Examples of consultant in the following topics:
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- Advice and consent is a power of the Senate to be consulted on and approve treaties signed by the president.
- In the United States, advice and consent is a power of the United States Senate to be consulted on and approve treaties signed and appointments made by the President of the United States to public positions, including Cabinet secretaries, federal judges, and ambassadors .
- This power is also held by several state Senates, which are consulted on and approve various appointments made by the state's chief executive, such as some statewide officials, state departmental heads in the Governor's cabinet, and state judges (in some states).
- The notion that pre-nomination advice is optional has developed into the unification of the advice portion of the power with the "consent" portion, although several presidents have consulted informally with senators over nominations and treaties.
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- In the United States larger campaigns hire consultants to serve as strategists.
- Modern campaign managers may be concerned with executing strategy rather than setting it, particularly if the senior strategists are typically outside political consultants such as primarily pollsters and media consultants.
- Campaigns are a multi-billion dollar industry, dominated by professional political consultants using sophisticated campaign management tools.
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- Founded by George Gallup , Gallup, Inc. is primarily a research-based, performance-management consulting company.
- Gallup currently has four divisions: Gallup Poll, Gallup Consulting, Gallup University, and Gallup Press.
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- The People in Aid initiative, for example, links seven areas that would improve the operations of aid organizations - health, safety and security learning; training and development; recruitment and selection; consultation and communication; support management and leadership; staff policies and practices; and human resources strategy.
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- The necessary and proper clause of the Constitution also allows Congress to enact laws that mandate oversight by its committees, grant relevant authority to itself and its support agencies, and impose specific obligations on the executive to report to or consult with Congress, and even seek its approval for specific actions.
- Besides these general powers, numerous statutes direct the executive to furnish information to or consult with Congress.
- For example, the Government Performance and Results Act of 1993, requires agencies to consult with Congress on their strategic plans and report annually on performance plans, goals, and results.
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- The upper-middle class consists mostly of white-collar professionals, most of whom are highly educated, salaried professionals whose work is largely self-directed and typically involves conceptualizing, creating, consulting, and supervising.
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- For example, oil executives were invited to consult on issues such as the U.S. position on the Kyoto Protocol and the involvement in Iraq.
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- The political analyst and consultant Gary Wasserman attests that media institutions' "most important political function" is to play the role of an "agenda setter," where they "[put] together an agenda of national priorities - what should be taken seriously, what lightly, what not at all. "
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- Congress—as long as it is consulted—is less inclined to challenge presidential initiatives in foreign policy than in domestic policy.
- It was established to limit presidential war powers, but it gave presidents the right to commit troops for sixty days with only the conditions being to consult with and report to Congress—conditions presidents often feel free to ignore.
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- Interest groups that attempt to influence policy by changing public opinion may be led by political strategists, who are often consultants familiar with public relations, advertising, and the political process.