Examples of seniority in the following topics:
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- The elderly, or senior citizens, are vulnerable to civil rights abuses due to a propensity for sickness, disability, and poverty.
- The elderly, sometimes referred to as senior citizens in the United States, are a demographic group usually defined by being retired or over the retirement age (which is dependent on life expectancy changes).
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- The titular, non-partisan leaders of the Senate itself are the Vice President of the United States, who serves as President of the Senate, and the President pro tempore, the most senior member of the majority who theoretically presides in the absence of the Vice President.
- Unlike committee chairmanships, leadership positions are not traditionally conferred on the basis of seniority, but are elected in closed-door caucuses.
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- It is responsible for providing national security intelligence assessments, performed by non-military commissioned civilian intelligence agents, to senior U.S. policymakers.
- The White House National Security Council is the principal forum used by the President for considering national security and foreign policy matters with his senior national security advisers, and Cabinet officials.
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- The elderly, often referred to as senior citizens, are people who are generally over the age of 65 and have retired from their jobs.
- Within the United States, senior citizens are at the center of several social policy issues, most prominently Social Security and Medicare.
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- Details of the bill include closing the revolving door , prohibiting senators from gaining undue lobbying access by increasing the "cooling off" period before they can lobby Congress from one to two years, prohibiting cabinet secretaries and other senior executive personnel from lobbying the department or agency in which they worked for two years after they leave their position, and prohibiting senior Senate staff and officers from lobbying contacts with the entire Senate for one year, instead of just their former employing office.
- Prohibits senior House staff from lobbying their former office or committee for one year after they leave House employment.
- Requires senior staff to notify the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct within three days if they engage in negotiations or agreements for future employment or compensation.
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- The Cabinet of the United States is composed of the most senior appointed officers of the executive branch of the federal government.
- The Cabinet of the United States is composed of the most senior appointed officers of the executive branch of the federal government of the United States, who are generally the heads of the federal executive departments.
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- One example are advocacy around the Farmers' Market Nutrition Program/Senior Farmers' Market Nutrition Program .
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- (For more information on these views see the article "Political Views of Lyndon LaRouche," as well as the main article titled "Lyndon LaRouche. " An overview of LaRouche's organizations is in "LaRouche movement. ") The highest group within the NCLC is the "National Executive Committee" (NEC), described as the "inner leadership circle" or "an elite circle of insiders" that "oversees policy. " The next most senior group is the "National Committee" (NC), which is reportedly "one step beneath the NEC. "
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- For example, senior citizens often make their demands onto the policy agenda because of their large numbers and inclination to vote.
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- These secretaries, or Cabinet members, are the most senior appointed officials in the executive branch of the United States government.