Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
None would partisanly discuss, in speech or writing, any legal matter that might one day come before the court.
There is blame enough for that, partisanly and institutionally, to go around.
Trying to pressure 'non-political' civil servants to partisanly support the President's re-election would become quickly publicized and undoubtedly backfire.
White was the negative image of Milk's identity politics, representing his constituents as partisanly as Milk represented the Castro district.
The claims in the Special Committee's report are as wrong-headed and partisanly motivated as the claims made in a House banking committee report, released last summer."
The electorate is very deeply and partisanly polarized, and there is a dissatisfaction with this type of politics, which yields very little but inaction on a whole series of relevant issues."
The session was one of the more bare-knuckled in the long series of partisanly divided Senate and House hearings that began this past summer into the fund-raising tactics of the Clinton re-election drive.
"Twinkle, twinkle, Kenneth Starr, now we see how brave you are," Mr. Pappas sang on the House floor last July, and Democrats soon were accusing him of partisanly trivializing grave events.
With "God Bless Spiro Agnew" posters sprouting partisanly across the land, Mr. Agnew did heavy duty in the 1970 off-year elections, attacking Democrats as "radic-libs" and even "ideological eunuchs" for encouraging protest against the war.
The recognition that Marvell can be seen responding idealistically to the new age, and partisanly aligning his poetry with Commonwealth and Protectorate aspirations is a consequence of admitting the enthusiasm many during the mid-seventeenth century felt for revolutionary events which would, they believed, bring a new order.
Sniping partisanly in the dying of apartheid's light, the old South African Parliament adjourned today forever in a session distinguished by the dearth of black faces - the last time that will happen - and by members' heated resort to democracy to salvage their careers in the nation's first free elections.