Sentence examples for would never ratify from inspiring English sources

Exact(5)

Mr. Inhofe, Republican of Oklahoma, said that Senate climate legislation was "dying on the vine" and that the Senate would never ratify a treaty that did not require strong emissions reductions from major developing countries.

Although neither organ works perfectly, they are a lot better than nothing, and their very existence defies the predictions of skeptics who said the E.U.'s member states would never ratify a system of institutionalized bailouts.

Indeed, this week, an expert group set up by the European Commission has reported that the EU as a whole should be able easily to beat its target of cutting emissions by 8% of their 1990 level by 2012.America also points out that European countries have not yet ratified the Kyoto Protocol and the American Senate would never ratify it anyway.

In 1997, by a vote of 95 0, the U.S. Senate passed a resolution that made clear that it would never ratify the Kyoto agreement, which the Clinton Administration would sign anyway the following year.

[A]n amendment to alter [the electoral college] would be virtually impossible to enact — both because the even more drastically malapportioned US Senate would very likely never pass it and because the smaller states, which benefit from the malapportionment, would never ratify it.

Similar(55)

The N.R.A. and other gun-rights advocates were further emboldened by lawmakers in Congress who warned President Obama that such a treaty would never be ratified.

Al Gore, then US vice-president, signed up to the protocol, but it was quickly apparent that it would never be ratified by the US Congress.

They have vowed that it would never be ratified by the Senate, even though language in the final draft specifies that nothing in the treaty could infringe on any nation's constitutional rights.

Monroe led the French government to believe that the Jay Treaty would never be ratified by the United States, that the administration of George Washington would be overthrown as a result of the obnoxious treaty, and that better things might be expected after the election in 1796 of a new president, perhaps Thomas Jefferson.

There is a good argument that, without the impeachment mechanism, the Constitution would never have been ratified.

U.S. Constitution: How would the United States be different if we had never ratified the Bill of Rights?

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