• This, the administration argues, makes the reform of the Social Security system all the more urgent.

    ECONOMIST: Holding the line? | The

  • The administration argues that the arms are necessary to enable Saudi Arabia to deter Iran from attacking it.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Facing our fears

  • The administration argues secrecy is needed to preserve the usefulness of those programs, and that State Secretes Privilege is a valuable tool.

    NPR: Invoking the State Secrets Privilege

  • The administration argues with no less conviction that the well-being of women depends on affordable access to contraception no matter where they work.

    ECONOMIST: Lexington

  • The administration argues, based on documents CNN obtained, that this would make the process of transitioning to federal control much easier than simply switching control to a new federal agency.

    CNN: Senate stalled on airline security measure

  • The administration argues that since civil unions and marriages are materially identical, those states--unlike those without civil unions, or with ones that are lesser than marriage--have surrendered the option of claiming a rational basis in protecting the public fisc.

    WSJ: Best of the Web Today: Maybe Scalia Was Wrong

  • The Obama administration argues the agreements are illegal if they're based solely on keeping the generic drug off the market.

    NPR: Court: Can Drug Companies Pay To Delay Generics?

  • The Bush administration argues the NSA program is exempt from that requirement.

    CNN: Spy court to get secret briefing -- about secrets

  • The Bush administration argues that no national solution will solve the problem of carbon emissions that a global agreement must be reached.

    NPR: Supreme Court Hears Global Warming Arguments

  • U.S. The Obama administration argues for "heightened scrutiny, " which the Supreme Court has never used and which is, like intermediate scrutiny, stricter than rational basis and more relaxed than strict scrutiny.

    WSJ: Best of the Web Today: Maybe Scalia Was Wrong

  • The Bush administration argues that Congress approved just such an alternative when it stripped the courts of the right to hear the detainees' habeas corpus challenges.

    NPR: Supreme Court Hears Guantanamo Arguments

  • Although the Bush Administration argues otherwise, several leading LOST member states (including Communist China) have contended that the accord actually prohibits one of the President's most important measures aimed at preventing the shipment of WMD: the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI).

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Protect US sovereignty: Sink the Law of the Sea

  • The Obama administration argues Congress is well within its rights to regulate an interstate industry that delivers a product virtually every American will use at some point in his or her life.

    FORBES: Obamacare Judges Must Answer The "Broccoli Question"

  • U.S. forces have little need of practical military help from NATO allies for any attack on Iraq, but the Bush administration argues that it would be nice to have NATO's moral support.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Bigger NATO waters down statement on Iraq

  • The most vocal advocates are based at the libertarian Cato Institute, whose chairman, William Niskanen, an economist who worked in the Reagan administration, argues that the constitution's checks and balances work much better when government is divided.

    ECONOMIST: Lexington

  • The Cuomo administration also argues any benefit sought by "Tonight" wouldn't cost the state more.

    WSJ: NY cuts cancer programs in state budget

  • The administration, he argues, has missed a chance to rein in India's growing arsenal (thought to consist of up to 50 assembled warheads now, but with plans for some 300-400 by early in the next decade).

    ECONOMIST: Diplomacy and proliferation

  • The government's unofficial policy has been implemented in the hopes of pleasing the Obama administration, which argues that by barring Jewish building, Israel will encourage the Fatah-controlled Palestinian Authority to moderate its policies and so engender an atmosphere conducive to a peaceful settlement of the Palestinian conflict with Israel.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Fatah's message

  • The administration, however, argues that progress on those issues is more likely if the United States has an active, open relationship with Beijing, and makes the case that rejecting the trade legislation could convince China to retreat from its dealings with the United States.

    CNN: White House steps up lobbying effort for China trade bill

  • As the Heritage Foundation's Walter Lohman argues, the administration needs to get beyond symbols and think about the substance of its Asia policy.

    FORBES: New Asia

  • Indeed, the results are positive enough that one leading pain expert in the US argues the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) should only license abuse resistant painkillers.

    FORBES: Is The Era Of OxyContin Abuse Over?

  • The Centre for American Progress's Matthew Yglesias argues that the administration has not actually changed its position.

    BBC: Obama may soften healthcare plan

  • She wanted to know about the proper balance between the private sector, government and NGOs, and she challenged her father on one critical point he makes in the book, where he argues that the Obama administration should have raised the government debt ceiling prior to the 2010 midterm elections.

    FORBES: Chelsea Clinton, on Stage

  • By funneling money and rhetoric at the global anti-censorship movement, he argues that the Obama administration has tainted local projects with suspicions of ties to the U.S. agenda, hypocritically focused its efforts on U.S. interests, and even endangered local bloggers.

    FORBES: Global Bloggers Tell Washington (And Google): Hands Off Our Internet Freedom Fight

  • John Bellinger, the former legal adviser to the State Department, argues that one of the Bush administration's biggest mistakes was neglecting to secure international support for its novel counterterrorism policies.

    WSJ: Terror on Trial | William Shawcross on Legal Proceedings Against Extremists

  • Brent Wisner of the Los Angeles firm Baum Hedlund Aristei Goldman, argues the Food and Drug Administration shouldn't have approved Zoloft because Pfizer didn't publish some clinical studies that found the drug about as effective as a placebo.

    WSJ: Pfizer disputes suit claiming Zoloft doesn't work

  • He argues that the Federal Aviation Administration does not oversee the maintenance of aircraft nearly as closely as it once did.

    WSJ: Book Review: Attention All Passengers

  • Victor Cha, a former Bush administration aide, argues that the DPRK tends to act less provocatively when it is engaging the U.S. However, that effect is likely to fade if no new American concessions are forthcoming.

    FORBES: Turn The Problem Of North Korea Over To Its Neighbors

  • Obama didn't bring on the country's financial crisis and he argues that his administration prevented it from turning into a full economic collapse.

    CNN: Anger, advertising dominate U.S. mid-terms

$firstVoiceSent
- 来自原声例句
小调查
请问您想要如何调整此模块?

感谢您的反馈,我们会尽快进行适当修改!
进来说说原因吧 确定
小调查
请问您想要如何调整此模块?

感谢您的反馈,我们会尽快进行适当修改!
进来说说原因吧 确定