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"preempt" Definitions
  1. to occupy (land) in order to establish a prior right to buy.
  2. to acquire or appropriate before someone else; take for oneself; arrogate: a political issue preempted by the opposition party.
  3. to take the place of because of priorities, reconsideration, rescheduling, etc.; supplant: The special newscast preempted the usual television program.
  4. to forestall or prevent (something anticipated) by acting first; preclude; head off: an effort to preempt inflation.
  5. Bridge
  6. to make a preemptive bid.
  7. Bridge
  8. a preemptive bid.

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607 Sentences With "preempt"

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

The urge to preempt would dominate; whoever gets the first few weapons will coerce or preempt.
The change in sound didn't preempt any sort of commodification.
"I don't want to preempt those [upcoming announcements]," Calabria said.
FCC DEFENDS DECISION TO PREEMPT STATE LAWS: Oral arguments were held Thursday in a lawsuit challenging the Federal Communications Commission's vote last year to preempt a pair of state laws in Tennessee and North Carolina.
Our mission is to predict and preempt injury and health complications.
The second is to anticipate and try and preempt unethical outcomes.
Does Fox crank up the America First dimensions to preempt Bannon?
Still, companies can preempt and influence the working-mom value equation.
We want to preempt this; we don't want to act afterward.
After that FERC will preempt its authority and ram CPV through.
The executive order is partly an attempt to preempt those efforts.
Congress had given the FCC the power to preempt laws that restrict the development of broadband networks in 1996, and the FCC used that power to preempt a Missouri law banning cities from building broadband networks.
But if you really want to blow her mind, preempt the question.
An embassy move would seem to preempt a final status peace deal.
But it was never intended to preclude or preempt the salary test.
In other words, he's asking CFIUS to possibly preempt a proxy fight.
So in court, I'd preempt the bad parts of a client's character.
Kavanaugh apparently anticipated this line of attack and tried to preempt it.
This means you have to predict and preempt what your opponent will do.
Drugmakers tried to preempt those rules this morning by offering an implicit compromise.
Privately owned Cylance uses machine learning to preempt security breaches before they occur.
DL: And yet, the movie seemed to know and preempt its haters complaints.
Another tactic of persuasion is to preempt the bad parts of your speech.
Millennium and CPV tried to preempt New York's permitting authority over the pipeline.
They ordered an alert of Soviet nuclear weapons to preempt a U.S. attack.
That has Silicon Valley hoping to preempt regulation by implementing their own reforms.
"I don't smoke," she writes in the caption, as if to preempt internet outrage.
She wanted pills to end it all and preempt the misery that she anticipated.
Next, it should respond to or preempt the alternative messages being offered to voters.
She should preempt that possibility by softening some of her positions, but she cannot.
There's a history of state legislatures trying to preempt Supreme Court rulings with legislation.
EPB petitioned the Federal Communications Commission, asking the federal government to preempt Tennessee's law.
"We will preempt these laws and return this power to local governments," Warren promised.
"We don't think the FCC has the power to preempt state action," said Wiener.
Congress can preempt this by passing legislation of its own that would overrule Flores.
Oren Falkowitz, CEO of Area 1 Security, wants to preempt phishing attacks before they occur.
If you seeing it slowing, the question for the Fed is when do you preempt?
Democrats have indicated they won't preempt states without getting an aggressive national bill in return.
With the midterm elections on the horizon, he's working to preempt the next great catastrophe.
Refraining from more draconian policies may preempt dangerous Pakistani retaliations and threats to US interests.
The proposed regulations could be an effort to preempt more aggressive federal restrictions on Amazon.
Or will Matthew Whitaker preempt him by limiting the scope of the special counsel investigation?
The pesticide lobby has long sought to preempt local authority through the federal pesticide law.
The tricky issue is whether the federal government should preempt states and block their mandates.
He took unprecedented steps to preempt his state's presidential primary and keep voters at home.
To preempt any attempt by Mr. Trump or his successors to restart a torture program.
The Community Broadband Act would preempt states from passing laws that prohibit municipal broadband networks.
The vote also sought to preempt states from setting their own rules governing internet access.
And they would preempt the current patchwork of state laws regarding the enforcement of autonomous driving.
Without Title II, states may ask under what authority do you presume to preempt our laws?
By definition, a single national policy on privacy would preempt states from having their own policies.
In rolling back protections last year, the FCC included language designed to preempt new state laws.
Velodyne, which supplies Uber with its LIDAR sensing technology, tried to preempt questions about its product.
A work of this size and it does not preempt natural events like a rip current?
The Trump administration argues that federal law should preempt California from setting its own emissions rules.
Now it's trying to preempt Buffalo Wild Wings from heading down a similar path of irrelevance.
If that was an attempt to preempt criticism with another stereotype-centered joke, it didn't work.
Popular sources report the ATF asserts LEOSA does not preempt state restrictions on common firearm features.
The Trump administration argues that federal law should preempt California from setting its own emissions rules.
North Carolina is not the only state to preempt municipalities from addressing these sorts of issues.
In fact, it was in large part conceived to preempt a revolution of the working classes.
Removing flavors is the company's latest effort to preempt a major move from the federal government.
Also, if people want to preempt you, there's a good chance others will like your company.
Advocates are also rallying against a bill that would preempt local regulation of facial recognition technology.
The Democratic bill would allow state laws to prevail, but the Republican bill would preempt them.
The FCC holds that it can preempt state-level laws because broadband service crosses state lines.
In the past, Google has been able to preempt these kinds of issues with savvy lobbying.
Oliver, 39, also used the social media site to preempt the Broncos' performance with a little praise.
This act would preempt laws like those in Atlanta that provide nondiscrimination protections for the LGBT persons.
She seemed to assess Peter for a second, then moved to preempt his next, most obvious question.
Legal experts have said it's not clear whether the FCC has the authority to preempt the states.
That maintenance requires that later precedents which diverge from the Constitution are not allowed to preempt it.
Suen says that it's important to preempt this occurrence and consider changing pandas' diet during mating season.
But with the paparazzi's prying eyes dying for a peek, many are forced to preempt tabloid scoops.
The bill would preempt local and city regulations in favor of the state's (kinder-to-Uber) terms.
Such a move would preempt state efforts and better inform pricing decisions by private and public payers.
But this accusation sometimes carries a prophylactic quality that attempts to preempt valid criticisms of the industry.
Our defensive ability to respond or preempt depends on ballistic missile defense, including intelligence and advanced warning.
Such show pony legislation would serve one real purpose: to invalidate or "preempt" tougher state-level protections.
A strategy to counter and -- where possible -- preempt this has to be top of the Europeans' list.
But partisan scuffling over whether different proposals would preempt existent state data security regulations have stymied progress.
The plan specifies that it would displace or preempt all federal regulations for stationary sources of CO2.
Meanwhile, the ACA itself will preempt only those state laws that pose an obstacle to achieving its objectives.
It could potentially pass legislation to preempt actions by the administration and that prevents unilateral withdrawal from NAFTA.
So rather, I preempt it and just show you, here's all the numbers behind everything that we're doing.
The new network is designed to rapidly preempt routine traffic to free bandwidth for emergency use, they said.
Apple, on the other hand, has tried to preempt this approach by emphasizing consumer privacy in its products.
But you know, this -- They&aposre trying to get out ahead of it and preempt it -- WATTERS: Right.
"This case is an archetypical example of the kind of lawsuit Congress sought to preempt," Remington's lawyers wrote.
That included questions about their argument that the FCC shouldn't be able to preempt state net neutrality rules.
And so, the legal mind says, we&aposll, do you preempt all of that just by suing first.
" To preempt the question, the rapper permanently marked his body with his permanent state of being: "Always Tired.
He's already sought to preempt them with a prototype cigarette that has a health warning printed on it.
Wade," as well as "federal laws to preempt state efforts that functionally limit access to reproductive health care.
The House bill, called the Self Drive Act, would preempt state laws governing the deployment of driverless technology.
After the Hebron massacre, some in Israel convinced themselves the perpetrator acted to preempt an attack against Jews.
Use the "Objective" or "Executive Summary" section at the top to preempt any anticipated questions about your candidacy.
The group said that Tuesday's court decision should preempt any congressional action to codify the 2011 delisting decision.
People like Musk say we need to preempt this, that we have to stop it before it's too late.
One of the main sources of conflict has been whether to preempt states from legislating their own privacy regulations.
Pre-seed investment isn't an option bet to preempt the seed or Series A; it's their bread and butter.
Under sentencing guidelines, Cartwright was facing six months of prison for the charges, although the pardon will preempt sentencing.
Now in 2018, to preempt your question, I think we can take back the House and the Senate. Why?
In other words, if AB 3080 is passed, it would not preempt any existing employment contracts in the state.
"If the legislation is substantial enough, then I think it makes sense to preempt," said FTC Chairman Joseph Simons.
Critics say it would preempt justice, undermine military discipline and send a message that battlefield atrocities will be tolerated.
" Asked if Mueller's appointment would preempt his own request for Comey information, the Iowa Republican replied, "I don't know.
Several Democrats running for Senate said they were angered by the court's decision to preempt the rule this early.
It also includes some Republicans who are pushing for a purely voluntary standard nationwide that would preempt Vermont's law.
The administration's rule aims to preempt the Golden State's CAA waiver and argues that it should be pulled entirely.
BlackBerry in February completed its acquisition of California-based Cylance, whose software uses machine learning to preempt security breaches.
Qassem Soleimani, a top Iranian leader, to preempt an attack the Iranians were planning to carry out within days.
Pennsylvania Republicans are likely to consider ways to preempt a new tax on sodas and sugary beverages in Philadelphia.
Another way to preempt any sudden-onset FOMO is to take charge of the evening, top shortage be damned.
It's doing so to preempt the lawsuits over its classification of drivers as contractors that will inevitably be filed.
And rather than substantively amending Section 230, FOSTA simply (and correctly) makes clear that it doesn't preempt criminal law.
Warren said she would preempt state laws on this matter using federal legislation, something that would no doubt be controversial.
When the conference committee convenes, members will have to preempt a GOP split over the nature of the final package.
And to preempt concerns from voters, Rubio brings up the issue himself, saying that the debate over immigration has changed.
It is unclear whether federal law would preempt state laws that attempt to regulate the automation aspect of the technology.
The administration's rule aims to preempt California's Clean Air Act (CAA) waiver and argues that it should be pulled entirely.
Cortez Masto's bill would not preempt state law and would allow state attorneys general to extract fines for privacy violations.
"I write to strongly protest your decision to instruct Sinclair's ABC affiliates to preempt this evening's Nightline program," McCain wrote.
The state passed a law last month to raise teachers' wages by $6,100 in an attempt to preempt the strike.
Sometimes, though, regulators might capitalize on early public fears to preempt this process, and thereby expand their own regulatory authority.
And then, to preempt yet another Times scoop, he posted all his highly incriminating emails about the meeting on Twitter.
That seems to be more of an open question, as to whether the Clean Air Act would preempt those claims.
The 24(a)(27) exemption also does not preempt state law, whereas the new Section 2506(a)(2506) does (see below).
Preempt Security, a startup still in stealth, came out of hiding today enough to announce an $8 million Series A round.
It's worth noting, though, that the FCC has previously lost on a ruling to preempt state laws that ban municipal ISPs.
And if conservatives had heeded them at the time, they might've been equipped to preempt Trumpism before it destroyed their movement.
Its technology could be appealing to studios as a way to combat, or preempt, online leaks of movies still in theaters.
A German exit would be better, both inherently and as a measure to preempt and preclude so dangerous an Italian departure.
"The FCC's attempt to preempt state rules appears questionable," said Pantelis Michalopoulos, a telecommunications lawyer at the firm Steptoe and Johnson.
