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339 Sentences With "took pains"

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

Gebert took pains to emphasize that this isn't a bad thing.
However, he took pains to compensate companies affected by the cancellation.
They took pains to describe this as correlational and not causal.
What's interesting is that he took pains to make this point.
The two sides took pains on Thursday to show common ground.
The White House took pains to keep the news from leaking.
They took pains to keep from being photographed or digitally tracked.
The other defendants took pains to protect their boss, Mr. Stuart said.
Indeed, there is evidence that the playwright took pains to gather information.
And on Wednesday, the protesters took pains to keep their demonstrations orderly.
But Hassett took pains not to blame his boss for the gaffe.
At his press conference, Rosenstein took pains not to go beyond its contents.
Cohen, for his part, took pains to explain Roshi's transgressions without excusing them.
Last year, many companies took pains to explicitly separate themselves from an implicated executive.
Apple took pains to emphasize that the watch would not actually collect sonic data.
And he took pains to emphasize that the country was still safe for tourism.
And one that someone took pains to keep out of reach for the Bushes.
When we spoke, she took pains to emphasize that none of this is inevitable.
But he took pains to always praise Trump while he charted his contrary course.
You took pains on "The Tonight Show" to joke equally about both political parties.
But the leaders of Turedjam took pains to talk to me about anything but mining.
The administration took pains to emphasize that the sanctions were not meant to target China.
Even the Islamist candidate, Mr Mourou, took pains to distance himself from his own party.
Her testimony was bolstered by the fact that she took pains to avoid appearing political.
McMillion, who said he was a gun owner himself, took pains to avoid alienating customers.
But Musk and Mayor Emanuel also took pains to address the "doubters" in the room.
As Starr's investigation gained momentum, the White House took pains to limit their staffers' legal exposure.
She took pains to protect her intellectual property and often scorned attempts to commercialize her novel.
She took pains to stay healthy throughout her pregnancy, using spreadsheets to track what she ate.
A number of them also took pains to note that they had nothing against rap music.
Booker and his team took pains during the debate to show they were thriving without it.
As they rapidly accumulated wealth, the Bezos family took pains to preserve the trappings of normalcy.
In draft after draft, we took pains to let the investigation speak for itself, without bias.
Sophia's designer, Hanson Robotics, has said it took pains to establish the robot's lifelike feminine qualities.
But the oil driller took pains to note that it "currently has no plans to pursue bankruptcy."
The administration took pains to develop the second version of the order in a more normal way.
Hollande and Michel took pains to exchange mutual compliments to their security services and cross-border cooperation.
These stories took pains to justify the bloodlust of human characters by making dinosaurs grotesque and violent.
As usual when discussing these kind of radical new efficiencies, Walmart took pains to quiet such fears.
But the judge took pains to say that was not her reasoning for a period of probation.
Even when speaking before civil rights and women's rights groups, Obama took pains to avoid particularistic appeals.
But Cook took pains to explain that the dollar was to blame for Apple not making more dollars.
Franklin D. Roosevelt took pains to disguise his paralysis, which nonetheless became an inspiration to differently-abled people.
During the course of it, she alleged Trump took pains to avoid connecting her expenses back to him.
The Army Corps and pipeline developers said they took pains to avoid tribal heritage sites in North Dakota.
For different reasons, everyone, on all sides, took pains to avoid any suggestion that this was a coup.
But, when I interviewed him in the nineteen-eighties, he took pains to distance himself from nouvelle cuisine.
Mr. Van Gelder, as he took pains to explain to interviewers, was an engineer and not a producer.
At the same time, it took pains to stress that Mr. Ma would remain involved with the company.
On Friday, White House officials took pains to demonstrate that it was still possible to hold the meeting.
In fact, it reinforces a portrait of a government official who took pains to go by the book.
But Twain took pains, during a museum reception in July, to publicly thank her ex-husband in her remarks.
But he took pains to emphasise that longstanding plans to move to a single interest rate were on track.
Bach then reels off examples where Eichmann took pains to prevent any person from being spared or shown mercy.
Obama, "clinging" comment aside, took pains to speak about the ails of working-class whites with nuance and empathy.
Meanwhile, Pelosi stayed in regular contact with Lowey, but took pains not to put her thumb on the scale.
Its exponents took pains to show that mainstream hip-hop videos offered only a partial representation of black life.
We students at Mount Holyoke College in the early '60s took pains to play down economic and class distinctions.
Although Mr. Kurz took pains to deny it, governing the country with the far right had become increasingly difficult.
Many news organizations have come to resemble the fact-starved blogs they once took pains to remain separate from.
The Democratic Party took pains to divide the 20 eligible candidates so that there would be no undercard debate.
The games were rendered by Strutt, who took pains to create 39 hand-colored, engraved plates of these activities.
And it's obvious that writers took pains to imbue every friendship in the show with a healthy level of flirtation.
"Meeting Pukie" was not a prerequisite to joining CrossFit culture; Amundsen insists coaches took pains to help folks avoid it.
But Suotamo always took pains to emphasize whom he'd learned from, and how kind Mayhew had been as a mentor.
Sounds like legislative history, but Justice Alito took pains to explain in a footnote why, in his estimation, it wasn't.
Mr. Khadam took pains to emphasize that his refusal to obey the order did not amount to an armed rebellion.
The non-Latino director, Lee Unkrich, took pains to make sure the film was accurate in its representation of Mexico.
At first, Congress took pains to oversee its delegations through a system of strong committees in the House and Senate.
BOK Governor Lee Ju-yeol, however, took pains to underscore that the Fed wasn't the lone factor in its policy deliberations.
The photographer took pains to make sure every detail accurately reflected the show for couples who wanted to follow the theme.
The ad agency behind the campaign, Wieden+Kennedy New York, took pains to recreate the original scene as faithfully as possible.
In the press conference, Chairman Yellen took pains to say that "we have time to wait and see" about the budget.
But South Korean officials took pains to quell talk in social media of an impending security crisis or outbreak of war.
As a precaution, some campaign staffers took pains to have conversations with Cohen in the hallway or elsewhere in Trump Tower.
When Silvercrest Asset Management Group launched its internal educational offering, Silvercrest Academy, the firm took pains in selecting the inaugural course.
Draghi, along with ECB chief economist Peter Praet, took pains to temper market expectations for a speedy exit from bond buying.
