viewing what they derided as vulgar, immoral and anti-Islamic material.
However, the history of AI shows that problem-solving methods initially derided as "cheating" or "hacky" can soon combine to create something unexpectedly powerful.
Its leader, Rahul Gandhi, although a much-derided dynast, has helped modernise the party a little, raising its profile on social media, for example.
Trump derided the debate schedule in late July -- saying some are scheduled during NFL games -- raising questions of whether he might skip the faceoffs.
Critics of the proposal were derided by Ms Ocasio-Cortez's millions of admirers and Twitter followers as anti-environmental and, possibly worse, anti-progressive.
Cuomo has talked more about U.S. President Donald Trump on the campaign and his aides have derided Nixon as a talented but unqualified actress.
Linton got into an Instagram spat with a woman who derided her for listing the designer brands she was wearing, although Linton ultimately apologized.
In an editorial about the new project, John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK, derided the company's packaging pledge as a familiar smoke screen.
When Eisenhower was president, liberals derided him, Dwight Eisenhower couldn&apost reed if his lips were chapped, then he becomes a paragon of virtue.
Labour's Corbyn had been widely mocked and derided (even by those in his own party) as an out-of-touch socialist from the 1970s.
In 2009, Kraft launched a creamier take on Vegemite, iSnack 2.0, but it was quickly removed from shelves after being widely derided by Australians.
Conservatives have previously derided the account as a "slush fund," including Mick Mulvaney, former White House budget director and now acting chief of staff.
Expectations that persons of different cultures and religions should conform to an American ethos would be derided by many as oppressive and dangerously nationalistic.
Then-candidate Trump had talked up the investigation until this point, at which time he and his campaign derided Comey for the "political" decision.
RELATED: Clinton unloads on Sanders Clinton also derided Sanders' criticism of the two groups who endorsed her, saying they are champions of Democratic causes.
Also, there's Eddie Redmayne's truly insane performance as the villainous Balem Abrasax (great name), which has been derided and praised by critics all over.
Through the artful marriage of images and words, the seeds for the derided but nevertheless important New Age movement was planted in Southern California.
After the philosopher William Barrett derided the jury's decision in the pages of Partisan Review, the poet Allen Tate challenged Barrett to a duel.
Democrats have derided the probe as a partisan exercise designed to shield Trump by muddying the waters around the federal investigation into his campaign.
The president accused the media of fabricating his tensions with the U.S. intelligence community, despite his frequent posts on Twitter that derided the agencies.
Derided by its enemies as "retreatism," a term coined by the libertarian Murray Rothbard, this tradition might offer lessons for present day centrist conservatives.
After critics derided Trump for making unilateral concessions without a detailed commitment from Kim to denuclearize, the president hailed the summit as a success.
Raymond publicly derided scientists who posited a link between fossil fuels and climate change, and he spent millions of dollars attempting to discredit them.
Trump has long derided the investigation as a "witch hunt" and vociferously denied that his campaign colluded with Moscow to interfere in the election.
Although initially vowing to take Avenatti seriously during the interview and refrain from using nicknames, Carlson derided Avenatti as "creepy porn lawyer" on air.
Conservatives have derided the bill as "ObamaCare lite" and it is unclear whether it has sufficient support to get through the Republican-controlled House.
And I'm betting that some of those who derided Lewinsky then would like to revise and extend their remarks in the world of 2017.
In an interview with Bloomberg ahead of the Group of 20 meetings, Mr. Putin derided the "shock tactics" of Mr. Trump and Mrs. Clinton.
In the Harry Potter film series, the nervous Neville Longbottom, played by Lewis, is frequently derided by the conniving Draco Malfoy, portrayed by Felton.
Every American, including those derided by the far right as socialists for pointing to growing income inequality, wants continued prosperity in the New Year.
Some newcomers are derided as "sparkle ponies" who bring a dozen costume changes but no food or water and mooch off everyone around them.
Inhofe famously derided climate change as a hoax and, like Pruitt, he has been a strong supporter of his state's oil and gas industries.
Allman and Cher recorded a solo album—1976's much-derided Two the Hard Way—but the pressure of tabloid interest took its toll.
Mr. Trump was derided as the candidate of "uncertainty," which markets typically abhor, and many of his stated policies are vague, incoherent or inconsistent.
The British strategy for its divorce from the European Union is to "have your cake and eat it," something critics have derided as delusional.
A town once derided for the damaging aftereffects of religion and superstition has now remade itself in the image of its own new myths.
The centerpiece of that bill is funding for the law's cost-sharing reduction subsidies, which Trump had repeatedly derided as bailouts for insurance companies.
Mr. DeSantis's campaign platform, derided by Democrats as thin, essentially came down to promising to continue on the path set by Florida's current governor.