I'm not in much of a position to preempt whatever narrative the producers decide to shoehorn in during the editing process.
There's the possibility a federal law could preempt state law in California and potentially other states that pass their own bills.
And by using surveillance in an attempt to preempt future crime, the NYPD left behind a trove of uniquely fascinating images.
Doing this in advance will allow business owners to react swiftly in a crisis and preempt any questions from their clients.
The House measure contains another trucking provision that would preempt state laws on commercial trucking meal and rest breaks, which Sen.
The Pentagon has stated that this was a defensive action designed to preempt and to clearly deter Iran from attacking Americans.
Still, some environmental advocates said they feared that the EPA's proposal could preempt even more stringent rules being considered in California.
The high court said that Congress had only allowed the FCC to preempt restrictions on the development of private broadband networks.
It could go in early and preempt a North Korean attack on the South, or fight in the middle of a war.
To preempt such a move, Pomaro and his wife Federica enrolled Angela in a school that mostly serves the children of migrants.
It's disputed whether the FCC has the power to preempt state laws, and Pai has been skeptical of the idea in past.
And most notably, the court vacated a section of the rules that let the FCC preempt any stricter state net neutrality laws.
With this data in hand, Berdugo said, the company can preempt everything that brokers do by four and half months or more.
It has to go through a public comment process, and Congress could, if it desires, reverse the rule or legislatively preempt it.
One is the purely medical: Give the drug to patients and maybe preempt or treat the dissociative side effects with other drugs.
Some tech giants have signaled that they're open to new regulations — and in certain cases they're taking proactive steps to preempt them.
The tragedy of Intel's mobile failure is that the company foresaw all the threats to its business and acted to preempt them.
The Commerce and Supremacy Clauses of the U.S. Constitution empower Congress to regulate interstate commerce and to "preempt" state health insurance laws.
Whether it was to preempt a rebellion or a constitutional challenge to his presidency or not, someone orchestrated this at Trump's direction.
Seeking to preempt the appearance, the president turned to Judicial Watch, a conservative advocacy group, to hit at the former special counsel.
This initiative imagines a DHS that is faster, smarter, and better equipped to preempt and combat rivals and adversaries across the globe.
As more organizations begin to implement peace data strategies to preempt violent extremism, we're likely to see three main results worldwide. 1.
As the UN assessments make clear, Palestinians in Gaza are struggling not just for their rights, but to preempt their collective expiration.
Go deeper: Freelance health care journalist/analyst Andrew Sprung has written a lot about how these measures could preempt the administration's priorities.
We're going to take a different tack and consider why McConnell so quickly tried to preempt a nominee in the first place.
The sentencing submissions from both sides were due Friday, but Hastert's defense apparently decided to preempt prosecutors by filing early on Wednesday.
The FCC claimed it could preempt state net neutrality laws because state-imposed rules would subvert the federal policy of non-regulation.
As a matter of both basic agency law and federalism, the power to preempt the States' laws must be conferred by Congress.
Twitter and Google have also been working to introduce their own transparency measures to preempt regulators, though some lawmakers aren't satisfied. Sens.
The proposed bills would also preempt states from establishing their own laws overseeing autonomous testing, which could clash with California's well-established system.
At the same time, mindful readers stop reading during a doxing siege—and call the police to preempt the word being made flesh.
Motherboard noted that Verizon also recently filed a white paper urging the FCC to preempt states from imposing their own internet privacy laws.
Even though a ban on rare earth exports is just speculation at this point, companies have begun to preempt any new Chinese restrictions.
To preempt that, in mid-November Juul released its "action plan" describing the steps it'd take to keep kids from using its product.
That rule hasn't been held up in court, and the last time the FCC tried to preempt state laws around broadband, it failed.
For more than four decades, he did everything in his power to preempt any civil society organizations or real, autonomous institutions from emerging.
Silicon Valley companies asked federal lawmakers to step in and preempt state rules, particularly California's privacy law set to take effect next year.
The November 2017 statement is signed by both Daniels and Green, seemingly in an attempt to preempt any new reporting on this case.
But the lower chamber's spending bill also included another trucking provision that would preempt state laws on commercial trucking meal and rest breaks.
Not least because Facebook's self regulation has always been another piece of crisis PR, designed to preempt and steer off the real thing.
This has some concerned about an overreaction from the Federal Reserve to preempt rapid wage growth and accompanying inflation by hiking interest rates.
A Washington Post story later reported that Bezos purposely announced his divorce on Twitter as a way to preempt the National Enquirer report.
The more conservative AFL experienced a growth spurt as it collaborated with employers, preparing employer-friendly contracts, to preempt more radical CIO organizing.
Trump Jr. appears to have posted the damning emails in an attempt to preempt a New York Times story that published shortly afterward.
Both sides agree that the bill would reduce impediments to deploying the technology, but it would at least partially preempt state regulatory authority.
WhatsApp is keen to preempt criticism, and says that although it's changing its privacy policy, it continues to support end-to-end encryption.
This would ensure states and cities are more ready to weather possible disasters and preempt the need for as many supplemental appropriations debates.
Scott Wiener has proposed a bill that would preempt density restrictions near most transit stations and job clusters, instead allowing more multifamily zoning.
Despite CPV's spectacularly inappropriate siting, its efforts to preempt state laws and regulations, and an egregious corruption scandal, construction of the plant continues.
They do not require any legislative changes on the part of trading partners, nor do they preempt a country's existing or potential laws.
Environmental urgency to tackle what is a massive user of coal-fired power is overlaid with diplomatic urgency to preempt a trade showdown.
Pressed to discuss whether the island should have been open, Ardern said she didn't want to preempt an inquiry which has been launched.
Pressed to discuss whether the island should have been open, Ardern said she didn't want to preempt an inquiry which has been launched.
And I'll never forget how an insulated suburban school board voted unnecessarily to preempt thousands of similar stories from reaching the same conclusion.
Title 53 of Section 305 builds upon this law by having Title 18 Section 3505 preempt any laws or resolutions of other municipalities.
Barr's willingness to preempt many of the questions he'll likely receive during his confirmation hearing reads like an attempt to soothe those concerns.
The FCC took up their cause and attempted to preempt laws in their states that were written specifically to prevent their networks from expanding.
And someone finally wrote a good encryption bill to preempt states from trying to implement their own anti-crypto policies at a state level.
The company decided to disclose the letter to the government to preempt Jacobs, who had threatened to go to the government himself, Padilla said.
As Ars Technica noted, the push to preempt states from doing so is backed by other telecoms like Verizon as well as many Republicans.
But the industry may preempt that: PhRMA, drugmakers' leading trade group, is planning a "major industry announcement" on direct-to-consumer advertising this morning.
Clemmons told Díaz that people were saying that his New Yorker article was meant to preempt any accusations of misconduct against him, said Callard.
The president promised us in the White House that he would not take any step that may preempt or prejudge Jerusalem, not before negotiations.
And so, he&aposs probably getting word, and he&aposs probably getting prepared to kind of preempt if something could come down against him.
Indeed, such an algorithm could become a public utility that platforms can use to preempt getting into trouble and drawing the attention of lawmakers.
Any plan to preempt the North's nuclear assets could easily tumble into a wide-ranging campaign, necessitating a full-scale invasion of the North.
If the president were to pardon himself to preempt a legitimate investigation into potential criminal wrongdoing, it would have no effect on congressional investigations.
We don't wait for the round to form, we preempt it, and if we don't do the deal we have a relationship going forward.
That needs to be factored into the equation when we think about what Kim would do to preempt an attack or retaliate for one.
JOE KERNEN: You saw Dalio notes that there is not a Central banker in the world that wants the preempt inflation at this point.
Bluebird said no CRS incidents, or side effects that could preempt higher doses of bb2121 in future studies, have been seen with its treatment.
Proposals from Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders would preempt any state laws that ban local communities from building their own municipal and public networks.
Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) would preempt state laws that bar communities from building out their own publicly owned networks.
Whether you want to preempt this shift, or just want to own it digitally, you can pick it up for a big discount today.
They will push for the statute to preempt state efforts, effectively having the statute serve as a ceiling rather than a floor of protection.
"FDA regulations cannot preempt state laws that preserve constitutionally protected rights, such as the fundamental right to life and medical self-preservation," the website explained.
It's a short, straightforward bill with a simple aim: to preempt states from attempting to implement their own anti-encryption policies at a state level.
But the AFT and NEA still do not recommend drills, suggesting schools focus instead on school safety plans and early intervention to preempt violent behaviors.
Industrious leakers like evleaks and Roland Quandt, who, year after year, preempt flagship phone announcements with detailed images and specs of the devices to come.
Generally, industry groups and Republicans have argued that any new federal law should preempt privacy laws in the states, in order to avoid overlapping standards.
On Twitter, journalists attending the keynote prefaced their tweets about the demo with "no joke" to preempt the eye-rolling and incredulous replies they expected.
Industry also fears a patchwork of state regulations, hoping federal rules could be used to preempt them ahead of the California law's 2020 effective date.
Alabama legislators have justified their vote to preempt local minimum wages by saying that statewide uniformity regarding wage policy is more important than local democracy.
And, she wrote, her administration would "preempt" laws on the books in 26 states that discourage or prevent municipalities from building their own broadband infrastructure.
But it's not clear whether the orders in New York or Montana qualify as net neutrality rules that the FCC could preempt, per the Verge.
Clapper told lawmakers that the report would ascribe a motivation to Russia for the hacks but said he did not want to "preempt" the report.
The states' lawsuit also asked the appeals court to reverse the FCC's effort to preempt states from imposing their own rules guaranteeing an open internet.
" — Neal Rothschild, Axios "Insurance regulators weigh in on why selling across state lines can be problematic": "We strongly oppose legislation that would preempt state authority.
Escobar followed up by asking about a line in the report where he said he didn't want to "potentially preempt constitutional processes" during the investigation.
And the limits on patentable subject matter could curtail further research and investment in areas broader than these that are deemed to preempt basic research.
This might preempt a great deal of whining, but a series of sleepless nights in a row might cause your boss to start asking questions.
To preempt debate, we use the U.S. Census Bureau's definition of the Midwest region which, unlike its definition of the South, shouldn't be too controversial.
The third ill wind is China emerging as a superpower, wanting to control the narrative and co-opt people and preempt any criticism of it.
That's business as usual for a TV network, which sometimes has to preempt its regular schedule for special events like the NCAA March Madness tournament.
Today, local police and national law enforcement agencies have a greater chance to identify, anticipate and preempt terrorist actions through new artificial intelligence — AI — tools.
Ohio is the latest state to preempt local efforts to raise the minimum wage, after Cleveland tried to boost wages for its lowest-paid workers.
Claims of the right are always included, but they are invariably affirmative claims that would preempt legislative discretion and require the expenditure of public resources.
Federal regulation will preempt any state schemes that seek to govern block chain movement and trump inconsistent rules on the issuance of cryptocurrencies by companies.
The other option is to ask Congress to revise the law and give it clear authority to preempt state laws that restrict municipal broadband networks.
If you look at our surveillances, social media, the different things that we&aposre doing to try to preempt these situations, we&aposve been very successful.
"The FCC has claimed that they have the power to preempt state laws but that doesn't mean they actually do," Hansen told me over the phone.
Republicans have strongly opposed including a private right of action in federal legislation and have pushed for federal law to preempt state laws such as California's.
The Trump administration is moving forward with new rules that would require drug companies to disclose their prices, rejecting the industry's efforts to preempt those regulations.
The legislation would preempt states from passing their own laws regulating driverless cars, which the industry argues is necessary to avoid a patchwork of state rules.
Trump Jr. tweeted out the full email chain of his communications setting up the meeting to preempt a New York Times story about it in July.
