Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(5)
Similar(60)
The pardon, they wrote "elevates Arpaio once again to the pantheon of those who see institutional racism as something that made America great".
While the bulk of that call concerned the sitting in the Middle East, Prime Minister Barak raised the Rich matter at the end and asked the president once again to consider the Rich pardon.
He told me he had been informed that the president had reviewed the submissions Mr. Quinn had sent in and was impressed with them, and once again considering the pardons.
But Mr. Clinton's flurry of last-minute pardons has set off a storm on Capitol Hill, with Republicans once again speaking of new rounds of investigations, particularly into the pardon of Mr. Rich, who has lived in exile in Switzerland for 17 years.
I think the real need for pardon belongs to all of us, and the world system that once again has told black people that their lives don't matter.
Former Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair, now the Parliamentary Secretary to the Justice Minister who oversaw the Liberals' legal cannabis law, once again threw cold water on the idea that pardons would be happening soon.
There is widespread fear that if a new government comes to power in approaching parliamentary elections, it will pardon Mr. Mollah, Mr. Azad and other Jamaat members still facing trial — allowing the collaborators of 1971 go free once again.
Once again, after all the dust settled, those who were convicted were released from prison and pardoned, and the government eventually acknowledged that its actions had been driven by an illegitimate combination of panic and political expediency.
And once again, we'll use the presidential holiday photo opp to issue a few pardons of our own.
Once again, the National Turkey Federation has given the president two turkeys, which the White House proceeded to give cheerful names to and then publicly "pardon" before retiring them to live out the rest of their short lives.
After much negotiation, once again involving the Earl of Pembroke, Edward and Lancaster finally agreed to the Treaty of Leake in August 1318, which pardoned Lancaster and his faction and established a new royal council, temporarily averting conflict.
More suggestions(1)
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com