And Judge Gorsuch took pains to position himself above politics, on the eve of formal, rigorous questioning from senators on Tuesday.
After asking Ford to stand and be sworn to tell the truth, he took pains to emphasize he wanted to accommodate her.
The president took pains to avoid praising or criticizing Castro in his statement and instead directed his remarks to the Cuban people.
" Rasmussen also took pains to call out political correctness on college campuses and suggested the whole thing was just a "huge misunderstanding.
At his news conference with Mr. Abe, Mr. Trump took pains to say he and Mr. Xi were developing their own rapport.
Defense Secretary Jim Mattis took pains to walk back President Trump's threat of an imminent strike against the Assad regime in Syria.
Even when it's grim, and something dark is happening, there's quite an overt beauty, and we took pains to make sure that happened.
The company took pains to emphasize it doesn't have the tools to make a determination on what the network's political motivations might be.
They took pains to say they don't believe Trump is the Messiah (which is one of those sentences I never thought I'd write).
A review in Time took pains to state that Mr Lamar is not merely excellent but also the Most Important Rapper in America.
The White House took pains to cast Walsh's departure as a jointly agreed-upon move meant to bolster Trump at a key moment.
Both sides took pains to describe the meeting as "constructive," cordial, and wide-ranging, covering key topics including cyber security and North Korea.
And both the company, prosecutors and the circuit court took pains to keep the identities of those involved in the case under wraps.
Justice Department officials and prosecutors in the Yahoo case took pains not to link the Yahoo hackers with the F.B.I.'s Russia investigation.
The two leaders took pains on Tuesday to reassert their working relationship in a phone call, but some chill is likely to last.
Speaking to reporters before an event in Indianapolis, Mr. Cruz deflected questions about Mr. Pence's plans, but took pains to praise him effusively.
Trying to allay suspicion about his motives, Dr. Marshall took pains to make clear that he accepted the basic findings of climate research.
The Democratic contenders, perhaps remembering the ugly moments from July's freewheeling debate, took pains to remind viewers that they agree on most issues.
" It was also instinctively obvious to Democrats playing defense, who took pains to point out that Podesta and the D.N.C. were actually "hacked.
The State Supreme Court took pains to say that the state Constitution was the "sole basis" for its ruling requiring a new map.
Last year Gottfried Leibbrandt, its chief executive, took pains to stress that it was the bank's security, and not SWIFT's, that had been compromised.
Variety also took pains to point out that "insufficient evidence" is not, in fact, the same thing as finding the allegations to be untrue.
All of them took pains to excuse their own sense of cynical retreading by pointing it out before critics—or even worse, audiences—could.
When making the album, the group took pains to stay in line with their musical heritage, while still carving out some space for innovation.
While the Pinellas case could still turn into a cluster, state officials took pains to say they do not have evidence of that yet.
Officials also took pains to say the government was committed to cutting overcapacity, especially in "old economy" heavy industries such as steel and coal.
Even the Marine Corp Band's spokesperson took pains to call Beyoncé a gifted singer whose musical ability had nothing to do with the performance.
Outside observers and sources linked to WeWork on Tuesday took pains to characterize WeWork's drama as a SoftBank problem, not a tech industry problem.
Self-conscious about modeling his Sherlock tales around Poe's Auguste Dupin stories, Conan Doyle took pains to express the debt from the very start.
In the newest version, introduced in 2017, engineers took pains to retain the ability to fold down the windshield, a challenge in a modern automobile.
Snowden took pains to separate himself from the campaign to pardon him, saying he doesn't think it's his place to push for such a thing.
Vosoughi said Electome also took pains to follow the political conversation in real time in order to make its issue categories as precise as possible.
Here in the Midwest, he took pains to be just another volunteer, traipsing along residential streets and speaking with Iowans who knew little about him.
In television appearances on Sunday, Trump appeared uncharacteristically modest and took pains to lower expectations that his path to the Republican nomination was now clear.
The representative from Ohio took pains Wednesday to make that clear during a congressional hearing examining the potential ramifications of Facebook's proposed Libra digital currency.
But the law did not restrict gun sales or ownership, and Democratic leaders at the time took pains not to promote legislation that did so.
Perhaps mindful of the debate's South Florida venue, several took pains to flaunt their Spanish-language skills, particularly when it came time to discuss immigration.
The reports grew so widespread that the police in Iraq, a country where sectarian divisions often lead to bloodshed, took pains to publicly deny them.
Not my president, not my dealIt&aposs clear the administration took pains to make sure this deal would not have to be signed into law.
Both Mr. Munoz, who was named "communicator of the year" by PR Week magazine last month, and Mr. Spicer took pains to personalize their apologies.
Beijing responded with predictable fury and threats, even as Trump took pains to downplay the bill and to flatter President Xi in his signing statement.
PARIS — When President Emmanuel Macron took office, he took pains to include two iPhones in his official portrait, a symbol of his penchant for technology.
Mr. Carell, who was 11 during the actual Battle of the Sexes, said he took pains to make sure Riggs didn't look like a clown.
He took pains to avoid disrupting his relationship with Kim, making clear he still sees it as a critical building block to reaching a deal.
At a media drive of the new Audi e-tron, the German marque's first long-range BEV, company officials took pains to outline their own efforts.
Russian agents took pains to disguise who they were, using stolen identities and virtual private networks when they interacted with both the platforms and their users.
When the White House officially unveiled its 2018 budget Tuesday, President Donald Trump's budget director took pains to insist that the blueprint represents campaign promises kept.
Just as Kelley and Haywood have done, Scott took pains during the interview to assure Lady A fans that this is a break – not a breakup.
The documents show that the Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca took pains to continue working with international pariahs, such as relatives of Syrian dictator Bashar Assad.
As part of the process, the company also took pains to ensure that the candidates got a breadth of experience, and it tracked their progress closely.
She took pains to note, for example, that Kavanaugh and his friend weren't laughing at her, as Patrick Leahy, the ranking Democrat on the committee, said.
As many as 100 Russian troops were believed to be at the airfield, though the Americans took pains not to target them, and none were hurt.
When I played Dragon Quest Builders, I took pains to restore every little ruined cottage or shack I came across, to build graveyards over bone pits.