But a new protection in the company's specialized T2 security chip hints at a sophisticated type of attack that the company may be trying to preempt.
Levine: He won the Levine case, in which the Supreme Court established that the FDA's drug labeling oversight does not automatically preempt state law tort claims.
"I don't want to preempt what our response will be ... but the government intends to act on what is a flagrant mistreatment of customers," he said.
Accordingly, Congress could expressly preempt state health insurance licensing schemes by passing a new federal law that explicitly aims to cancel out its state-level counterparts.
Officials told the Post that the Pentagon started the assessment to preempt Trump from pushing thoughts of withdrawal by proving the worth of the current arrangement.
Where Congress has created a regulatory regime of its own, as it has with immigration, it can choose to preempt inconsistent state laws on that subject.
The American Legislative Exchange Council—known as ALEC—has taken the lead, drafting model legislation to preempt everything from minimum wage regulations to sanctuary city policies.
"I decided to preempt any possibility and risks" of the breast cancer returning, said Faure, a freelance photographer who lives in the Westchester, New York, area.
Abbott's order actually may preempt some local ordinances, as in Dallas County, that had barred in-person religious services, as The Dallas Morning News reported Tuesday.
Uber is now pushing legislation in Oregon that would preempt local mandates on driver caps, permits, data collection and access for passengers in wheelchairs, among others.
But it seems far more likely that the company is hoping this disclosure will somehow preempt future articles about its own noticeable aversion to being observed.
Trump filed the challenge to preempt the state from turning over his tax returns to Congress after New York passed a law potentially allowing for that.
At least for now, price pressure in the economy remains benign, although the Federal Reserve is moving to preempt inflation with its campaign to hike rates.
The logic is that a federal law on the matter of, say, selling personally identifiable information to advertisers, would be more lenient and preempt state laws.
In fact, a detailed 2018 report from Business Insider Intelligence noted that banks are already using AI to mimic bank employees, automate processes, and preempt problems.
If you talk to your significant other about this, openly, owning what you want and won't budge on — then you won't preempt all conflicts, of course.
Harris's plan would preempt such challenges by forcing states to justify to the Justice Department why the laws aren't violating constitutional precedent in the first place.
He doesn't know how to control anything in this situation but the only thing he can preempt is not getting that baby bath delivered to the house.
Such a ruling would have dramatic implications for the California lawsuit—one of the two principal arguments against California is that the FCC rules preempt state laws.
To varying degrees, these proposals preempt other climate regulations, and in at least one instance provide a legal shield for oil companies facing certain kinds of lawsuits.
It's almost guaranteed that it's going to happen, and like so many other misuses, it's possible to anticipate this but not necessarily know how to preempt it.
The legislation would also preempt states from passing their own laws regulating driverless cars, which the industry argues is necessary to avoid a patchwork of state rules.
By attacking CNN, NBC, and ABC, he is trying to preempt negative coverage of his administration — something that worked for him during the primaries and general election.
It has made delaying going public easier for companies like WeWork, and even recently tried (but failed) to preempt an IPO for fashion subscription service Stitch Fix.
But that measure lost Democratic support at the last minute during a markup vote amid a fight over how strongly the federal bill should preempt state laws.
The Mueller report makes clear the special counsel's desire not to preempt the impeachment power of Congress by drawing definitive conclusions from the facts found (p. 263).
Sinegal explained the chain's rapid expansion to the Los Angeles Times in 1985, saying, "We are working to get established in certain markets, to preempt those markets."
It would preempt the Recovery Act, the local restructuring law that was thrown out in U.S. courts before Puerto Rico asked the Supreme Court to reinstate it.
Polster also refused to dismiss civil conspiracy claims against the drugmakers, distributors and pharmacies, and said federal law did not preempt a variety of the plaintiffs' claims.
The Northern Territory News (NT News) decided to preempt an inevitable joke about the news industry on March 4 when the country's demand for toilet paper rose.
But the government's effort to preempt the ICC surely indicates its fear of being labeled war criminals and anxiety over the domestic consequences of such a verdict.
The concessions thus far, however small or trivial, add up to embolden the regime and squeeze our ability to respond, prevent and preempt in an effective manner.
The Fed raised interest rates last week, the first of three projected hikes meant to bring monetary policy toward historic averages and preempt future spikes in inflation.
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act allows the federal government to preempt state laws that regulate fuel economy in order to ensure standard rules across the country.
And so when the federal laws came out, there was all this confusion about what applied, what didn't apply, but in general, federal laws preempt state laws.
And by preempt, it just means that you can't bring those claims—they'd get dismissed, because it falls under the auspices of the federal Clean Air Act.
What they're not saying: The bill doesn't say that the federal government should preempt state rules or address the ability of citizens to sue in certain privacy cases.
He cautioned, however, that the bank was not "going to seek to preempt events we don't know," and noted that higher borrowing costs could affect consumers and businesses.
Alongside Uber, it lobbies state legislators to preempt local regulations, which may limit the ability of cities from organizing road space in the most environmentally efficient way possible.
Auto dealers want the final bill to clarify that the measure would not preempt state dealer franchise laws that generally bar automakers from selling vehicles directly to consumers.
But if the beverage industry keeps pushing laws that preempt soda taxes from ever seeing the light of day, fewer communities will be able to reap these rewards.
"An agency that has no power to regulate has no power to preempt the states, according to case law," van Schewick said in a statement provided to Motherboard.
As IBM kindly pointed out in a series of emails meant to preempt today's announcement, VMware and IBM already teamed up and announced a partnership back in February.
Net neutrality advocates, meanwhile, point to a 2016 federal court ruling that the Obama-era FCC didn't have the authority to preempt certain state laws concerning municipal broadband.
The ENCRYPT Act of 2016, or by its longer name, the Ensuring National Constitutional Rights of Your Private Telecommunications Act, would preempt state and local government encryption laws.
When hearings begin Wednesday morning, ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS will preempt their regularly scheduled daytime programming for live coverage of the House Intelligence Committee's open impeachment hearings.
In Oakland on Tuesday, voters approved a measure to close eviction loopholes, and in Alameda, voters defeated a real-estate industry measure to preempt local rent control efforts.
They create standards to address the financial crisis, protect the environment, impose ethical constraints on artificial intelligence, and tackle corruption, that lead, and sometimes preempt, government-set standards.
A competing bill from the Energy and Commerce Committee has been bogged down by a partisan scuffle over whether the law would preempt existent state data security regulations.
Michalopoulos noted that while the legality of the situation is not completely clear yet, federal agencies generally have to offer some type of regulation to preempt state regulation.
That's not to say that Apple should be wholly responsible for coding education, just to preempt Silicon Valley's occasional delusions of grandeur about apps solving major world problems.
When two cities (Wilson, North Carolina and Chattanooga, Tennessee) filed petitions with the FCC to preempt these laws, the FCC was met with widespread criticism from the incumbents.
But it would also preempt state privacy regulations and would not provide individual citizens with a private right of action to sue companies, two sticking points for Democrats.
A competing bill from the Energy and Commerce Committee has been bogged down by a partisan scuffle over whether the law would preempt existing state data security regulations.
The list, which is updated every two years, allows U.S. authorities to more easily track and prosecute members of jihadist organizations, helping to preempt future terrorist attacks. Sen.
Finally, North Korea will have to assume from recent deployments that the United States is prepared to use massive force to preempt any attempt to use nuclear weapons.
That jump came due to "the desire to preempt future controls", China scrap veteran Michael Lion, president of Lion Consulting Asia, said before the origin data was released.
In the past, when judges have suggested the House should take a vote, Pelosi has responded by doing just that, taking action to preempt unfavorable rulings in court.
Biometric software may help police track down burglars, or even preempt a terrorist attack, but tech that watches us can engender fear and coerce us towards self-censorship.
Any rules that were created as a result of the bill would preempt certain state privacy regulations, according to a Rubio aide, fulfilling a major request from industry groups.
The order further seeks to "preempt" state and local governments from enacting regulations that would supercede the federal government, preventing states from crafting their own rules to protect consumers.
On July 7, the Senate voted 63-30 to pass a bill that would preempt state laws like Vermont's and replace them with a single national GMO labeling standard.
"It seems like I'm just ticking off one issue in America after another, but that's not my intention," he said afterwards, trying to preempt any accusations of empty showboating.
Not satisfied to duplicate what these two federal agencies have accomplished, EPA wants to preempt the authority of state regulators who impose their own bonding requirements on mining operations.
But Comey may also have been motivated from a desire to both preempt Russian disinformation and prevent leaks from the FBI itself, as Lawfare's Susan Hennessey argued on Twitter.
Democrats have eyed filing a lawsuit if Trump declared such an emergency, but it's unclear what move Democrats could take to preempt him from carrying out such a plan.
To put it simply: Innovative treatment is important, absolutely, but if we want to decrease costs, we should focus on streamlining care to preempt the need for expensive treatments.
But a competing bill from the Energy and Commerce Committee has been bogged down by a partisan scuffle over whether the law would preempt existing state data security regulations.
In order to assuage the concerns of Congress and preempt any tough regulation, the companies have all announced reforms in order to make it clear who's funding political advertisements.
So apparently in an attempt to preempt such a pardon, Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. unsealed 16 charges against Manafort for mortgage fraud, conspiracy, and falsifying business records.
Facebook is trying to preempt these drastic measures with Zuckerberg's recent apology tour and its purchase of full-page ads in nine newspapers today claiming it understands its responsibility.
In order to be proactive, numerous women online have begun taking steps to train others in their communities to preempt the possibility of being a victim of internet abuse.
Coordination to preempt a systemic collapse of economies around the world is vital, with the International Monetary Fund and other agencies taking a lead, encouraged by the United States.
The Church Committee's investigation prompted President Ford, in an effort to preempt more extreme congressional action, to sign an executive order reorganizing the intelligence agencies and banning political assassinations.
To preempt this kind of Iranian response, the Pentagon should state clearly that the U.S. will not permit its personnel to be harassed by Iran's conventional or unconventional forces.
Trump's proposal allowing short-term health insurance to cover any period of less than 12 months (as opposed to only three) doesn't preempt state laws from limiting these plans.
The sounds preempt the disjointed and somewhat surreal interplay of images in the videos that reflect Rasdjarmrearnsook's engagement with Buddhist thought on attachment, greed, suffering, death, rebirth, and nothingness.
Inslee would reverse Trump's efforts to preempt states and local communities and also work to overturn the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's ability to force states to accept natural gas pipelines.
Which begs the question: is Uber's sudden discovery of goodwill toward its drivers actually just a move to preempt regulations that would require it to add a tipping option anyway?
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is calling on Congress to come up with a federal privacy standard in order to preempt states from passing their own laws governing data collection.
The legislation, which passed the House Commerce consumer protection subcommittee by voice vote, would exempt that yearly allotment from safety standards and would also preempt state laws concerning driverless cars.
Sawyer, which was decided in 1952, the Supreme Court overturned President Harry S. Truman's proclamation seizing privately owned steel mills to preempt a national steelworker strike during the Korean War.
Clapper and Rogers testified on the matter before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday but provided few new details, arguing that they did not want to preempt the report.
This FCC Order further asserts that the FCC does not have authority to prohibit ISPs from blocking content in the future, and that FCC regulations preempt states from doing so.
Facebook is so eager to preempt the shift to Stories that it might even let us use the same interface of horizontally swipeable cards to sift through News Feed posts.
As the senator told the New York Times this month, he'd consider military force for a humanitarian intervention, or even to preempt a missile test by Iran or North Korea.
Expectations that the U.S. Congress might pass federal legislation to preempt state rules have faded despite bipartisan support, and Congress is considered unlikely to deliver a privacy bill this year.
"Your input is critical to helping us preempt a heavy-handed regulatory approach that could stall innovation and kill the U.S. ICO market," Davidson said in a letter to invitees.
