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to crackdown
noun
Abruptly stern measures or disciplinary action; increased enforcement
Exact(60)
Ms. Walter noted that her agency pushed for "additional authority" to crackdown on Wall Street.
The chancellor has announced plans to crackdown on multinational technology companies avoiding UK tax.
I would urge for more international policy changes to crackdown on this.
"Many governments were emboldened by this anti-democratic trend and took the opportunity to crackdown".
The Queen made reference to such substances as she announced the new Conservative Government's plan to crackdown on "legal highs".
"There is a difference between having a policy to crackdown and between having some mistakes committed by some officials.
That attack was widely condemned across Israel's political spectrum and the government vowed to crackdown on Israeli extremists.
The Obama administration's effort to crackdown on banks placing risky wagers with their own money has met Republican opposition.
"The boats were carrying out routine controls to crackdown on illegal activities such as tobacco smuggling or illegal fishing".
Those bombings were instigated by Riina who effectively declared war on the Italian state after began to crackdown on the mafia in the late 1980s.
One user on the microblog Sina Weibo wrote on July 8: "On the one hand the government spares no effort to crackdown on pornography.
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