Disney CEO Bob Iger took pains during the company's quarterly earnings call today to defend ESPN, whose fiscal future has been the focus of much skepticism lately.
No word on why he left, though the company took pains to say in a legal filing that Stone had not uncovered evidence of massive accounting fraud.
And while Fear took pains to establish its own unique characters in its first season, as time has marched forward, it's found few new places to go.
Tourism is a big driver of the French economy, and Ms. Azoulay, who became culture minister in February, took pains to emphasize that things were under control.
Netflix's comment on the decision took pains to note the company's strong support for "artistic freedom worldwide" while citing the "valid legal request" made by the Saudis.
Dimon took pains to note that even if a recession were to hit, it would look very different from the one that followed the 2008 financial crisis.
A former Goldman Sachs banker, he is a longtime associate of Gulati's, though he took pains during the campaign to emphasize the areas on which they disagreed.
Start with Sean Wilentz's "No Property in Man," which argues that the Constitution's framers took pains (however strangled or surreptitious they were) to ensure slavery's eventual demise.
More recently he recanted, saying that people took pains to explain to him that girls actually suffer harm from those interactions, and that his mind was changed.
Geo officials took pains not to publicly blame the military, and the military did not respond to requests for comment about whether it was punishing the network.
Mr. Versace of Neurala said the company took pains to ensure that the Chinese investor had no access to its source code or other important technological information.
Huebner took pains to keep her conversation "as far away from pitchy as possible," rarely talking about Kodable and keeping the focus relevant to the chat topic.
The judge took pains to say on the record that he personally knows both Campbell and Schmack and doesn't view the controversy over the case as politically motivated.
Kane, who continues to cover the story, took pains to note that he had no position on North Carolina's eventual punishment or its presence in this year's tournament.
But U.S. Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein took pains in Friday's press conference to stress that no Americans were being accused of wrongdoing in this round of indictments.
In its pitch to investors in recent weeks, Uber took pains to set itself apart from Lyft and to talk about how it was expanding beyond ride-hailing.
White House officials, who had initially urged Mr. Trump to cut the tour into two separate trips to Asia, took pains to ease the load for the president.
Writing for the three-judge panel, Judge Kim Wardlaw, obviously exasperated by the government's unyielding position, took pains to explain the limits of what the court was holding.
Our skipper was a devoted and experienced older brother, so he was well equipped with strategies to help calm our kids and took pains to make them comfortable.
House Democrats took pains to define each of these ahead of the impeachment vote, specifically defining high crimes and misdemeanors as including abuse of power, betrayal, and corruption.
Cohen's lawyer, former Clinton White House aide Lanny Davis, also took pains to underscore that his client had been acting not on his own, but at Trump's behest.
In 2003, as the Bush administration prepared for a conflict in Iraq, White House officials took pains to build support among allies and media commentators for an invasion.
During other parts of her news conference on Thursday, Pelosi took pains to push back on the idea that Democrats' move toward impeaching Trump is motivated by politics.
Cory Booker — who directly attacked Biden in earlier debates — even took pains to defend the former vice president, scolding the debate moderators for even bringing Biden's son up.
Don't Breathe, meanwhile, took pains to illustrate that the effects of capitalism have turned our metaphorical house into a nihilistic, greed-driven wasteland where hope only barely survives.
Reich also took pains to stress that Sanders could still win the nomination, and that his supporters should keep pushing for him until the final ballot is cast.
They also took pains to structure the new American government so that the people's representatives would make policy decisions based on the national interest, not their own financial interests.
Hundreds of the male alt-right members and trolls harassing Jones took pains to include Yiannopoulos in replies to many of their tweets — almost as a kind of salute.
He also took pains to point out he's not beholden to the NRA's financial support, even though the group spent $30 million to support him in the 2016 election.
Mr. de Blasio took pains to stress the newness of the plan, while at the same time disputing the notion that his administration had come late to the issue.
But the company took pains to say that Front Defense was made by an "independent internal startup" that just happened to be made of current HTC employees, not HTC itself.
And while Pretty Woman hints at the darker side of this arrangement, The Deuce actually took pains to show us the violent, strained flip side of Candy's so-called freedom.
The prime minister of Flanders, Geert Bourgeois, took pains to suggest Flemish and Belgium pride could co-exist: "That's our DNA and gives Flanders its own special form," he said.
Rick Scott of Florida, who took pains to separate himself from some Trump policies in a key swing state with a large Latino population, appeared to have narrowly defeated Sen.
Or were they too dazzled by the fact that "Americanah" was on the Book Review's list of the 10 Best Books of 2013, a point they took pains to make?
The Israeli prime minister said that Iran "vows to destroy my country every day," but took pains to stress that the threat he sees is not just to his country.
Wednesday's vote had been in the works long before the march on Saturday, but the European lawmakers took pains to include a specific criticism of that event in their resolution.
Colonel Cook said he was there to watch the entire company, but he largely appeared focused on Third Platoon — even as he took pains to not single out Lieutenant Hierl.
Ms. Hauck, working with the director Oliver Butler, also took pains to space the photos more tightly, as they found that fewer faces made each one stand out too individually.
Mr. Trump's staff also took pains to avoid the perception that he was swooping in for political gain, at a time when locals officials were focused on survival, not optics.
"They even took pains to recreate the same texture and color of the cement," said Margarita Jerabek, director of historic resources at ESA, a planning firm involved in the project.
Mr. Trump, who often watches his televised interviews with the sound off, took pains to look like a central casting version of a president on his first day in office.
Both took pains to separate acts of terrorism from Islamic teaching, in part because they argued that the United States needed the help of Muslim allies to hunt down terrorists.
The society hired an architect who took pains to design a mosque that would blend in with the neighborhood, where a fire station stands across the street from the site.
Organizers of the exhibition, which include the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum itself, took pains to explain that, yes, visitors would probably be charged to enter in at least some locations.
During his speech in Atlanta, Mr. Biden took pains to state explicitly that he was not repudiating his previous stance on abortion funding and would make "no apologies" for it.
The campaign presents its Nevada operation as a response to popular demand: There are 12 offices in Nevada, multiple staffers took pains to mention, more than any other presidential campaign.
The State Department, having allegedly blackballed them from much of the city's establishments, took pains to find alternative accommodations for Castro and company once the Theresa had extended them its courtesy.