"An agency that deems itself to lack statutory authority to regulate a particular practice altogether cannot rely on the same absence of authority to preempt state regulation," the states wrote.
Twitter erupted with jokes about what was clearly an attempt by NBC sensors to preempt an incident by a woman, who, throughout her career, has refused to play by Hollywood's rules.
Samantha Hoffman, a consultant with the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London who is researching social credit, says that the government wants to preempt instability that might threaten the Party.
"It seems to me highly likely that the copyright law in this particular case would preempt any state law claim," Brad Newberg, intellectual property lawyer at McGuire Woods, told The Verge.
On Tuesday, Joe Biden told his advisers he wanted to give a speech in South Carolina to address, and preempt, the mounting attacks on his record concerning race and civil rights.
Brett Kavanaugh's defenders have a new project: a book to preempt several forthcoming books expected to describe allegations of sexual assault and their bearing on Kavanaugh's confirmation to the Supreme Court.
The move could also be an attempt to preempt protests planned for the Alphabet shareholders meeting Wednesday, as some activists are concerned about Google's effects on housing prices and local communities.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is pushing an obscure regulation that would duplicate the responsibilities of other federal agencies and preempt state authority, potentially driving an important industry out of business.
By attacking CNN with claims of "bias" and "censorship," the campaign is trying to preempt negative coverage of his administration — something that worked for Trump during the primaries and general election.
This would have effectively ended Netanyahu's premiership, so he tried to preempt it by calling for a vote to dissolve the Knesset, essentially betting on voters rather than his fellow politicians.
Shale producers would have to take into consideration that OPEC and Russia would seek to preempt a rise in oil price above $50 per barrel by increasing their own production first.
Gunshots were heard in the area after news spread in the locality, with the army and security forces stepping up their presence to preempt any backlash, the state news agency said.
Just as the tobacco industry used state legislation to preempt local efforts to control tobacco, the soda industry is about to roll out the same strategy to quash local soda taxes.
If we share the same goal of protecting consumers, Congress needs to enact a federal data breach notification standard to preempt the hodge-podge of state laws from around the country.
It has also made some recent updates to preempt some common worker concerns, such as temporarily removing customer ratings so workers aren't penalized when high-demand items aren't found in stores.
The dispute centers on a 1996 law aimed at countering illegal immigration that gave the federal government the authority to build border barriers and preempt legal requirements such as environmental rules.
Democrats sought to bolster their arguments by furnishing the Senate with video clips of witness testimony and Trump's remarks and to preempt the defense's argument that impeachment requires a criminal act.
We have troops there for the same reason we keep troops in other parts of the world — to preempt threats to our homeland, deter aggression and protect America's far-flung interests.
This seemed to preempt protest against the privatization of Istanbul's cultural heritage: the shipyards contain structures that date from the Ottoman conquest and settlement of the city in the fifteenth century.
The FCC's repeal of net neutrality rules has been significantly weakened by a federal appeals court, which ruled that the Commission could not preempt state laws like those pending in California.
The BOJ left monetary policy steady at its July policy meeting but pledged to ease without hesitation to preempt risks that could hurt the chance of hitting its 2% inflation target.
In one of Hetzler's videos, a Frankish player builds castles right next to a gold pile held by their Byzantine opponent, to try and preempt dangerous, expensive units from the Byzantines.
The AV START Act would preempt those state rules and authorize automakers and tech companies to deploy (and possibly sell) thousands of vehicles without traditional controls like steering wheels and foot pedals.
Others may challenge only portions of the order, such as the provisions which "preempt" state and local governments that may try to pass their own laws to protect consumers from ISP abuse.
If incumbents can't preempt a primary challenge, McElwee said they may quickly find themselves out of their depth, with few people who can help tailor a new path to victory for them.
But if the Senate approves its legislation to preempt states from adopting a stricter standard than the federal government for self-driving cars, there could be confusion about which rules still apply.
"An agency that has no power to regulate has no power to preempt the states, according to case law," Stanford Law professor Barbara van Schewick said in a statement to The Verge.
He appears to have a real commitment to shepherding Saudi Arabia's economy into the modern era in order to preempt the financial catastrophe that will accompany a continued decline in oil prices.
The company this week touted speed tests for its Snapdragon 845 chip as proving its products are superior to Intel's, possibly in an attempt to preempt negative reaction to Davis' revelation today.
The night before, Facebook had tried to preempt the stories, announcing it was suspending Wylie, Cambridge Analytica, SCL, and Aleksandr Kogan for violating its policies against sharing Facebook data with third parties.
While Brown may have sought to preempt attacks on Harris with his op-ed, it's also provided fodder for a slew of conservative websites that are levying misogynistic critiques of her credentials.
Takuji Okubo, managing director and chief economist at Japan Macro Advisors reckoned the Bank of Japan's negative interest rate move was an attempt to anticipate and preempt a change in market sentiment.
And maybe traffic will be interrupted and the media will preempt programming to cover funerals of dead black men and women like they routinely do for fallen officers in cities across America.
Some savvy investors, such as Blackstone's Jonathan Gray, have actually poured money into the warehousing business in an effort to preempt the broader trend and capitalize off the scaling need for space.
Kay Ivey (R) this week signed legislation that will preempt cities and counties from removing monuments to the Confederacy from public property, over the objections of black lawmakers and civil rights groups.
The push has hit some speed bumps as representatives clash over details like whether the bill should preempt states' laws and whether individuals should be allowed to sue companies for alleged violations.
We always preferred private disagreements, but even the most public of spats could never diminish the CIA's commitment to the global intelligence mission to preempt threats and further U.S. national security objectives.
"It's a surprise, because with Keystone XL, we saw Republicans forcing a dozen votes to preempt, block and even try and reverse Keystone decisions and inject Congress into that process," Pierce said.
"I don't want to preempt or try to guess what's going to happen," Ghosn said in an interview on Thursday, on the sidelines of the CES technology show in Las Vegas, Nevada.
But a preventive U.S. military strike should be out of the question — an attack would only be justified to preempt an actual or imminent attack on the United States or our interests.
But in order to preempt accusations of left-wing bias, the platform has repeatedly partnered with outlets that draw into question how committed the platform really is to rooting out fake news.
Looking to preempt the attacks, Trump first called Clinton a bigot on Wednesday night, and then accused Clinton of looking to "smear" his followers in remarks just an hour before she spoke.
Experts see it as an attempt to preempt criticism that is sure to come from GOP senators that Obama is trying to ram through a nominee before he leaves office next January.
The bill would preempt state laws, unless they already specify a shorter time period for the statute of limitations or a particular amount of damages that can be awarded in a lawsuit.
Samsung moved up its launch date for its S10 series in order to preempt Huawei's expected unveiling of a foldable-screen competitor at a Barcelona trade show in late February, the WSJ reported.
The launch of the News Tab could be an attempt to preempt the negotiations for which the bill would allow, or simply show Facebook is willing to change its ways without new legislation.
President Obama and his FCC Chair Tom Wheeler supported a federal effort to preempt state laws restricting community networks, but an appeals court said the decisions must be made at the state level.
Privacy will be one of Capitol Hill's biggest debates next year, Axios' David McCabe notes, as the companies push for federal regulations to preempt California's new rules before they take effect in 2020.
But Westworld lampshading its static characters feels like an attempt to preempt this very criticism instead of helping us understand why it's not interested in its characters as, well, people to begin with.
This could lead Pyongyang to conclude an attack is imminent even when it isn't and attempt to preempt a US strike with its own attack — potentially kicking off a war nobody actually wants.
Veronica Escobar, D-Texas, quoted from the report that Mueller did not want to "potentially preempt constitutional processes for addressing presidential misconduct," and asked him to explain what he meant in simpler terms.
The Senate's bill, which passed out of committee last week, could totally preempt California's and other states' authorities to determine how autonomous vehicle companies handle their passengers' data, and protocols after a crash.
The recent mass vaccination campaign aimed not only to stop the transmission of the virus but also to preempt transmission during the rainy season, which is already starting in some areas, Briand said.
The United States government is accelerating efforts to monitor social media to preempt major anti-government protests in the US, according to scientific research, official government documents, and patent filings reviewed by Motherboard.
The Trump team so far has been deflecting all inquiries about Russia to Marc Kasowitz, Trump's longtime attorney in New York, and so far only one outside group to preempt the Comey testimony.
Trump may have fired Comey to preempt this exact outcome—a rangy investigation—and history suggests that if you start to turn over stones in Trumpland, you'll find something sooner rather than later.
Congress has been purposefully left out of the executive order drafting process, the official said, because the administration wants to preempt legislation being considered in the House and Senate that addresses similar issues.
Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives introduced legislation on Thursday that would preempt state and local paid leave laws for employers that choose to offer paid time off and flexible work arrangements.
It seems as if the guidelines were designed to preempt states such as California which already has issued enforceable safety regulations, such as requiring a driver and a steering wheel in all vehicles.
King's amendment would extend further than just the commercial breeding of pets and preempt state regulations on the sale of crops, dairy products, farmed fish or shellfish, farm animals and manufactured meat products.
Democrats are already fighting to preempt that strategy, arguing that, legally, Trump sabotaged any effort to deny Bolton a voice when he attacked his former national security adviser on Twitter early Monday morning.
Bezos would later preempt a National Enquirer story on the affair in a post on Medium, which also was the first time he mentioned a possible connection between the hack and Saudi Arabia.
Indeed, the ruling classes in both the North and South were sufficiently alarmed at the prospect of a biracial coalition of workers and farmers to undertake serious measures to thwart or preempt it.
Such a stay would preempt a possible economically damaging legal battle in the courts with creditors if Puerto Rico were to default on its more significant debt obligations due in May and July.
It led Indian forces to mount a "surgical strike" across the Line of Control, the cease-fire line between India and Pakistan in Kashmir, to preempt yet another cross-border attack from Pakistan.
Although this is a monumental exhibition — Andre's first career-spanning museum survey — there was little publicity or fanfare in advance of its opening, perhaps a conscious attempt by the museum to preempt protests.
The Federal Communications Commission is working to preempt some of these laws to allow greater municipal investment in some states, a crisis for telecom that has led to a bevy of pending lawsuits.
"The supervisory board talks over the bonus payments are ongoing, the result of which I cannot and do not want to preempt," said Stephan Weil, prime minister of Lower Saxony, VW's second-largest shareholder.
She also called further for federal guarantees to "preempt" other state efforts that limit access to reproductive health care without explicitly targeting Roe, and pointed to existing legislation called the Women's Health Protection Act.
But the bill would also require any new rules to preempt stronger state laws, like California's landmark consumer privacy act that was approved last year and is anticipated to go into effect in 2020.
And in Cleveland last year, the Democratic City Council rejected a $15 proposal for the city and then lobbied the state legislature for a law to preempt cities from going beyond the state standard.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court in Boston on Monday, was intended to preempt one expected to be brought by Amgen, which has previously sued Sanofi and Regeneron over their rival cholesterol drug Praluent.
There is no doubt that the California laws impact the federal government's enforcement of immigration laws (that is their purpose), but that may not be enough to allow federal law to preempt state law.
Big tech companies are pushing for a federal bill to preempt California's law, which Governor Jerry Brown signed into law in June but whose provisions are not due to go into effect until 2020.
Strzok's legal team has said in court filings that it hopes to learn that in the discovery process, which the Justice Department has attempted to preempt by filing a motion to dismiss the lawsuit.
Republicans insist that any privacy bill must preempt state laws, but Becerra said during the sit-down that he's warning key negotiators against advancing legislation that could dilute consumer protections afforded under California's law.
Yang also calls for new laws on tech that "preempt state regulations, when possible, to create one national framework," something Republicans have pushed for on Capitol Hill as they discuss federal data privacy legislation.