Kandahar's notorious Sarposa Prison, often derided as a Taliban recruiting camp, holds 22 children with their mothers, according to the deputy warden, Saifurahman Urakhail.
The group's message on Saturday night derided the government as "communists" and "drug traffickers," saying the rebels would give their lives to restore democracy.
The move follows months of complaints and hearings in which conservatives have derided Facebook and Google (with little actual evidence) for censoring the right.
Critics of the 1996 Summer Games in Atlanta derided them as the "Coca-Cola Olympics" for the marketing blowout undertaken by that local benefactor.
"She's now been derided and called out by name on the campaign trail, on Twitter and even on the GOP presidential stage," Jensen asserted.
Almost nothing in China screams "corrupt" like playing golf, a game long derided by the Communist Party as a bourgeois luxury of the West.
It had even gone so far as to start its own publishing imprints, which my literary friends scorned and derided as cheesy and shameless.
Restoring balance back to the legislative branch is critical, but that cannot come from returning to an opaque and publicly derided process like earmarks.
Lately, Trump has derided Merkel for her push to accept refugees into her country, shifting his language on the German leader he previously praised.
But Mr. Trump has derided the lifting of the ban as "politically correct," raising the possibility that his administration may roll back the changes.
Trump has on multiple occasions derided Mueller's probe as a "witch hunt" that has the world "laughing" at the U.S.  View the discussion thread.
D'Annunzio's influence on fascism has made him a controversial figure in Italy: at once lauded for his poetic talent and derided for his politics.
Yet the moves were derided by many Democrats, who saw Pelosi not only handing Trump a victory but also stepping on the impeachment news.
The outcome could have a major impact on a commission long derided for inaction, even as record amounts of money have poured into campaigns.
Dubious claims: Commentators derided Prime Minister Boris Johnson's claim that "cupid's darts will fly once we get Brexit done," leading to a baby boom.
In the Monday radio interview, Trump derided Drake as the latest example of a smear campaign designed to hurt his standing with female voters.
The morning after the news of the proposal, Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Ajit Pai, a Republican, derided the idea of nationalizing wireless broadband.
Hearing Caroline talk about how her workshop was derided in the media, it was easy to understand why she was nervous to meet me.
It has also been derided by advocates and Democratic lawmakers for housing migrants in "cages," large chain-link pods that separate groups of people.
The messaging efforts have been derided by lawyers representing family members of 9/11 victims, who accuse Riyadh of "whitewashing" history with its messaging.
" The "Be A Hero" effort had picked up steam, and appeared in headlines, earlier in the confirmation process when Collins derided it as "bribery.
Critics, meanwhile, view those accusations as a broader effort to discredit Mueller's probe, which Trump has repeatedly derided as a "witch hunt" against him.
But Trump faces a heavy burden of proof that he is not, as he has famously derided other politicians, "all talk and no action."
Still, she said she hopes the series comes as a surprise to viewers who are used to seeing fat characters derided for their weight.
After criticism from advocates who derided him for unleashing an overly harsh approach, deportations declined significantly in the later years of the Obama presidency.
The allegations were investigated internally, which is common among congressional offices — but that's a process Gillibrand herself has derided as unfair to the accuser.
Lawmakers from both major political parties derided Trump's remarks, with both Democrats and Republicans saying the U.S. president appeared weak in front of Putin.
Although millennials may be derided by out-of-touch columnists as passive, avocado toast-eaters, today's youth are in reality an engaged, activist generation.
The nine-figure statement of intent was widely derided as profligate, showing that Netflix might be a source of cash but scarcely offered serious competition.
While the White House has claimed that its hands are tied, could these social media activists (sometimes derided as "slacktivists") end up making a difference?
He referred to him as "two-faced Tester" and derided his lack of support for the Republican tax overhaul and other key White House policies.
As one of the most prominent members of the Mueller team, Weissmann was called out by Trump and was frequently derided by right-wing commentators.
Once derided as the most liberal member of the Clinton administration, Shalala now faces attacks from challengers who contend she is not nearly progressive enough.
This will be the fourth such work stoppage in four years, and follows on Instacart's much-derided (and later backtracked) changes to its tipping structure.
Fan Subscriptions was derided for reserving a license to any art that users created as well as the right to a 30 percent revenue cut.
" He derided Bezos's Instagram post as a "wonderfully banal passive aggressive post from the would-be author of 'Zen and the Art of Counterfeit Trafficking.
Throughout the campaign and since the election, King has relentlessly derided the president, his policies, and his administration in tweets to his 4.8 million followers.
What followed, the complaint said, was a pattern of discrimination, as Ms. Bardhi was repeatedly derided and marginalized by Mr. Neumann and other WeWork officials.