He later won a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, where, bowing to the demands of repertory theaters of the period, he took pains to cultivate plummy London diction.
As part of a recent brand overhaul, Carl's Jr.'s ad agency took pains to ensure the paper that lined its trays provided a photogenic backdrop for customer meals, Haley said.
From the beginning of the Super Bowl commercial craze in the early 1980s onward, agencies took pains to keep their ads shrouded in secrecy throughout the run-up to the game.
Pelosi, already gearing up for the next fight, took pains not to gloat on Friday and declined to comment on the conventional wisdom that the President had underestimated her political skills.
Dimon took pains during the analyst call to note that even if a recession were to hit, it would look very different from the one that followed the 2008 financial crisis.
During the primaries, she took pains to tie herself closely to the Obama administration, a strategy she appears committed to in the general as well, given the president's solid approval rating.
It took pains to highlight cases in which such people came to the country through the diversity visa lottery or because they were related to an American citizen or legal resident.
The judge also took pains to note that he was sentencing Pell for the offenses on which the cardinal had been convicted — and not for the sins of the Catholic Church.
Fed officials took pains to clarify from the start that the Treasury bill purchases were simply a technical fix aimed at lifting the amount of bank reserves in the financial system.
At Facebook's F8 developer conference in San Jose, California, Tuesday, the company took pains to present itself as a privacy-friendly company that prioritizes its users' safety following a scandal-ridden year.
Prominent Washington journalists, meanwhile, took pains to defend Ms. Sanders — earning their own opprobrium from some liberals who asked why reporters were sticking up for an administration that routinely impugns their work.
"The government took pains to allege that the individual defendants, who were Goldman employees, were acting within the scope of their employment and for the purpose of benefiting the corporation," he said.
The study authors took pains to point out, as is always the case with these kinds of studies, that it wasn't clear whether smoking weed and drinking were necessarily causing lower GPAs.
Out at the roadside prayer, as explosions thudded along the positions at the edge of town, Mr. Medvedev, the pastor, took pains to speak of unity in a town with enough conflict.
Mr. Churkin took pains to say the current situation is unlike the Cold War in that Russian and American diplomats today speak regularly and manage to accomplish things they can agree upon.
In his conversation with Mr. Wallace, Mr. Putin took pains to diminish Mr. Trump's stature as a businessman to insist that he would not have been a target for manipulation by Russia.
The White House took pains to emphasize that the latest version was extensively vetted, with each of the affected countries subject to its own set of restrictions tailored to its security capabilities.
Cohen's testimony, which covered a broad range of subjects, ultimately broadened our national understanding of the President's level of antipathy toward black folk (a claim several GOP congressmen took pains to deny).
Trying to get back in control After the McGahn news detonated, Trump -- as he often does when apparently caught off guard -- took pains to create an impression that he was in control.
One of the principal designers of Central Park in New York, he took pains to replicate the gentle beauty he saw in European parks that blended trees and shrubs, streams and bridges.
It took a Ronan Farrow exposé in the New Yorker, detailing that Ito and the Media Lab knew there was a problem and took pains to try to keep Epstein's donations anonymous.
But Sheiman also said Relevent took pains not to appear to big-foot the American players, leagues and owners who have exerted considerable effort — and invested considerable sums — in backing professional women's soccer.
Clinton took pains to reach out to white blue-collar workers, many of whom have been left behind by economic globalization and technological change and have been attracted by Trump's anti-elite message.
Even Kamala Harris, the Californian senator who took pains to say that she is "not a democratic socialist", has nonetheless endorsed Medicare for all, the Green New Deal and a $15 minimum wage.
Though the administration took pains in the executive order to say the ban wasn't based on religion, a White House press release later said all six nations were "compromised by radical Islamic terrorism."
Even though the building was designed literally from the ground up with safety in mind, the architects and the school say they took pains to avoid creating an overly militarized, anxiety-inducing environment.
Mr. Macron took pains on a tour of the French Antilles last weekend to appear more down to earth, glad-handing the public and standing in the rain for selfies with smiling crowds.
His fellow Republicans took pains to keep him updated on the committee consideration and review of the bill and to make the case that a strong economy contributed to America's strong posture internationally.
As for Friedman himself, the great theoretician of vouchers, he took pains to insist that he abhorred racism and opposed race-based segregation laws — though he also opposed federal laws that prohibited discrimination.
He ensured his officers studied Islamic culture, which at that time few American soldiers did, used force selectively and sparingly, and took pains to understand and work with the grain of Afari ethnic politics.
But beneath the display of party unity, many Democrats in competitive districts took pains to explain their vote, while Republicans boasted that it would be a boon to their efforts to retake the House.
Musk took pains to show the Cybertruck as being unlike any other production passenger truck on the road, punctuated by a 100-cubic-foot cargo area and up to 14,000 pounds of towing capacity.
Musk took pains to show the Cybertruck as being unlike any other production passenger truck on the road, punctuated by a 100-cubic-foot cargo area, and up to 14,000 pounds of towing capacity.
Esper took pains to make clear that his decision to fire Spencer wasn't driven by the former Navy secretary's stance on Gallagher but was the result of Spencer's secret outreach to the White House.
Last year, Trump took down Florida Republican Adam Putnam with a tweet during the state's gubernatorial primary, putting his weight behind the eventual winner, Ron DeSantis, who took pains to get close to Trump.
And while the Pentagon took pains to downplay the apparent disconnect between the commander in chief and his top generals, on Capitol Hill, members of Congress did not hide their frustration with the White House.
Key issues include high debt levels and financial regulation, as officials took pains to reassure markets about the country's economy, affirm its commitment to economic and market reforms, while explaining some difficulties it was facing.
At the meeting of the Conservative Action Project, which does not get involved in races but includes representatives of heavyweight conservative groups that do, Bannon took pains to emphasize that he wasn't breaking with Trump.
Obama administration officials took pains to say that the new casualty did not occur on what the military was defining as the front line of battle, in keeping with Mr. Obama's insistence about ground troops.
Our nation revolted in opposition to the tyrannical rule of a king, and while the Framers understood the need for an energetic executive, they took pains to deny the new office of president unchecked power.
McMaster took pains to counter the narrative that the use of force by the US to solve the North Korea nuclear showdown is unthinkable, because of possibly horrendous reprisal attacks against Seoul by the North.