One Democratic lawmaker told Vox they'd suggested to Democratic leadership staff that House Democrats start every week with a resolution against anti-Semitism, just to preempt any Republican attempts to block the House's agenda.
In this case, where the FCC is removing pro-consumer protections, Pai is delighted to preempt the states from ensuring that their citizens are protected from anti-consumer and anti-competitive practices of broadband companies.
And apart from OLC's constitutional view, we recognized that a federal criminal accusation against a sitting President would place burdens on the President's capacity to govern and potentially preempt constitutional processes for addressing presidential misconduct.
It is also possible that the federal case will result in only certain parts of the FCC rules being overturned, such as the provision intended to preempt states from establishing their own net neutrality laws.
Since the FCC says it no longer has any authority to protect an open internet, it's also the case that the FCC lacks the legal power to preempt states from protecting their residents and economy.
Kamala Harris' busing attack, expressed regret for his comments about his work with segregationists, and pitched a progressive vision for criminal justice reform — trying to preempt attacks on his support for the 1994 crime bill.
"I am confident that the FCC's authority to preempt such state laws will be upheld, along with our proven market-based framework for protecting Internet openness, investment, and innovation nationwide," Pai said in his statement.
Speaking on the increased litigation reserves, Paul Kavanagh, CEO at Patronus Partners, told CNBC Thursday that the bank not try to preempt the amount of the final settlement with the DOJ by increasing their reserves.
Democratic senators involved in a key bipartisan working group left a Wednesday evening meeting with little to say about whether they were making progress on a national privacy bill Republicans hope will preempt state measures.
Now in the wake of Easter morning terrorist attacks that killed nearly 300 people, the government is blocking social media to preempt the kind of hate speech that fueled violence almost exactly one year prior.
We continue to see proposals that would preempt state licensing requirements and, thus, consumer protections by allowing sales across state lines by federal edict, without proper discretion for the states to form compacts between themselves.
The legislation would put in place federal regulations and preempt individual states from creating their own laws around self-driving cars, a problem that could make it more difficult for vehicles to travel between states.
By summer 1974, the House Judiciary Committee approved three articles of impeachment against Nixon (obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and contempt of Congress), and he resigned to preempt what seemed a near-certain impeachment.
Diversity programs — which can include everything from hiring tests and performance reviews to ensure fair hiring and pay decisions as well as trainings — are designed to "preempt lawsuits," they added, instead of truly stopping prejudice.
One factor potentially working against the ISPs is that the Federal Communications Commission's attempt to preempt all current and future state net neutrality laws was blocked by a federal appeals court ruling in October 2019.
Would the president-elect, with Comey solo at his side, try to preempt the classified document's leaking by taking it head on and describing it to members of the press gathered on the first floor?
"No one should take any decisions which may preempt or prejudge (negotiations) because this will be the destruction of the peace process as a whole," Erekat said, according to a transcript provided by an aide.
By summer 503, the House Judiciary Committee approved three articles of impeachment against Nixon (obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and contempt of Congress), and he resigned to preempt what seemed a near-certain impeachment.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Major technology companies and internet service providers told a U.S. Senate panel on Wednesday they support federal legislation to protect data privacy but want Congress to preempt tough new rules adopted by California. Amazon.
The FCC prohibited state laws from contradicting the decision, so it's very likely ISPs will sue Washington state over this new law to find out if the FCC does have the power to preempt the move.
CBA's shares fell as much as 2.7 percent after the announcements - which according to analysts preempt structural reforms likely to be brought in by a powerful banking inquiry that has rocked Australia's scandal-plagued financial sector.
And the First Amendment keeps all of this in the balance since it is possible it would preempt any claims that political speech creates a hostile work environment, protecting the person who participated in political speech.
The trick was to make the cable persuasive enough to score the expense money, but not so compelling that other agents who read it, and were based closer to the conference, would try to preempt him.
The original bill that mandated the use of a single standardized test was passed in 1971 by state legislators in order to preempt moves by the city to try to make the specialized schools more diverse.
The bank had already said prior to the tests that its CET25.8 ratio was 24bp lower over the quarter at 11.5% at the end of June, in an effort to preempt concerns about its capital position.
But consolidating "everything that the City knows about a given location" into one place also raises questions about privacy and civil liberties—questions Palantir has tried to preempt with a white paper posted on its website.
The interview, which bled into Laura Ingraham's show, ended on an unintentionally humorous note when Hannity appeared to slyly give his producers the "kill" signal to preempt his colleague from continuing the interview with the president.
A top Republican-aligned non-profit is seeking to preempt House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's (D-Calif.) live town hall Wednesday evening with a mobile billboard calling on her to support the GOP's tax reform efforts.
Administration officials have argued the strike was necessary to preempt an imminent attack Soleimani was planning against U.S. troops and diplomats in the Middle East, but they have offered no proof to back up their assertions.
Opponents of the FCC's net neutrality rules are pushing for Congress to fill the void left by the agency's repeal in order to preempt a regulatory back-and-forth that would accompany every change in administration.
WALGREENS PHARMACIST ALLEGEDLY DENIES ARIZONA WOMAN PRESCRIPTION TO PREEMPT MISCARRIAGE OVER HIS PERSONAL BELIEFS The strawberry-flavored syrup is a purified form of a chemical in the cannabis plant — but not the one that gets users high.
The political scientist William Benoit says there are three modes of political communication: acclaim (present one's record and proposals without comment on one's rival), attack (criticise one's rival) and defend (preempt or rebut criticisms of one's self).
By turning Boeing's flight test into a full mission, NASA hopes to preempt any potential gaps in access to the ISS, and an extra astronaut will keep NASA's total crew on board the station about the same.
To preempt any more scandals around Onavo and the Facebook Research app and avoid Google stepping in to forcibly block the apps, Facebook is now taking Onavo off the Play Store and stopping recruitment of Research testers.
Whatever the motives for obfuscating the North Korean nuclear threat, the need to protect the American people is immediate and urgent: The U.S. must be prepared to preempt North Korea by any means necessary—including nuclear weapons.
In 2007, when Tehran launched gas supplies to neighboring Armenia, Russia's Gazprom immediately bought up the pipeline within Armenia and built it with a small circumference to preempt its future use for transporting gas to European markets.
Now, sources say, Damascus and Tehran are keen to preempt any such American deterrent in the south, along the new route for a land bridge — even if doing so slows or retards the coalition's war against ISIS.
Any income that's deemed to have been inappropriately diverted is taxed at 25 percent, higher than the regular corporate tax rate, and so Facebook looks to be falling in line to preempt falling foul of the legislation.
Soon after making its offer, CTG held talks with European utilities to gauge their interest in buying EDP's and EDPR's U.S. renewables business to preempt any objections from U.S. authorities, sources familiar with the situation have said.
After a nearly $22016-million lobbying effort last year, Uber is expected to seek legislation in the Texas state legislature that would preempt local regulations with an Uber-approved set of statewide standards that exclude fingerprinting requirements.
Two U.S. agencies are writing new rules that would revoke California's authority to set its own emissions standards and preempt states from setting their own vehicle rules, Reuters reported Thursday, citing two people briefed on the matter.
More than a dozen states, typically more conservative ones like Oklahoma or Mississippi, have passed laws that preempt local bag policies and put the question of taxes or bans solely in the hands of the state legislature.
Delivery service American Eagle Express had petitioned the court to overturn a 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that said the Federal Aviation Authorization Administration Act of 1994 (FAAAA) did not preempt New Jersey wage law.
As Gizmodo reported when the draft proposal was first released:The order further seeks to "preempt" state and local governments from enacting regulations that would supercede the federal government, preventing states from crafting their own rules to protect consumers.
TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan should push back against any U.S. suggestion that it is suppressing the yen's value for trade advantage, an adviser to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said, in a bid to preempt criticism of Japan's currency policy.
It's no coincidence that this tablet is being announced today: Acer and Google are very much trying to preempt Apple with an education-focused tablet of their own to bolster Chrome OS in a market it's already leading.
Given that the administration has been clear that dumping is a centerpiece of its Section 232 investigation, a WTO member could choose bring a legal challenge under the Anti-Dumping Agreement to preempt the administration's Article XXI plan.
Syrian rebels backed by Turkey said they were in the final stages of preparing an assault from Turkish territory on the Islamic State-held Syrian border town of Jarablus, aiming to preempt any YPG attempt to take it.
On Tuesday, seemingly to preempt another Times story, he posted the full email exchange in which he arranged the meeting — and the actual emails themselves are the first concrete evidence of collusion between the Trump campaign and Russia.
Perhaps to preempt social media scrutiny, tech CEOs and venture capitalists have been eager to volunteer themselves as socially conscious tribute over the past few months, treating Trump's presidency as a second chance to make a good impression.
" The no-go list included the English letter "N," according to the New York Times, in order to "preempt social scientists from expressing dissent mathematically: N > 2, with 'N' being the number of Mr. Xi's terms in office.
Most of the measures are modeled on a law passed last year in North Carolina, when Republicans moved to preempt a Charlotte city ordinance that allowed people to use the public bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity.
Olaf's Frozen Adventure didn't just overstay its welcome, though: Twitter users also added that it seemed to be in poor taste to preempt a movie that celebrated Latinx culture with what amounted to an ad for Frozen 2.
Trump's promise that he "will not let people die on the streets" dangled in the air for what seemed like days during the healthcare discussion, waiting for one of the candidates to preempt him with his ridiculous claim.
Democrats in Congress have also introduced legislation called the "Community Broadband Act" that would preempt anti-municipal broadband state laws, but there's virtually no chance such a bill would pass while Republicans control both the House and Senate.
Indeed, the most recent Israeli operation in Syria, against IRGC and Hezbollah, which reportedly killed two Hezbollah fighters, was apparently intended to preempt an Iranian revenge attack on Israel for an attack Israel conducted in Iraq in July.
In fact, continuing the failed approach of the past will lead not to denuclearization but to conflict, either because the president feels compelled to preempt or because Kim Jung-un believes he can win a war of unification.
That announcement angered the opposing coalition of three parties led by Anwar, 72, who argued it was inappropriate for Mahathir to preempt the king's decision and that a vote in parliament would challenge the powers of the monarch.
The intent of Congress was first and foremost to encourage the island's government to work out consensual deals with its creditors under Title VI, and the outgoing government is doing its level best to preempt such an outcome.
Crucially, Johnson, Nixon, and Clinton — the presidents who were either impeached or who, in Nixon's case, resigned to preempt a coming impeachment — all faced Congresses controlled by their political enemies, and who therefore wanted them out of power.
But, given the succession and nature of recent leaks, the statement could also be in anticipation of a story that will break soon, one that the Department of Justice was notified of, and decided to preempt this way.
He's well-educated and, with that, we have to just look at making sure that the rule of law and the Constitution is going to be followed and that's going to basically preempt anything else he does,' Manchin said.
The aim of identifying potential buyers is to preempt any objections from U.S. authorities, who are increasingly scrutinising Chinese acquisitions of American assets in strategic industries and could block the proposed takeover of EDP, the banking sources told Reuters.
There are enough U.S. military cemeteries around Europe to remind us of the costs of defending our European allies which had in the past notoriously ignored the danger and failed to preempt the impending catastrophes of two world wars.
Arkansas is urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that federal law does not preempt a state law that regulates pharmacy benefits managers' drug-reimbursement rates aimed at combating the "damaging effects" of the industry's practices on small pharmacies.
Following three rate cuts this year to preempt a domestic slowdown fueled largely by President Donald Trump's trade war on China, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said, "Our economic outlook remains a favorable one, despite global developments and ongoing risks".
