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Some Related Sentences

Executive and authority
Executive authority is vested in both the Prime Minister and Cabinet who are collectively responsible to Parliament.
In 1953 the Republican's Old Guard presented Eisenhower with a dilemma by insisting he disavow the Yalta Agreements as beyond the constitutional authority of the Executive Branch ; however, the death of Joseph Stalin in March 1953 made the matter a practical moot point.
Executive authority on the Falkland Islands is vested in Queen Elizabeth II, who has been the head of state since her accession to the British throne on 6 February 1952.
Executive authority is vested in the Government ( i. e. cabinet, of which the King is not a member ).
They called for the IRA to withdraw from the authority of the Dáil and to entrust the IRA Executive with control over the army.
The London Transport Executive ( LTE ) was the transport authority from 1 January 1948 to 31 December 1962.
The Greater London Council was the transport authority from 1 January 1970 to 28 June 1984 and the executive agency was called the London Transport Executive.
Executive Order 10600, dated March 15, 1955, by President Dwight D. Eisenhower, revised approval authority.
The hierarchy of authority in Malaysia, in accordance to the Federal Constitution, has stipulated the three branches ( administrative components ) of the Malaysian government as consisting of the, Executive, Judiciary and Legislative branch.
The Executive has the power and authority to generate revenues through the collection of various taxes, levies, fines, summons, custom duties, and fees, to name some, from the general public.
Executive character and abilities, political skills, expert handling of power and authority, working for a cause, achieving recognition, exercising sound judgment, decisive and commanding.
The Fundamental Law was also amended, making it more democratic, electing the entire Executive Committee by the PNC, instead of just the Chairman, separating the post of the Speaker of the PNC from the Chairman of the Executive Committee and affirmed the authority of the Executive Committee over the army.
Executive authority resides in an assembly of the presidents of the provinces, the mayors of the comuni and the board of directors.
The separation of powers is a doctrine which provides a separate authority that makes it possible for the authorities to check each other's checks and balances ( see United States Executive Authority Act 1936 ).
Should there be a dispute between the Executive and Judiciary, the Executive has no authority to direct the Judiciary, or its individual members.
Executive authority is vested in the Queen, who is represented in the territory by the Governor of Saint Helena.
As a corollary to the fact that Congress, and only Congress, is vested with the legislative power, Congress ( in theory ) cannot delegate legislative authority to other branches of government ( e. g., the Executive Branch ), a rule known as the nondelegation doctrine.
" This pertains directly to the Heads of the Executive Departments as each of their offices are created and are specified by statutory law ( hence the presumption ) and thus gives them the authority to act for the President within their areas of responsibility without any specific delegation.
Executive authority within a Westminster System is essentially exercised by the Cabinet, along with more junior ministers, although the head of government usually has the dominant role within the ministry.
The University of California-appointed Chair has tie-breaking authority over most decisions of the Executive Committee.
Within the Board of Governors, authority resides in the Executive Committee to exercise all rights, powers, and authorities of LLNS, excepting only certain decisions that are reserved to the parent companies.

Executive and British
The classic example, considered by their American counterparts quite curious, was the maintenance of the internal comma in a British organisation of secret agents called the " Special Operations, Executive " — " S. O., E " — which is not found in histories written after about 1960.
The Irish Free State, whose consent to the Abdication Act was also required, neither gave it nor allowed the British legislation to take effect in the Free State's jurisdiction ; instead, the Irish parliament passed its own Act — the Executive Authority ( External Relations ) Act — the day after the Declaration of Abdication Act took force elsewhere, meaning Edward VIII, for one day, remained King of Ireland while George VI was king of all the other realms.
Originally a trading brand of the Railway Executive of the British Transport Commission, it became an independent statutory corporation in 1962: the British Railways Board.
It also established the office of the Governor-General of India along with an Executive Council in India, which consisted of high officials of the British Government.
* 1973 – British and Irish authorities sign the Sunningdale Agreement in an attempt to establish a power-sharing Northern Ireland Executive and a cross-border Council of Ireland.
* Walter Freud, Sigmund's grandson, chemical engineer, member of Royal Pioneer Corps and British Special Operations Executive
In June 1942, Heydrich was assassinated in Prague in an operation led by Jozef Gabčík and Jan Kubiš, members of Czechoslovakia's army-in-exile who had been trained by the British Special Operations Executive.
*** Governor of Hong Kong ( under British rule, now replaced by Chief Executive )
Leo Marks describes inventing such a system for the British Special Operations Executive during World War II, though he suspected at the time that it was already known in the highly compartmentalized world of cryptography, as for instance at Bletchley Park.
Prior to the formation of the OSS ( the American version of the British Secret Intelligence Service and Special Operations Executive ), American intelligence had been conducted on an ad-hoc basis by the various departments of the executive branch, including the State, Treasury, Navy, and War Departments.
Camp X, at Ajax, near Oshawa, Ontario, Canada, where an " assassination and elimination " training program was operated by the British Special Operations Executive.
* The 1986 book " Camp X " by David Stafford is the most accurate account of the activities and personnel of Camp X the secret agent training camp for sabotage and guerrilla warfare at Ajax near Oshawa Ontario, Canada, that was administered by the British Special Operations Executive.
During World War II it was extensively used by the British Special Operations Executive ( SOE ) for sabotage missions.
Trained by the British Special Operations Executive ( SOE ), the pair returned to the Protectorate by parachute, jumping from a Handley Page Halifax, on 28 December 1941.
* Special Operations Executive, a British World War II covert military organisation
It was Etienne's death that made Violette, having already joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service in 1941, decide to offer her services to the British Special Operations Executive ( SOE ).
Responsible government was never granted during British colonial rule, and the Governor remained the head of government until the transfer of sovereignty in 1997, when the rôle was replaced by the Chief Executive.
In 1959, an Interim Constitution provided for an Executive Council under British rule.
Near the end of the short election campaign, there appeared in the press the text of a letter purporting to have originated from Grigory Zinoviev, head of the Executive Committee of the Communist International ( Comintern ) and Arthur MacManus, the British representative to ECCI, and addressed to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Great Britain.
* Kenneth Cooper CB, Chief Executive from 1984 to 1991 of the British Library
During World War II, the double transposition cipher was used by Dutch Resistance groups, the French Maquis and the British Special Operations Executive ( SOE ), which was in charge of managing underground activities in Europe.

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