Breitbart took pains to suggest a seemingly damning contrast: the F.B.I.'s fumbling of a tip about the Parkland shooter and the agency's work investigating allegations of collusion between Russians and Mr. Trump's presidential campaign.
Which is why Netflix also took pains to tell investors that it thinks it's going to be just fine, even as Disney sends Baby Yoda their way, and Apple sends Reese Witherspoon and Jennifer Aniston.
Billy Carter, Jeb Bush, Roger Clinton and Tony Rodham are just a few of the family members of recent presidents who have generated unwanted headlines, even as White House officials took pains to prevent them.
Other officials who seemed much less likely to have authored the op-ed, or even to have known who did, also took pains to deny authorship, either in person or through their spokespeople on Thursday.
Under Obama, DHS leadership took pains to distinguish between unauthorized immigrants who should be prioritized for deportation — "felons" with criminal records or recent entrants — and members of "families" who'd lived in the US peacefully for years.
Similarly, central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan took pains to expand on its views in the face of international criticism that China needs to communicate better about its policies, particularly after its surprise currency devaluation last year.
But even after he threw some red meat to the White House, Barr took pains to make it clear that he wasn't trying to prejudge the outcome of his internal review of the surveillance in 2016.
According to Engadget, the company took pains to make sure its scooters wouldn't go down in flames:The company also offered up a credibility-straining claim that its Super Batteries won't explode, even when they've been punctured.
The two leaders share different views on trade, Russia and immigration, leading to some uncomfortable moments at a joint news conference on Friday in which they took pains to downplay differences that were hard to mask.
Unlike the CGI Peanuts Movie, which gave the character's dimension, but took pains to maintain the original look and tone of the Schulz strip, this new series has a more old-school pen and ink feel.
In the early 1920s, Banting and his colleague Charles Best thought they had finally identified the right enzyme, and in experiments took pains to make sure it did not come into contact with caustic digestive chemicals.
While commending the beauty and majesty of Wagner's compositions, Mr. Gutman also took pains to analyze his nonmusical activities — notably his profuse, turgid and virulently anti-Semitic writings, which would become a lodestar of Nazi ideology.
Self-aware enough to realize that some of what he was up to — especially his snuggling up to certain industry interests — might be viewed negatively by some, he took pains to keep his activities under wraps.
At the same time, they took pains to make clear that while it was the states' responsibility to run their own elections, the federal government should play a significant role in monitoring threats and providing resources.
But publicly, he took pains to stay on the same page as the president, insisting there was "no daylight" between South Korea and the United States on the goal of ridding North Korea of its arsenal.
The governor took pains to say that he respected the religious and moral arguments against abortion, but that he personally supported abortion rights and that his efforts to broker a compromise on the bill had failed.
The Kremlin spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, took pains on Thursday to emphasize that so far the sides had reached no agreement on a meeting that Russian news media outlets reported might occur in Vienna in July.
Neither the company nor the men, whose names have not been confirmed by the authorities, have made any statement since the arrests, and Dutch and Belgian authorities took pains to warn that the investigation was ongoing.
During the museum reception, Hill and McGraw thanked a long list of friends, colleagues and associates for their roles in their careers, but Hill, especially, took pains to speak about the couple's "greatest gift" – their three daughters.
Boeing, for example, took pains in the 1990s to make sure that the controls in its first software-based "fly-by-wire" system mimicked what pilots had used when the physical yokes and buttons controlled each flight.
Throughout our interview, McCrory took pains to contrast himself with the social conservatives in the Statehouse down the street and highlighted his opposition to other conservative legislation including a "religious freedom" bill that more closely resembled Indiana's.
The Clinton camp described her delegate lead as all but insurmountable — more than twice as large as Barack Obama's lead over her in 2008 — but also took pains to avoid appearing overly antagonistic toward Mr. Sanders. Mrs.
California's DMV took pains in its announcement to highlight that it wasn't trying to overstep the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which has the final say on developing and enforcing compliance with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards.
" Dr. Midgley took pains to distinguish between the important contributions of science and the philosophy of "scientism," in which "prophets," she wrote, decree that science is "not just omnicompetent but unchallenged, the sole form of rational thinking.
On Wednesday, when she addressed her fellow Germans, flanked by the health minister and the head of the public health institute, she took pains to say that the information she was sharing had come from the experts.
In an interview, he took pains to note that she had the backing of 30 of the 32 Democrats from her home state of California, while his home state of Maryland had only four Democrats all told.
The Lebanese government took pains to play down the cooperation between Hezbollah fighters and the Syrian Army on the Syrian side of the border, and of those two forces with its own army on the Lebanese side.
A fund manager noted there were signs in the deal structure that show the management took pains to take into consideration the Samsung merger, but he added it was not enough to convince him as an investor.
Still, Republicans took pains to emphasize that their opposition is not to voting rights on the whole, calling the package an attempt at forcing control over state and local elections into the hands of the federal government.
Russian officials took pains to emphasize they are not trying to undercut Mr. Trump, though Mr. Putin and his government often seem to relish opportunities to thwart the international aims of the United States and its allies.
As the New York Times reports, Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan took pains to issue what amounts to a warning to her colleagues nationwide in June: go ahead and chase tech money, but watch out for higher housing costs.
Thus, from the very start, both respondents took pains to establish their attachment as an example of the intelligence and courage that it takes to rescue the words "husband" and "wife" from their ever-increasing lack of prestige.
Iran also took pains not to cross a "red line" that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu literally drew – with a marker, on a printed graphic representing Iran's nuclear program – in a 2012 speech to the U.N. General Assembly.
Pella Kågerman and Hugo Lilja, who co-directed Aniara, took pains to make sure these Mima scenes offered a visceral earthly escape— for both the characters and the audience—from the sterile cruise-ship environment of the spacecraft.
Mr. Ziobro, in his statement on Tuesday, took pains to recite the serious crimes for which Mr. Polanski was convicted, including sex with the 13-year-old, who was under the influence of alcohol and methaqualone, a sedative.
But the Treasury took pains on Sunday to make clear that there had been no changes to U.S. policy towards China after a senior Treasury official said that the CED process had been canceled, a statement later retracted.
The company took pains to note that the $55 billion estimate factors in only already existing sources of share dilution, and that further shares will almost certainly be created, further reducing the maximum potential value of Musk's payout.