The deal would keep the door open to thousands of immigrants from places that Trump derided as "shithole countries" in a White House meeting Thursday.
But Kali's episode has been widely derided as the worst one of season 2, and the scripts don't give much direction to her possible future.
An enthusiastic Trump supporter, Mr Landry has derided the Obama-era consent decree in New Orleans as a "hug-a-thug" document that hamstrings police.
But critics posting on social media derided the network for focusing on an unsubstantiated idea rather than on those killed or injured in the attack.
Halting tax cuts for individuals in 5003, derided as a gimmick by Democrats, is designed to pare the bill's long-term costs to the Treasury.
This week started with a controversial, widely derided meeting between President Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin, and ended with… an invite for round two!
Skeptics of Reagan's 1980s missile defense program, derided by critics as Star Wars, said the plan was like trying to shoot bullet with another bullet.
The top tennis player in the world and winner of 21 Grand Slam titles is regularly derided for being too muscular and having thick thighs.
Snapchat has been derided as confusing to some because of its unique layout and how it originally relied on users knowing how to swipe around.
Whether one likes or dislikes his deeds, the 45th president will distinguish himself from the conventional politicians whom he has often derided as ineffectual blowhards.
The Trump campaign once derided Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Fighter pilot vs.
Former U.S. presidential nominee Ross Perot famously derided GM's directors as "pet rocks" in the 1980s, before GM bought out his stake in the company.
All that much-derided upper middle-class fussing about grades and extracurriculars speaks less to privileged entitlement than to very real fears of downward mobility.
And in the speech that kicked off his official campaign, he derided Mexicans as "rapists" who were bringing drugs and crime across the US border.
These include shifting some of the derided "behaviour detection officers", who are trained to spot suspicious body language and the like, to regular screening duties.
George W. Bush, in his effort to overhaul Social Security in 85033, predicted it would become insolvent in 2041 (for which he was widely derided).
The central bank's inflation targeting has long been derided by leftists from Zuma's ruling ANC party who see a weak currency as an economic panacea.
He called a news conference in which he derided Mr. Ponte as a "hug a thug" yokel from Maine who was out of his league.
Trump promised during the 2016 campaign to pull the U.S. out of the agreement and has consistently derided the Obama-era pact since taking office.
Trump had long derided the deal and fulfilled one of his key campaign promises by announcing his administration was pulling the U.S. out of it.
"The company sold more iPhones than most of the bullish analysts thought, including the X, which the community had derided endlessly," Cramer said in May.
And it's improbable that the moderator, Lester Holt, will be as gentle as Matt Lauer was during that much-derided forum a few weeks ago.
" Perhaps his characterization was too harsh, but Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts probably spoke for many when he derided such approaches as "sociological gobbledygook.
Democrats and environmentalists have derided the decision, warning it would have significant impacts on global efforts to curb greenhouse gases which are causing climate change.
After being derided on social media, Mr. Trump deleted the post and replaced it with one that had a circle instead of the star shape.
Rhodes, who is 38 and holds a master of fine arts in creative writing, derided the press corps as too naive to cover world events.
Those metrics, including the much derided kill ratios, may have helped the Americans to win tactical victories, but did nothing to win the war strategically.
Obama took a swipe at Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump's rhetoric on the campaign trail where the billionaire real-estate tycoon has derided illegal immigrants.
During his State of the Union address, he derided them as "ridiculous partisan investigations," and warned the probes would hurt the chance for bipartisan achievements.
Trump has derided asylum seekers and other immigrants coming across the U.S. southern border as liars and criminals, prompting Democrats to accuse him of racism.
Political figures who had backed Trump from early on, and had been derided for doing so, were euphoric about the earthquake that had taken place.
Her biggest confrontation with the press probably came in late June, when she derided the media's "fake news" against Trump, singling out CNN for abuse.
The estate tax, often derided as the "death tax," is a 85033-percent tax on estates deemed to be worth around $10 million or more.
Square Feet NORTH BETHESDA, Md. — Congested and derided, the Rockville Pike thoroughfare, which connects Bethesda and Rockville, troubled local residents, officials and developers for years.
When Miami's Metrorail opened, Reagan derided the "$113 billion federal subsidy" that "serves less than 211,28.8 daily riders" as a prime example of government waste.
Walt persuasively contends that Washington's bungled interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya helped propel Trump, who has consistently derided foreign policy experts, to the presidency.
Pena Nieto was later cleared by a government-led investigation that critics derided as a whitewash, and the episode did lasting damage to his authority.
They said that Christian voters who backed Trump had been derided as unthinking, unsophisticated hypocrites, but for many of them that only affirmed their resolve.
The military prosecutor's office said the cases have been closed due to lack of evidence, and derided allegations of impunity as "unjustified rumors," Newsweek reported.