" In 2014, Cruz signed a letter to the FCC expressing serious concern over the agency's statement that it planned to exercise its power to preempt state laws prohibiting municipal networks—or as the letter called it, "taxpayer-funded broadband.
However, some investors believe that Chewy's valuation has increased and is now in excess of the current capacity available under those baskets, which could preempt such a move or limit how much of the business could be spun off, sources said.
"I don't want to say anything that would preempt or disqualify anybody, but I will say that gender and racial balance are important when building a cabinet — and that will be a consideration in choosing my running mate as well."
But he has also been cautious about over-playing the benefits of a Trump presidency, perhaps so as not to preempt whatever policies the president adopts and to avoid giving the impression that he expects something from the United States.
In the June 28 rulings that the business lobby is protesting, a three-judge 9th Circuit said the Federal Arbitration Act does not preempt California's public policy that corporations cannot require consumers to waive their right to seek a public injunction.
Unfortunately, the FCC has decided that it won't allow that to happen: as part of its proposal to repeal net neutrality, the commission is trying to use its authority to preempt any and all state and local net neutrality regulations.
Given that tomorrow's AWS announcement is a bit of an open secret, it's probably no surprise that Microsoft is trying to preempt Amazon's announcement tomorrow by focusing on Windows Server 2016's ability to enable these new hybrid cloud scenarios.
Decisions guided by efforts to contextualize information, foreground stakes, preempt harm, and accept consequences also help combat information disorder, a term Claire Wardle and Hossein Derakhshan use to describe the process by which misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation contaminate public discourse.
Today, a leading technology policy think tank, supported by Google, Amazon, and Facebook, proposed a "grand bargain" with lawmakers, arguing that any new federal data privacy bill should preempt state privacy laws and repeal the sector-specific federal ones entirely.
Their go-to move in recent years: pushing bills through state legislatures that "preempt"—essentially prohibit—city and county governments from passing minimum wage laws higher than the state levels—which in many states remain low due to political gridlock.
It's no shocker that the bill comes from two Democrats — states currently have different rules on reporting breaches, and Republican support for a proposal that would allow the federal government to preempt those state rules will likely be difficult to secure.
The ruling is a milestone in Dutch jurisprudence, and may preempt a debate scheduled for Thursday in parliament in which the government will discuss several ideas it is considering to protect Dutch companies from being taken over by foreign buyers.
But U.S. counterterrorism experts also see CVE as a key part of the toolkit necessary to preempt terrorist activity in the first place and to help handle the many cases of extremism that will fall below the legal threshold for investigation.
Alex Maddox, digital and capital markets director at Kensington Mortgages, said it had raised money late last year to preempt an anticipated funding squeeze caused by Brexit concerns, regulators' demands for higher capital levels and lenders refinancing the BoE's loans.
A group of unionized Southwest Airlines Co baggage handlers have urged a federal appeals court to rule that federal labor law did not preempt their claims that the airline violated a unique Illinois biometric law when it collected their fingerprints.
Last year, the FCC voted to preempt state laws blocking the geographic expansion of broadband internet service offered by cities in North Carolina and Tennessee on the grounds that it was required to take steps to promote competition for the service.
Recognizing that federal guidance was long overdue, the industry came together to work with lawmakers and more than 70 public health and business groups to advance national menu labeling guidelines to preempt the burdensome regulatory jumble and give consumers clarity.
What the bill would do: The legislation would put in place federal regulations and preempt individual states from creating their own laws around self-driving cars, a problem that could make it more difficult for vehicles to travel between states.
On Tuesday, just two days before her primary, Salazar tried to preempt an impending story from the Daily Caller, exposing her as one of a number of women to accuse Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's foreign media spokesman of sexual assault.
"Governors call on the FCC to reject a proposed rule that would disrupt the existing state-federal partnership and preempt states' authority to protect consumer interest by creating a third-party National Eligibility Verifier," the group said in a statement.
Meanwhile, Syrian Kurdish PYD guerrillas have expanded their territory in northern Syria by ousting Islamic State from towns and then occupying them, and the Turkish offensive appears to be an attempt to preempt the Kurds from doing the same in Jarablus.
But the "bargain" would also preempt state laws like California's new privacy act, and repeal every other existing piece of federal privacy legislation, including landmark laws like Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).
Without going into a lot of detail about what they do, Preempt CEO Ajit Sancheti said at a high level even large companies lack the security personnel they need to meet the number of threats a company faces on a daily basis.
So, it&aposs sort of just really belies the truth and accuracy of it, and then you saw the New York Times sort of preempt, put this out there in advance of the I.G. report, which is expected to be quite damning, right?
The militants have always kept tight control on communication to preempt hostile propaganda and prevent informants from passing on information to the Iraqi forces or the U.S.-led anti-IS military coalition that is carrying out most of the airstrikes on their positions.
The Trump Administration insists that it will prevent North Korea from deploying a nuclear-armed ICBM that could target the continental United States, or preempt an imminent launch of a missile against the United States or the territory of a U.S. ally.
"In an oversupplied jet fuel market, we should try to preempt any risks by being more stringent with new suppliers as this is about supplying airplanes," said the official, declining to be named because he's not authorized to talk to the media.
Second, these private groupings stood midway between mass society and the structures of state and national government, performing functions that the political sphere might otherwise seek to preempt—hence the names "intermediary associations" and "civil society" that contemporary social scientists have given them.
I FIGURED YOU'D BRING IT UP AND I JUST WANT TO PREEMPT IT. WAPNER: I KNOW, I UNDERSTAND, BUT I MEAN YOU CAN CERTAINLY UNDERSTAND THAT YOU REFERENCED IT RIGHT OFF THE BEGINNING PART OF OUR INTERVIEW ABOUT THIS CONFLICT OF INTEREST QUESTION.
Eshoo's legislation, which is expected to face fierce opposition from Republicans, comes one month after a federal court ruled that the Federal Communications Commission lacks the authority to preempt Comcast and AT&T-backed state laws that pose barriers to community broadband development.
Johnson, Nixon, and Clinton — the presidents who were either impeached or who, in Nixon's case, resigned to preempt a coming impeachment — all faced Congresses in which both chambers were controlled by their political enemies, and who therefore wanted them out of power.
Ironically, stressing local flexibility is the opposite of the argument that GOP governors and legislatures have made over the past decade as they have passed an escalating series of laws to preempt or overturn liberal municipal ordinances on an array of subjects.
Republicans must get on the offensive now and argue not only that hardworking taxpayers deserve a tax cut but also that tax cuts need only be deficit neutral, not revenue neutral, in order to preempt the inevitable attack from the Congressional Budget Office.
As such, industry isn't likely to enjoy Wyden's bill, which not only doesn't preempt state privacy law, it advocates the state by state creation of a "protection and advocacy" organization that can file additional civil suits against companies that violate privacy regulations.
Not only is the Commission lacking in its own statutory authority to preempt, but its effort to kick the States out of intrastate broadband regulation also overlooks the Communications Act's vision of dual federal-state authority and cooperation in this area specifically.
Court says FCC's 'unhinged' net neutrality repeal can't stop state laws The FCC's repeal of net neutrality rules has been significantly weakened by a federal appeals court, which ruled that the Commission could not preempt state laws like those pending in California.
"Defense Secretary Mark Esper also said on Tuesday that the US decision was made to preempt an Iranian attack on US targets within days, and Trump&aposs national security adviser, Robert O&aposBrien, said Soleimani was plotting "to attack American facilities and diplomats.
A federal appeals court has ruled that U.S. Department of State regulations setting minimum pay for au pairs who travel to the U.S. to provide childcare for families do not preempt a Massachusetts law that provides a host of protections to domestic workers.
Facebook also touted its self-regulation work to the agency, detailing the transparency features it is building that let users know who is funding ads as the company attempts to preempt federal regulation of political ads on digital platforms like its own.
While committee members continue to debate whether the national law should preempt state bills and if individuals should be allowed to sue companies they believe have violated their rights, there is one thing they agree on: federal privacy legislation is urgently needed.
With even Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) blasting Trump's move — although McConnell was careful to avoid criticizing Trump by name — the White House moved Monday to try to preempt the congressional backlash by imposing sanctions on Turkey on its own.
And considering the immediate impact his tweets have had on companies and their entire related sectors, the CEOs of some of the bigger drug companies might want to try to preempt this threat with a call or two to Trump Tower before it's too late.
The trouble is, the FTC can't preempt those behaviors with specific rules — it can only act after the fact if it finds "unfair or deceptive" behavior — and the agency has a much broader focus, meaning only the most egregious issues are likely to draw attention.
The new executive order is a bid to preempt the no-fewer-than-five serious congressional proposals now under consideration on Capitol Hill, which, if passed, could reduce Trump's decision-making authority on how to respond to a future attempt to swing an American election.
Saudi Arabia has long used generous social spending and subsidies on utilities as a way to effectively buy off dissent against its autocratic style of government, such as when it announced $100 billion in spending projects to preempt Arab Spring-inspired protests in 1990.
Earlier today, Facebook attempted to preempt negative reactions to the documentary by publishing a blog post and writing a lengthier, more detailed letter in the same vein to the Scotland-based production company Firecrest Films, which produced the documentary in partnership with Channel 4.
"In my statement last year dissenting from the commission's decision, I warned that the FCC lacked the power to preempt these Tennessee and North Carolina laws and that doing so would usurp fundamental aspects of state sovereignty," said Ajit Pai, the commission's senior Republican member.
Congress party President Rahul Gandhi, who has made land rights a key part of his campaign ahead of national elections due by May, on Saturday asked chief ministers of Congress-led states to file petitions against the court order "to preempt large scale evictions".
Part of the explanation then was that it was "sweeps" month (though Trump's speech will preempt new episodes of Black-ish, FBI, and Ellen's Game of Games), but it was also because the networks found the topic of Obama's speech to be too partisan.
The full thread — posted by Trump Jr. himself in two tweets in an effort to preempt a story by the New York Times' Jo Becker, Adam Goldman, and Matt Apuzzo — makes indisputably clear that Trump Jr. was trying to collude with the Russian government.
The added dividend from all of this technology is more data – data that can help Amtrak, commuter and freight railroads identify trends that can improve maintenance schedules, swap out track subject to excess wear, and preempt the failures of equipment that can compromise safety.
But not only were several issues, such as the legal abandonment of the Lifeline program, sent back to the FCC to be addressed, the entire Restoring Internet Freedom rule had its teeth pulled by the removal of the agency's ability to preempt state laws.
CARBON NEUTRAL In a bid to preempt criticism that its jetset guests are part of the problem, the WEF said this year's Davos would use offsets to be fully carbon neutral, line up more electric vehicles and offer local food and non-meat protein options.
The two nations are so far from rapprochement that barely a day passes without blistering condemnation of Japan in North Korea's state media, or a hasty scramble from Japan's leadership to preempt any action from Washington that might not be in its best interests.
The three judges wrote in individual opinions that they agreed on the broad strokes of the collective ruling, though Williams, appointed by President Ronald Reagan, broke with the other two on striking down the portion of the order that would preempt state net neutrality laws.
"A lot of people think that the President has the authority to use his own judgment to decide what presents an imminent strike and that he has the authority to use nuclear weapons to preempt that attack before it gets under way," Blair said.
She has made statements supporting "preempting state laws that unfairly protect incumbent businesses," a clear reference to the FCC decision last year to preempt state laws (laws that are often backed by telecom giants) that would block cities from building their own broadband networks.
Scott Wiener's SB 827 — a sweeping approach to solve California's housing crisis by having the state government preempt local zoning ordinances and allow for greater density near rapid transit stations and high-frequency bus stops — is one of the most important ideas in American politics today.
More hawkish rate setters worry that if the Fed does not act to preempt inflation, it could end up behind the curve and lose credibility, while the more dovish members believe the economic recovery is still fragile and want to see firm evidence of inflationary pressures.