This mode of moral argumentation came through in the Rogan controversy when Sanders and Rogan's critics took pains to stress that accepting a Rogan endorsement was not merely unwise but immoral, and that these two judgments were distinct.
While aides took pains to describe what they called his calm reaction to the appointment last week of Robert S. Mueller III as a special counsel in the Russia investigation, in reality he expressed anger from the start.
Fazil Cengiz, who operated the studio from 1978 until it closed in 2008, always took pains to make it available to flamenco dancers, who sometimes had trouble booking space because their furious footwork was thought to destroy floors.
U.S. officials said they informed Russian forces ahead of the missile attacks and that they took pains to avoid hitting Russian troops at the base, saying there were no strikes on sections of the base where Russians were present.
The boisterous Trump and reserved May took pains to demonstrate a readiness to maintain the "special relationship" between the United States and Britain, something that is particularly important for May as she steers Britain out of the European Union.
While questioning investigator State Police Trooper Gerald F. Donovan during the hearing — which resulted in the charge being brought against Spacey — attorney Alan Jackson took pains to note that the accuser didn't immediately report the alleged assault to police.
The study was conducted from August 2017 to November 2018 on participants recruited at a U.S. children's hospital, and took pains to note that screen time implications for brain development on young kids still remain unknown despite found associations.
" He also took pains to point out that Apu doesn't speak in the aforementioned episode, calling the scene "a later addition" that he says he didn't see until "right around the same time that everyone else in America did.
Mr. McConnell took pains on Tuesday to note that both Republicans and Democrats were invited to the White House to discuss the coming nomination with Mr. Trump as part of the requirement for seeking the Senate's advice and consent.
At a 25-minute news conference, they both took pains to emphasize that they would cooperate, and that they understood what Mr. Macron called "the message of worry and anger" expressed in the extremist vote in France's presidential election.
Longshots John Delaney, Tulsi Gabbard and Pete Buttigieg each tried to display allegiance to some of the most unorthodox positions floating around the Democratic campaign -- but all three took pains to avoid going too far off the deep end.
In "Celebrating Italy" (1990), devoted to seasonal festival foods, and "Italy in Small Bites" (1993), about the between-meal snacks known as merende, she took pains to explain where each dish originated and its place in the local culture.
In his speech announcing the shutdown would end, Mr. Trump also took pains not to distance himself from the idea of a wall — reiterating his familiar arguments about the perils of illegal immigration and the value of borders secured his way.
But people in the room said Prime Minister Beata Szydlo took pains to be polite and cooperative after Thursday's sharp exchanges with the likes of French President Francois Hollande, who had effectively accused her of ingratitude for EU grants to Poland.
The mayor was careful to thank Mr. Cuomo again for offering state resources to combat the city's rise in homelessness and help build housing; Mr. Cuomo, in turn, took pains to praise Mr. de Blasio for his leadership on those issues.
"While the Wheeler FCC's advisory committees were far from perfect, we took pains to ensure balance between public interest groups and industry, Republicans and Democrats, those with a more regulatory orientation and those with a more deregulatory orientation," Sohn said.
The Roman Catholic Church took pains to deliberately hide the extent of its global sex abuse crisis, going as far as destroying documents and failing to compile records that could be used to prosecute perpetrators, a top cardinal admitted this week.
Unsurprisingly, the Nevada Republican party took pains last night to make sure everything looked like it was going just fine, even when chaos was unfolding at many of the caucus sites and anecdotes of the disorganization surfaced on social media.
One network, however, took pains to pre-emptively announce that it would not serve as Mr. Spicer's future employer: CNN, which has clashed repeatedly with the press secretary and the Trump administration, said on Friday that it would not hire him.
After speaking for a couple of hours, Mr. Cole wandered back upstairs and chatted with a friend who'd recently spoken to a friendly neighbor, who took pains to note that she was not the one who had called the authorities.
Despite Trump's claims, the documents released on Saturday revealed that the FBI took pains to make clear that its interest in wiretapping Page was rooted in what the agency viewed as probable cause that he was acting as a foreign agent.
Ueland said the White House wants witnesses to testify in person, on the Senate floor -- something senators involved in the 1999 trial of Clinton took pains to avoid out of concern for how it would make the institution look. Sen.
She has also spent time among the horse jumping and fashion circuits this season – and while Lamberto was photographed with her in Paris during the Paris Longines Jumping in July, "the couple took pains to avoid being spotted together," says one source.
Warren and Schatz both took pains in their plans to make sure they're targeting the most debt relief toward low-income students; Warren's plan invests specifically in minority institutions and puts a high priority on lowering the cost of college for minorities.
Mexican Attorney General Arely Gomez confirmed "a kind of summons had been issued for Del Castillo to testify," according to the AP, but took pains to make clear that the actress is considered a witness and has not been accused of any crime.
"Powell took pains to state that the FOMC's rate projections are based on their best assessments of the economic outlook," Kevin Logan, chief US economist for HSBC wrote in a Wednesday note to clients, referring to the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee.
Yet his sloppiness as a stylist and the hopelessly rushed quality of his structures—he took pains with his beginnings but raced to the end of his books, as though late for dinner—has damaged his reputation since, at least in English.
Measuring about 35 by 40 inches and painted in soothing blues and greens, it depicts father, mother, and infant in an interior that's decidedly Middle Eastern — a reference that counters Westernized depictions of Biblical subjects, and one that Tanner took pains to achieve.
When civil war broke out in South Sudan more than two years ago, the United Nations took pains to tell the world that its peacekeepers in the country had opened their compound gates and given refuge to tens of thousands of civilians.
The Republican-authored report also took pains to point out that special counsel Robert Mueller's charges against former Trump campaign chairman Paul Manafort don't involve any allegations of coordination with Russia during the election — even though Mueller's probe isn't done yet. Rep.
I remain open but skeptical of explanations that suggest politics are simply worse than in the eras where leaders — and I use the term loosely — took pains to preserve slavery and Jim Crow, excluded women, and used offensive stereotypes to justify imperial adventures.
She and Ms. Weiss also took pains to keep the neighbors happy, outlining the shape of the proposed additions with poles and tape during the planning phase, then adjusting the pitch of the roof to preserve the view from a nearby house.