Watchdog groups have derided that deal as insufficient, noting that pouring profits back into the hotel will make it more valuable in the long term.
In the early 19th century, the Italian peninsula, dominated by rival kingdoms and city-states, was derided as a "geographical expression" rather than a country.
ROME — Rome's much-derided Christmas tree, scornfully nicknamed Spelacchio, or mangy, for its forlorn appearance, was removed from the central Piazza Venezia on Thursday evening.
Their style was derided in some quarters as superficial, and some pundits criticized Mr. Halperin's interviews with President Trump during his candidacy as too cozy.
Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, he said, "I have decided" what to do about the Iran nuclear agreement, which he has long derided as terrible.
The president has accused the news organization of being foreign-owned, without any evidence, and often derided it as "fake news," echoing President Trump's language.
On Architecture Long derided as relics of an oppressive regime, the country's Communist-era buildings are being given a second look, and a new life.
The Wahhabi-Salafi belief system is one of religious supremacism, in which the very notion of man-made law, let alone democratic government, is derided.
Related: Democrats who once derided Mr. Bolton now want him to testify, while some of his former Republican friends are tossing him to the curb.
" And Foreign Minister Delcy Rodríguez recently derided the notion of humanitarian assistance as "a theory constructed by the Pentagon so that the U.S. can intervene.
Morissette wanted me to know this, perhaps because at the time she was derided as a packaged studio creation, someone merely pantomiming a gritty persona.
Morissette wanted me to know this, perhaps because at the time she was derided as a packaged studio creation, someone merely pantomiming a gritty persona.
Trump on Friday derided the pursuit of his financial records as "not legal" and a continuation of former special counsel Robert Mueller's investigative "Witch Hunt."
" Perhaps nowhere is Graham's loyalty to Trump more salient than when it comes to the House impeachment inquiry, which he has derided as a "lynching.
This thing has been banned by anime conferences, as it's widely derided as featuring faces from shota or loli—depicting minor characters in sex acts.
As a woman, Wiener felt both conspicuous and invisible, valued for her contribution to "diversity metrics" while her "soft skills" were simultaneously exploited and derided.
The industrial neighborhood of Willets Point, Queens — replete with body shops, salvage lots and junkyards — has been long derided as a shantytown and an eyesore.
The Occupy Wall Street Movement of 2011 was not particularly large, and was widely derided by establishment figures on both the left and the right.
In Canada, mainland students driving their Ferraris and Aston Martins to "demonstrate force" derided Hong Kongers as poor and added an expletive for good measure.
Combine that with recent polls showing the GOP tax bill, which Pelosi last year derided as "Armageddon," increasing in popularity, and Democrats are on edge.
That sounds nice, but what else are they going to say after last year, when the show was widely derided for jerking around its fans?
During the presidential campaign, he derided the alliance as obsolete and questioned whether the United States would automatically come to the defense of its members.
The estate tax, often derided as the "death tax," is a 40-percent tax on estates deemed to be worth around $10 million or more.
The company, owned by tech conglomerate Alphabet, was derided by U.S. politicians for not sending C-suite executives like Pichai and Alphabet CEO Larry Page.
Climate scientists and members of the Greens have derided the price — which is to increase to €35 by 2025 — as too low to be effective.
They've been derided as a "deep state," slurred as "Obama holdovers," threatened with draconian budget cuts and told President Donald Trump doesn't even need them.
" He has also derided the impeachment inquiry, arguing, "We can't have the president of the United States, no matter who it is, being held hostage.
Three executives of the Miss America Organization resigned on Saturday after reports that the pageant's leadership had attacked and derided former pageant winners in emails.
After the heavily memed, derided, and thereby watched second season of True Detective, HBO seemed to lean into this dubious marketing tactic with The Young Pope.
This is mostly because rival fuels were cheaper, rather than the Obama administration's Clean Power Plan, which was much derided but never actually went into effect.
The company's meteorologists are widely respected in the field, though the rollout of 30 and 90-day forecasts has been derided by some as inaccurate gimmicks.
He went through what he later derided as his "Phil Collins phase" in which he "fucked with my integrity" and actually attempted to release popular albums.
Trump has derided intelligence agencies for weeks, setting off the word "intelligence" in quotation marks to indicate his skepticism and suggesting their conclusions were politically motivated.
He's figured out that most modern indie bands sound like the once-derided Steely Dan; he sees no reason why DMB shouldn't have the same renaissance.
In Her Smell, Amber Heard's Zelda, whose grunge roots gave way to a more mainstream appeal, is derided by Elisabeth Moss' Becky Something for selling out.
Others took it in a more creative approach - a reference to her widely-derided comment about schools needing guns to protect the children from grizzly bears.

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