|
Перевод: cabinet
[прилагательное] правительственный; министерский; [существительное] горка ; застекленный шкафчик; шкафчик ; шкаф ; корпус ; кабинет ; кабинетный ; кабинет министров; правительство [существительное]
Тезаурус:
- The method adopted by Ministers for discussing policy questions is however essentially a domestic matter; and a decision by a Cabinet Committee, unless referred to the Cabinet, engages the collective responsibility of all Ministers and has exactly the same authority as a decision by the Cabinet itself.
- The Cabinet will meet again on April 30 after the Easter break to be given more details of the contents of the Queen's Speech.
- Mr Mellor told BBC Radio Four's World This Weekend there was a clear feeling that the arts, an "important and enduring part of society", needed Cabinet representation.
- Speaking almost simultaneously on Tyne-Tees Television's Face the Press , Mrs Thatcher showed an acute awareness of criticisms of her Cabinet style and used it as an explanation for not confronting Heseltine earlier in the Westland debate:
- In the Cabinet, Callaghan's open methods and refusal to countenance conspiracies made for a more harmonious atmosphere than ever prevailed under Harold Wilson (now Lord Wilson of Rievaulx).
- Heath's lack of imagination in this field," Healey observes, "was to have consequences for some of his cabinet ministers later on."
- Establish a Cabinet committee on health promotion.
- The Prime Minister then shifted the Westland issue to a formal meeting of EA, the Cabinet's Economic Strategy Committee, on Monday 9 December.
- Here, against the walls, are fine examples of cabinet work of the 1670s.
- The Cabinet did behave as a Cabinet and although I said earlier about the Treasury being forced to disgorge information when the DEA existed, that wasn't the case to the same extent in 1976.
- And, since the King had played some part in securing the formation of the National Government in August, the election would, in a sense, validate the King's action as well, "Of course you are going to vote," the King said to Sir Maurice Hankey, the Cabinet Secretary, on 2 October, before the Cabinet had alighted upon the doctor's mandate formula which made the election possible.
- She reached into a cabinet and turned the radio off.
- The Prime Minister told the Head of the Civil Service (who was still nominally in charge of the Cabinet Office, too, to avoid a conflict of status between Brook and General Sir Hastings Ismay, who had been Military Secretary to the Cabinet throughout the war and did not leave Whitehall till 1947) what he wanted as the ingredients of reform:
|
|
|