"Conscious of the regulatory failures that had fueled the 2008 crisis, Congress took pains to ensure that the new agency would be independent enough to resist capture by powerful financial interests and fulfill its critical responsibilities to American consumers," the lawsuit stated.
In urging the United States to remain committed to the Paris climate deal, the diplomat, Federica Mogherini, the European Union's foreign policy chief, took pains to note that each country would be free to choose how to meet limits on its carbon emissions.
Showrunner Laeta Kalogridis took pains to separate the series from one of the book's more problematic scenes, but the plot still hinged on graphic violence against women, and its hero Takeshi Kovacs was still played by blond-haired, blue-eyed Joel Kinnaman.
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who took pains to welcome the freshmen and praise their victories, must also attend to the demands of more moderate lawmakers whose victories in Republican districts sealed the party's majority — and whose re-elections are necessary to keep it.
The film stars Sareum Srey Moch and Kimhak Mun, and Vanity Fair reports that Jolie said she took pains during the filming not to retraumatize the survivors, making sure there were therapists on-set and building a roadblock to explain to locals what was happening.
Both Obama's speech on Tuesday, and for that matter, the Republican response by South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, took pains to rebuke Trump, the real-estate mogul whose red-hot rhetoric has endeared him to some and dismayed others in the campaign for the Nov.
According to the author Daniel Okrent, who is researching a book about immigration and eugenics in the early 20th century, Goddard took pains to emphasize that a moron could look "normal" — an "extremely potent" concept, Mr. Okrent said, in feeding the era's rampant xenophobia.
Sixteen years later, in 2006, he successfully rebranded himself as a centrist pragmatist who took pains not to identify too closely with the so-called Pink Tide, the wave of leftist governments that swept Latin America from the early twenty-first century until about 2016.
Both Obama's speech on Tuesday and, for that matter, the Republican response by South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, took pains to rebuke Trump, the real estate billionaire whose red-hot rhetoric has endeared him to some and dismayed others in the campaign for the Nov.
A few weeks earlier, there was media speculation, fueled by a postelection tour of America by Zuckerberg and his wife, that he was laying the groundwork to run against Trump in 20153, and in this meeting he took pains to shoot down the rumors.
In raising the concerns, Senate GOP leaders took pains to do so very politely so as not to put their party's presumptive nominee on the defensive, according to sources familiar with the hour-long meeting that took place Thursday at the National Republican Senatorial Committee headquarters.
Self-awareness isn't always an optimal commercial strategy, however — look at Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, who returned earlier this year with an album that took pains in places to pay homage to hip-hop's black roots and current stars but was largely met with a commercial shrug.
Days later, the company took pains to show that it does care about the ethical use of AI. Smith announced that it had refused to sell its facial recognition software to a California law enforcement agency that wanted to install it in officers' cars and body cams.
Nunes added to the confusion during an interview with CNN later on Monday when he took pains to say he'd visited the White House grounds, but not the White House itself, and that he didn't believe Trump or top West Wing staffers even knew he was there.
Though it requires a kind of "lightweight" headset that only its employees, strategic partners, and "thousands" of other people who've signed NDAs with the company have so far seen, Abovitz took pains today to distinguish Magic Leap's technology from tech that outsiders have experienced to date.
Officials running President Obama's transition in late 2008 took pains to keep under wraps his plans to select Hillary Clinton for secretary of state, and they orchestrated a secret meeting at the firehouse at Reagan National Airport to discuss keeping Robert M. Gates as defense secretary.
"And that allegation deserves the attention of every American." transcript Although his comments suggested he was more troubled by Mr. Trump's actions than Mr. Barr, Mr. Mueller took pains to defend how the attorney general handled his report — a subject of previous disagreement between the two men.
Just as that film took pains to capture on film much that has historically been excluded from cinema (namely, what is historically considered women's work), Something Revealed presents a century's worth of the creative labor and accomplishments of women that might otherwise be hidden or forgotten.
The brief took pains to say that there was nothing unusual about the department's participation in the case, noting that it had previously filed friend-of-the-court briefs in cases in which Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Bill Clinton had claimed immunity in civil suits.
Trump twists a judge's words -- again Before she sentenced Manafort in a hearing in Washington on Wednesday, Judge Amy Berman Jackson took pains to try to ensure the substance of the case could not be willfully misinterpreted by anyone outside the courtroom -- perhaps even the President.
As more of the women began to identify themselves, and started demonstrating in front of the Japanese Embassy and at other locations in Seoul, they were initially treated as an embarrassment — casting light on a part of history that South Koreans took pains not to discuss.
We're exhuming these old comments not as a "gotcha!" moment, but simply as a reminder that this is a longstanding debate, one in which senior Facebook figures (some of whom took pains to emphasize that they were speaking for themselves, not the company) have articulated a pretty consistent position.
Legally, it's a little weird to cite the case against DAPA as evidence that DACA is unconstitutional; while the Fifth Circuit's decision in that case was pretty harsh on DACA, it also took pains to distinguish the two programs in a way that made DACA seem more defensible.
In a subsequent press tour of its Baltimore fulfillment center, ostensibly intended to parry against this latest volley of charges of extreme and robot-like working conditions, Scott Anderson, director of Amazon Robotics Fulfillment, took pains to highlight the human element still necessary at the company's capacious warehouses.
On the arena floor Monday night, a handful of delegates booed every time Clinton's name was mentioned, and real enthusiasm for her candidacy was hard to come by even as other speakers took pains to praise Clinton's record on issues like healthcare, the minimum wage, and abortion rights.
In the statement of more than 1,000 words, Ms. McGowan took pains to both explain why she had grown close to Ms. Argento as well as suggest that she had more recently distanced herself after allegations emerged that Ms. Argento sexually assaulted Mr. Bennett when he was 17.
The White House took pains to shroud the trip in secrecy, barring reporters traveling with him from divulging it until it had ended, but as the Marine One helicopter drew close to the demilitarized zone, dense fog prevented it from landing, sending a frustrated president back to Seoul.
At one point, Mr. Mason recited the text of the amendment onstage, and an introductory video took pains to showcase clashes between previous presidents and the press, demonstrating that the news media's adversarial relationship with the presidency — which Mr. Mason called "healthy" — did not start with Mr. Trump.
Mr. Trump took pains to acknowledge the death of Mr. Evers, calling him a martyr who had fought during World War II and then returned to Mississippi to fight for the "same rights and freedoms that he had defended in the war" by helping to register blacks to vote.