This seems dead on arrival: But the "bargain" would also preempt state laws like California's new privacy act, and repeal every other existing piece of federal privacy legislation, including landmark laws like Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) and Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA).
Ars Technica went into detail on this ruling; the takeaway is that while it is possible that the FCC could preempt state law on information services in some cases, it's not clear at all that it has any authority whatsoever to do so with broadband services.
Gizmodo caught up with Nugent to chat about asteroids, what it's really like to have a day job that, for most of us, calls to mind Bruce Willis in a spacesuit drilling to Aerosmith hits, and what we need to do to preempt a major impact.
The announcement was made on Friday to preempt the publication this weekend of two blockbuster reports from The New York Times and The Guardian featuring claims from former Cambridge Analytica employee and whistleblower Christopher Wylie, who says the data formed the foundation of the firm's election toolset.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads The Andy Warhol Foundation filed a lawsuit earlier this month to preempt a lawsuit from photographer Lynn Goldsmith over her portrait photo of the late pop star Prince, which Andy Warhol turned into a series of 16 prints in 1984.
Amash tried to preempt criticism of his political calculations by accusing Republicans of being overly partisan, but his record as a "useful idiot" of the Democrats in Congress ever since Trump was elected makes it clear that he has already abandoned the Republicans in all but name.
In 2014, the FCC asserted the power to preempt state laws that pose barriers to municipal broadband, but earlier this month, the US Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit struck down the agency's authority to do so, in a stinging defeat for community broadband advocates.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A group of 22 state attorneys general and the District of Columbia late Monday asked a U.S. appeals court to reinstate the Obama administration's 2015 landmark net neutrality rules and reject the Trump administration's efforts to preempt states from imposing their own rules guaranteeing an open internet.
AND SO, YOU CAN, YOU KNOW, MAKE ALL THE PROCLAMATIONS IN THE WORLD ABOUT WHAT YOU ARE GOING TO DO BUT EVERY DAY SEEING IN MUNICH, WATCHING THE NEWS EVERY DAY, EVERY DAY THERE'S SOMETHING NEW AND IT'S IMPOSSIBLE TO TRY TO PREDICT, IT'S IMPOSSIBLE TO TRY TO PREEMPT.
The justices denied two industry groups' petition for review of a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that said federal labor law does not preempt Los Angeles' 2014 regulation requiring service providers at the city-run airport to enter into "labor peace agreements" with unions who request them.
Captain Marvel's cohorts believe in this Inhuman's power to save lives, while Stark is sounding like someone who took Minority Report extremely seriously — he thinks it's dangerous to put all your trust in someone who can effectively preempt the future, and he's already suffered a loss from it.
There will be some new information in this revised draft, however: the wording of its highly questionable definition of broadband as an information service could figure into its legal future, for instance, as would any indication of plans to preempt state regulations, which those states may not agree with.
Wittes has acknowledged being a good friend of fired FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyThere are poor ideas, bad ones and Facebook's Libra Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE.
The office of Prime Minister Bruno Tshibala appeared to preempt those discussions last week by saying cobalt, whose price has more than tripled in the past two years due to rising demand for electric vehicles, would be declared a strategic substance and that copper could be as well.
McConnell's desire to preempt any Obama nominee is motivated by the fear that, when confronted by a nominee, his GOP colleagues will confront a Catch-22 in which, regardless of what they say or do, the GOP's prospects for maintaining control of the Senate in 2017 will be worsened.
And while a lot of their prep is being spent on how to counter and preempt Republicans' "theatrics," Schiff has directed members and staffers to be "serious as f--k," as the aide described it, and advised them to treat the hearings as a somber moment in American history.
Absent comprehensive federal motor vehicle safety standards, which expressly preempt conflicting state standards, manufacturers would be forced to comply with myriad state and local regulations governing, for example, the design and performance of air bags, seat belts, tires, braking systems, and a multitude of other vehicle systems and components.
An agreement will not only avoid the levy of new taxes on US imports of cell phones, laptops and toys -- products largely engineered, designed and marketed in the US -- it will also preempt new Chinese retaliatory duties, including the re-imposition of tariffs on US autos and auto parts.
While imagining things that may not have happened, or did not happen exactly in the way the creator imagines it, is endemic to the process of creating historical fiction, this does not preempt historians' perfect right — even duty — to say where a given work strays from the historical record.
If ever her parents were to meet Pierce's parents, the first thing they would say would be: "Did Sparrow tell you how she got her name?" as if in one fell swoop they could explain the unusual moniker, preempt the thought that maybe they were hippies—"No, no," Mrs.
Best Rob Goldstone Trump Jr. also released a statement along with the emails — which he published moments before a New York Times story was posted about them — attempting to preempt the news: "To put this is context, this occurred before the current Russian fever was in vogue," Trump Jr. added.
Suggested explanations include allegations of quid pro quos for Trump family businesses, divisions between "nationalists" and "business" factions on his staff, his tendency to be persuaded by whomever he last talked to, a desire to preempt Democratic protectionists, and an instinct to do the opposite of whatever President Obama did.
While the Warren campaign declined to discuss its strategy to rebut such attacks, Warren's stump speech is crafted to preempt them by leaning more into her early biography growing up on "the ragged edge of the middle class" in Oklahoma rather than her years as Professor Warren living in Cambridge, Mass.
The announcement, made late Friday night, was designed to preempt reports published by The New York Times and The Guardian that would have exposed the fact that Cambridge Analytica had obtained information on 50 million Facebook users — and that Facebook had known about the improper availability of that user data for two years.
And it will not alter the growing sense among both Israelis and Palestinians that this latest wave of violence -- unplanned, unprofessional, largely carried out by young Palestinians from areas Israel has controlled since 1967 -- represents a new phase in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, one that is harder to preempt, control and contain.
"This legislation seeks to preempt traditional state authority to take the actions necessary for protecting state water resources, while doing away with existing federal laws that safeguard our nation's waters against harmful pollutant discharges from vessels," 10 state attorneys general, led by New York's Eric Schneiderman (D), wrote to senators last year.
ABC, CBS, NBC and PBS on Wednesday will preempt their regularly scheduled programming for live coverage of the House Intelligence Committee's open impeachment hearings of President TrumpDonald John TrumpGOP senators balk at lengthy impeachment trial Warren goes local in race to build 220006 movement 2202 Democrats make play for veterans' votes MORE.
Second, in return for this, Republicans would agree that any future Supreme Court nomination during President Trump's term would be considered under current cloture rules and would agree to a clean debt ceiling and avoiding any parliamentary abuses to preempt the cloture rules on highly divisive issues such as defunding Planned Parenthood.
This top-down political vision—long focused on capturing the presidency at the expense of long-term, movement-driven, majoritarian strategies at all levels of government—threatens to preempt hopes of restoring the public-good model of governance that was at the heart of postwar prosperity and foundational to the civil rights movement.
Y.), Don Bacon (Neb.), Fred UptonFrederick (Fred) Stephen UptonOvernight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus Democrats slam GOP on drug prices in bilingual digital ads Lawmakers discuss how to work together in midst of impeachment fight MORE (Mich.), and Andy BarrAndy Hale BarrOvernight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus Democrats slam GOP on drug prices in bilingual digital ads On the Trail: Forget the pundits, more electoral votes could be in play in 2020 MORE (Ky.).Reps.
Y.), Don Bacon (Neb.), Fred UptonFrederick (Fred) Stephen UptonOvernight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus Democrats slam GOP on drug prices in bilingual digital ads Lawmakers discuss how to work together in midst of impeachment fight MORE (Mich.), and Andy BarrAndy Hale BarrOvernight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus Democrats slam GOP on drug prices in bilingual digital ads On the Trail: Forget the pundits, more electoral votes could be in play in 2020 MORE (Ky.). Reps.
" Mueller's reasoning, in the words of the report: The Office of Legal Counsel has determined that a sitting president can't be indicted, but beyond that, "we recognized that a federal criminal accusation against a sitting President would place burdens on the President's capacity to govern and potentially preempt constitutional processes for addressing presidential misconduct.
GUILFOYLE: OK. So, yeah, I think this is interesting because I agree with Jesse in the first graph out of his body, which -- this was a prebuttal in terms of trying to get ahead of it, preempt the story that&aposs going to come out because of expectations as it relates to the I.G. report.
Last year, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), at the urging of the White House, voted along party lines to preempt portions of Tennessee and North Carolina laws designed to delineate the terms and conditions under which municipalities may construct and deploy broadband internet networks in order to offer advanced communications services to the general public.
The Western States Trucking Association (WSTA) filed a notice of appeal with the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday, after a federal judge in Sacramento last month said the Federal Aviation Administration Authorization Act (FAAAA) does not preempt the standard the California Supreme Court created last year in Dynamex Operations West v.
That's similar to what Trump's former attorney Michael CohenMichael Dean CohenDC bars to open early for impeachment mania Ex-Trump campaign official testifies Stone gave updates on WikiLeaks email dumps Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE, who's currently serving a three-year prison sentence, told Congress in February.
Community broadband advocates were dealt a bitter blow last month when a federal court ruled that the FCC lacked the authority to grant a request from Chattanooga, Tennessee and Wilson, North Carolina for the feds to preempt state laws that block those cities from expanding their locally-controlled networks to underserved communities in neighboring areas.
The video also touches on the very real feeling of doubting your style choices because of anxiety about other people's opinions: "I'll be at the door, almost ready to [leave the house] and I'll preempt those judgements — I'll go change into something that makes me feel more invisible and like I'll fit in," Tajima shared.
Most recently, a writer for The Atlantic who recently profiled Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos said last week he believes the forward-looking executive will spin off AWS to preempt the rising tide of antitrust rhetoric coming from Washington, DC, and especially from Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) amid her bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.
At its Thursday conference, the high court will discuss two industry groups' petition for review of a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that said federal labor law does not preempt Los Angeles' 2014 regulation requiring service providers at the city-run airport to enter into "labor peace agreements" with unions who request them.
By codifying a more complete definition of public charge into law, lawmakers can preempt the Trump administration's overreach  before it leaves draft form, and we're forced to amend the Statue of Liberty inscription to say, "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses..." so that they may be sent back from whence they came.
Wednesday afternoon, a US Appeals Court ruled that the Federal Communications Commission does not have the power to preempt state laws that restrict cities from building community-owned broadband networks, killing two planned network expansions in Tennessee and North Carolina and once again showing how much power big telecommunications companies have over the American political system.
And so any time there would be something bad looming, coming out in the press, the inspector general&aposs report, for example, that&aposs about to come out from the FBI, that&aposs the time you go into overdrive to get your story out ahead of time to preempt the bad stories that you know are coming.
One can only hope that Trump's instincts will prevail; because right now there's no trust, no channels of communication between Washington and Tehran, and every reason to believe that conflict is crowding out what little space exists for some form of diplomacy -- the only conceivable instrument to preempt the march of folly both sides seem intent on following.
Similarly, a prominent technology think tank, the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, has suggested a "grand bargain" of a new federal data law that would not only preempt state laws, but entirely repeal sector-specific federal privacy laws like the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), Children's Online Privacy Protection Rule (COPPA) and, of course, HIPAA.
Even if the industry succeeds in winning that case and the FCC's 2015 rules are thrown out, it's still unlikely that the courts will look kindly on the FCC's shaky attempt to preempt states from passing their own rules, former FCC lawyer Gigi Sohn, who helped craft the FCC's 2015 net neutrality rules, told The Verge.
But under the current atmospherics — (still) a nuclear North Korea, uncertain trajectory of inter-Korean relations, not to mention the occasional air and sea breaches by Chinese military jets and warships — the South Korean Defense Ministry's reform proposal appears precipitated, potentially leaving a gaping hole in Seoul's security and military readiness to preempt and respond to military incidents.
The White House named an infrastructure week in 2017, which was quickly overshadowed by the hearing for former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyThere are poor ideas, bad ones and Facebook's Libra Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE.
"In 2016 there was a lot of criticism that there wasn't enough coverage of 'lesser' candidates on the GOP side, and this is one way the media is trying to preempt that criticism for a very crowded Democratic field," said Leticia Bode, a political scientist at Georgetown University who studies the confluence of communication and political outcomes.
The dramatic move by Vale was an effort to preempt tough questions about its safety record, as the Friday disaster at the Corrego do Feijao mine - where the death toll has reach at least 84 people - came just over three years after a similar dam burst at the nearby Samarco mine it co-owns with BHP.
Amy KlobucharAmy Jean KlobucharPoll: Nearly 4 in 5 say they will consider candidates' stances on cybersecurity The Hill's Campaign Report: Battle for Senate begins to take shape Native American advocates question 2020 Democrats' commitment MORE (D-Minn.) voted to forward a bill in the Senate Agriculture Committee that could preempt our state's genetic engineering labeling law.
In an effort to preempt that destructive process, which was getting rhetorically uglier by the day, Dole — the former Senate majority leader and acknowledged expert on congressional procedure — drafted the elements of a tough but fair censure of the president in the form of a "joint resolution" to be approved by the House, the Senate and President Clinton himself.
The Teamsters' lawyers at Altshuler Berzon, in a filing in federal court in San Diego on Tuesday, said a 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals decision issued a day earlier that said the federal law governing working conditions for truck drivers did not preempt California wage law also applied to the state's new classification law, known as AB5.
However, the former House lawyers seek to preempt those arguments by saying Trump's actions in announcing his plans to proceed with the border wall are such an egregious rebuff of Congress's appropriations power under the Constitution that adjudicating the suit doesn't risk courts being drawn into every funding dispute between Congress and the White House or federal agencies.
He refused to do so: "Its preferred reading of the law  would transform the AWA from a limited gap-filing statute that ensures the smooth functioning of the judiciary itself into a mechanism for upending the separation of powers by delegating to the judiciary a legislative power bounded only by Congress's superior ability to prohibit or preempt," the judge wrote.
Both Xi and Kim Jong UnKim Jong UnChina is the United States's North Korea problem Pope appeals to world leaders to renounce nuclear weapons Trump must hang tough on North Korea MORE hastened to the negotiating table and to a series of high-profile summit meetings with Trump to preempt his taking even stronger measures in pursuance of his ambitious policy goals.
While Preempt isn't the first company to analyze credentials to ensure the person is who they say they are, Sancheti claims to have a way that is more reliable, requires less human involvement and won't shut down access to people who are legitimately trying to do their jobs in a way that's outside normal behavior — such as while traveling or working with a different project team.
In May 28503, former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyThere are poor ideas, bad ones and Facebook's Libra Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE's testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee was watched live by 22019 million people across all the major broadcast and cable news networks.
He was reportedly represented by Javelin literary agency, which also represents Former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyThere are poor ideas, bad ones and Facebook's Libra Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE and the anonymous administration official whose book "A Warning," that will be released this month.
Donald TrumpDonald John TrumpPossible GOP challenger says Trump doesn't doesn't deserve reelection, but would vote for him over Democrat O'Rourke: Trump driving global, U.S. economy into recession Manchin: Trump has 'golden opportunity' on gun reforms MORE on Wednesday morning sought to preempt an attack from Hillary ClintonHillary Diane Rodham ClintonLewandowski on potential NH Senate run: If I run, 'I'm going to win' Fighter pilot vs.
In February 220, Bianca Moebius-Clune, a career official directing soil health at the Natural Resources Conservation Service, the agency charged with overseeing conservation and other land management programs, sent an email to senior staff recommending that they consider clamping down on climate-related terms, according to a trove of internal emails revealed by The Guardian — an apparent attempt to preempt any political friction on the subject.
"This is not an industry that moves slowly, and by the time we're done writing the bill, we'll have a new set of challenges that didn't exist when we started," Rubio said But whether to give the FTC expansive rule-making authority is a raging debate: It would preempt the patchwork of privacy laws, and lawmakers from states like California with tough privacy regulations fear it could actually loosen their standards.
Rep. Fred UptonFrederick (Fred) Stephen UptonUpton cites Sanders's popularity in saying he will seek reelection Overnight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus Democrats slam GOP on drug prices in bilingual digital ads MORE (R-Mich.) announced he will seek reelection Monday, saying Sen.
While the repeal of net neutrality threatens democracy, by putting free expression at the discretion of a few large companies that can slow down or block what you see or read, the FCC order added a little-noticed but much more direct attack on our ability to make democratic choices about internet access: The agency invoked its power to preempt state laws to block states from setting their own rules about net neutrality.
He chose instead to preempt the process, parroting the talking points of the president in advance and trying to shape the narrative of "no collusion," despite the Mueller report making clear that the Russians tried to help the Trump campaign and close Trump associates were willing to accept that help, and then of "no obstruction," despite the repeated attempts by the president to fire the special counsel and continued public attacks on potential witnesses.
It's now believed the purpose was to preempt a National Enquirer story detailing his extramarital tryste with TV personality Lauren Sanchez, as well as text content of messages sent between the two (the photos were alluded to in the Enquirer's stories on the subject.)Bezos has since retained the services of Gavin de Becker to investigate the source of the leaked texts, as well as determine if any political motives may have played a part in their release.
Jerry MoranGerald (Jerry) MoranSenators inch forward on federal privacy bill Hillicon Valley: Dueling bills set stage for privacy debate | Google co-founders step down from parent company | Advocates rally for self-driving car bill | Elon Musk defamation trial begins | Lawsuit accuses TikTok of sharing data with China Advocates hopeful dueling privacy bills can bridge partisan divide MORE (R-Kan.) said he hopes any bill will "preempt a patchwork of state laws" — which Cantwell's bill does not.
But for the most part Wray is viewed as "a safe, mainstream pick," as The New York Times put it, and his nomination is "likely to allay the fears of F.B.I. agents who worried that Mr. Trump would try to weaken or politicize the F.B.I." The main wrinkle is that Trump's announcement is apparently intended to preempt Comey's eagerly anticipated testimony, which is expected to shed light on how Trump attempted to sway the FBI's investigation into former National Security Advisor Michael Flynn.
After being attacked for his lack of executive experience at Saturday night's GOP primary debate, Republican presidential hopeful Marco Rubio on Sunday touted his foreign policy acumen at a town hall in Bedford, N.H Rubio discussed his plan to curtail North Korea's nuclear ambitions in the wake of its long-range rocket launch on Saturday, saying the communist nation should be put on the state-sponsor terror list and advocated the creation of a missile defense system to preempt a nuclear attack.
Even though I know it's a shallow morality trope designed to fit flat narratives, and even though I know I can't please everybody, I still crave the approval, the absolution—because some insecure part of me wants to preempt any reader's claim that I should have done such and such (smashed his mouth, kicked his groin, bit his hand) instead of remaining very still and crying as quietly as I could—because, yes, I regret my stillness and my tears.
Ted LieuTed W. LieuCities are the future: We need to coordinate their international diplomacy George Conway opposes #unfollowTrump movement Puerto Rico resignations spur constitutional crisis MORE (D-Calif.) and Blake FarentholdRandolph (Blake) Blake FarentholdMembers spar over sexual harassment training deadline Female Dems see double standard in Klobuchar accusations Lawmaker seeks to ban ex-members from lobbying until sexual harassment settlements repaid MORE (R-Texas) on Wednesday introduced a bill, the so-called Encrypt Act, that would preempt state and local government from passing encryption-related laws.
French President Emmanuel MacronEmmanuel Jean-Michel MacronBiden hammers Trump over video of world leaders mocking him Trump returns to impeachment fight after NATO clash Overnight Defense: Trump cancels presser, cuts short NATO trip | Viral video catches leaders appearing to gossip about Trump | Dem witnesses say Trump committed impeachable offenses | Trump reportedly mulling more troops in Middle East MORE, clearly angered by Trump's complaints about NATO and threats to pull out, has decided to preempt that possibility essentially by forging a new geopolitical deal with Russia.
However, the president condemned former FBI Director James ComeyJames Brien ComeyThere are poor ideas, bad ones and Facebook's Libra Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE and former Attorney General Jeff SessionsJefferson (Jeff) Beauregard SessionsSanford: 'It carries real weight' to speak against Trump 'while in office' Medill dean 'deeply troubled by the vicious bullying and badgering' of student journalists Trump has considered firing official who reported whistleblower complaint to Congress: report MORE before he removed them for disloyalty.
In 2009, Thomas Schelling, an economist, national-security expert, and Cold War deterrence theorist, who had won a Nobel Prize for his game-theory analysis of conflict, issued a dire warning: A "world without nuclear weapons" would be a world in which the United States, Russia, Israel, China, and half a dozen or a dozen other countries would have hair-trigger mobilization plans to rebuild nuclear weapons and mobilize or commandeer delivery systems, and would have prepared targets to preempt other nations' nuclear facilities, all in a high-alert status, with practice drills and secure emergency communications.
MSNBC's Joe ScarboroughCharles (Joe) Joseph ScarboroughScarborough: Trump would arrest his media critics 'tomorrow' if he could Scarborough: 'Media silence is deafening' condemning Snoop Dogg attacks against Gayle King Overnight Health Care — Presented by Partnership for America's Health Care Future — Democrats seek to preempt Trump message on health care | E-cigarette executives set for grilling | Dems urge emergency funding for coronavirus MORE said "the media silence is deafening" regarding criticism of the rapper Snoop Dogg over his own comments about CBS News anchor Gayle KingGayle KingSnoop Dogg apologizes to Gayle King in Kobe Bryant flap: I was 'disrespectful' and 'overreacted' Rose McGowan hits Snoop Dogg for Gayle King comments: 'Death hurts.
Schiff himself cried foul last year when President TrumpDonald John TrumpTrump congratulates Washington Nationals on World Series win Trump hints that dog injured in al-Baghdadi raid will visit White House Vindman says White House lawyer moved Ukraine call to classified server: report MORE did the same thing to preempt and discredit the investigation by special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerGowdy: I '100 percent' still believe public congressional hearings are 'a circus' Comey: Mueller 'didn't succeed in his mission because there was inadequate transparency' Fox News legal analyst says Trump call with Ukraine leader could be 'more serious' than what Mueller 'dragged up' MORE.
In February, former Trump personal attorney and fixer Michael CohenMichael Dean CohenDC bars to open early for impeachment mania Ex-Trump campaign official testifies Stone gave updates on WikiLeaks email dumps Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE's testimony delivered 15.8 million viewers, while 13 million tuned in to see former special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerSpeier says impeachment inquiry shows 'very strong case of bribery' by Trump Gowdy: I '100 percent' still believe public congressional hearings are 'a circus' Comey: Mueller 'didn't succeed in his mission because there was inadequate transparency' MORE testify before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees.
Many places opened up early and offered up food and drink specials for former special counsel Robert MuellerRobert (Bob) Swan MuellerSpeier says impeachment inquiry shows 'very strong case of bribery' by Trump Gowdy: I '100 percent' still believe public congressional hearings are 'a circus' Comey: Mueller 'didn't succeed in his mission because there was inadequate transparency' MORE's testimony in July before the House Judiciary and Intelligence committees, and for former Trump lawyer Michael CohenMichael Dean CohenDC bars to open early for impeachment mania Ex-Trump campaign official testifies Stone gave updates on WikiLeaks email dumps Broadcast, cable news networks to preempt regular programming for Trump impeachment coverage MORE's February appearance in front of the House Oversight and Reform Committee.

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