More broadly, Trump's racial controversies — and the justifiably outraged reactions of Democrats and other political opponents — are going to keep issues of race salient in a way they weren't under the Bush or even Obama administrations, both of which took pains to avoid blow-ups on issues of race.
While The Daily Show host opened his show with a quick reminder for his audience to "acknowledge how batshit crazy this all is," Noah's monologue also took pains to point out that Comey's testimony was neither as vague as Republicans might have wanted nor as damning as Democrats undoubtedly hoped.
J. Cole's album 2014 Forest Hills Drive (which was technically released in December 2014, but went Platinum in 2015) was hailed as a classic by many hip-hop fans, simply because J. Cole took pains to load the album with signifiers that tied it to beloved rap records of yore.
But despite his conservative credentials over decades in public office, Taylor emphasized Senate votes he had in common with Hillary Clinton while presenting herself as the candidate most in tune with Trump (never mind her past alliance with Kasich, whose early endorsement she took pains to distance herself from in recent months).
On the set in Miami this week, network officials took pains to play down expectations, reminding reporters that the debate was taking place in the nascent stages of the race and lacked the celebrity appeal of a candidate like Donald J. Trump, whose participation in the 2015 and 2016 forums sent ratings soaring.
Those tweets bore the brunt of SNL's focus in its December 3 cold open, with Alec Baldwin returning to play a perpetually distracted Trump retweeting randoms instead of listening to his security briefings — and the show took pains to mention over and over that all the tweets mentioned in the sketch were real.
I have some thoughts on the pardon," Andrew Case tweeted Tuesday afternoon, beginning a 15-part thread that described Snow's conservative judicial philosophy, how Snow "took pains to ensure that the trial was procedurally fair," and citing a news article which details how Arpaio "sent investigators after the judge's wife and constantly insults him publicly.
It had the flavor of a City Hall confessional: For 15 minutes, Mayor Bill de Blasio took pains in a nighttime phone interview to explain why the leader of the nation's largest city would embark on a seemingly hopeless war with The New York Post, one of the most recognizable tabloid newspapers in the world.
Israel's Ashkenazi chief rabbi took pains to avoid the word "synagogue" to describe the scene of the crime — because it is not Orthodox, but Conservative, one of the liberal branches of Judaism that, despite their numerous adherents in the United States, are rejected by the religious authorities who determine the Jewish state's definitions of Jewishness.
In a speech to the nation's Duma last week, he took pains to sound reluctant in backing a constitutional amendment to reset his term limits, introduced in the legislature by former cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova—the first woman to journey into space, a hero of the Soviet Union, and now a loyal member of Putin's party.
The broadcast took pains to mention this dozens of times over the course of the broadcast, including in a Toyota commercial moonlighting as a vessel for the brothers to make a state-centric playlist for fans making the trek to Asbury Park, NJ to see them play the VMAs via satellite from the Stone Pony.
The strategy of buying calls across the board has "produced an average profit of 14 percent" and was profitable in each of the 19 years studied, Goldman's team reported in an earlier note, although they took pains to add that the strategy doesn't necessarily adequately compensate investors for the risk they are taking on by buying oodles of options.
It doesn't matter that Clinton had two female chiefs of staff as governor, as he took pains to point out in the "Today" interview, if he fails to take full responsibility for how his mistreatment of Lewinsky left her open to what was essentially government-sanctioned bullying by Ken Starr and slut-shaming by the entire world.
On the same day that President Donald Trump signed an executive order that would make many, if not most, unauthorized immigrants living in the United States priorities for deportation, he took pains to reassure one group of unauthorized immigrants: unauthorized immigrants who've been protected from deportation by the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program created by President Obama.
In his statement rebutting the allegations, Mr. al-Shammari took pains to assert that he was not responsible for either the use or the purchase of the 40-millimeter tear gas canisters that have been shot directly at protesters as if they were bullets and in some cases lodged in their heads, causing a slow death.
Dressed all in black, with her face hidden behind Cutler & Gross sunglasses, she would take large sheets of paper out with her in the evening and draw in situ: first in hashish-scented jazz dives and the strip joints of Soho; later at the Blitz club, where London's New Romantics took pains to outdo one another in the wild extravagance of their dress.
Aware that Mr. Trump would be speaking to the largest television audience since his inaugural, his messaging team — led by his chief strategist, Stephen K. Bannon; his top policy adviser, Stephen Miller; and the speechwriter Vince Haley, with input from his counselor Kellyanne Conway, his spokeswoman Hope Hicks and a handful of others — took pains to soften his often incendiary language.
But some of his former colleagues, who would not speak on the record, and those who have followed his career said they wondered how he, a prosecutor who took pains to be apolitical, had become the legitimizing force behind Mr. Trump's decision to dismiss Mr. Comey days after the F.B.I. director had told Mr. Rosenstein that he wanted to put more resources into the Russia investigation.
" In Thursday's statement, Apple took pains to clarify what it had apparently been trying to convey last week: that rechargeable batteries become less effective as they age; that an aged battery under the duress of a heavy workload can cause a device to shut down unexpectedly; and that the company had released a software update about a year ago "that improves power management during peak workloads to avoid unexpected shutdowns.
Raynor, like many other persons of Brookhaven, has made a pet of turtles, especially those which had the initials of her ancestors carved on their shells, and when this particular turtle which had a large "B" on his back, came to her house four years ago, she knew he had been the pet of the Bartow family, her ancestors, who settled here two centuries ago, and she took pains to make him welcome.
They took pains to project themselves less as outlaw bullies than as a force for order — although a historically minded observer might say that they were part of an American tradition extending from 20203th-century slave patrols to cowboy vigilantes to 20th-century gun thugs used to break up strikes that has seen groups of (generally) white men being allowed to operate as extralegal security or paramilitary forces, with implicit or explicit acceptance from forces of power or the state.
Senator Merkley and other Democrats on the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works took pains to focus in on Mr. Wheeler's efforts to roll back environmental protections and undo Obama-era regulations designed to fight climate change as indicators that he is unsuitable to lead the E.P.A. President Trump formally nominated Mr. Wheeler last week to lead the agency but he has been on the job in an acting capacity since his predecessor, Scott Pruitt, resigned in July amid ethics scandals.

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