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Answer for the clue "He attends Cabinet meetings ", 5 letters:
nixon

Alternative clues for the word nixon

Word definitions for nixon in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
surname, variant of Nickson , literally "son of (a man named) Nick, English familiar form of Nicholas .

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 1404 Housing Units (2000): 529 Land area (2000): 2.665773 sq. miles (6.904320 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.009383 sq. miles (0.024303 sq. km) Total area (2000): 2.675156 sq. miles (6.928623 sq. km) FIPS code: 54552 Located within: Pennsylvania ...

Usage examples of nixon.

Watergate affair, that of Archibald Cox, a special prosecutor later fired by Nixon, the corporations got off easy.

Nixon, at least, was blessed with a mixture of arrogance and stupidity that caused him to blow the boilers almost immediately after taking command.

Nixon aficionados, they all understood that it would not be available again for a hell of a long time and probably never.

Ford had been selected, by Nixon, to replace Spiro Agnew, convicted several months earlier of tax fraud and extortion.

In the November 1972 presidential election, Nixon and Agnew had won 60 percent of the popular vote and carried every state except Massachusetts, defeating an antiwar candidate, Senator George McGovern.

Nixon and his aides lied again and again as they tried to cover up their involvement.

Justice William Rehnquist, the fourth and most virulently conservative of the four Nixon appointees, has been either pressured or cajoled by the others to remove himself from the case because of his previous association with the Nixon administration.

Later in his life Woodrow Hammond would become an aquaintance of Richard Nixon who became the only Prime Minister of California to ever be expelled from office for misconduct by Imperial order.

My own relationship with Buchanan goes back to the New Hampshire primary in 1968 when Nixon was still on the dim fringes of his political comeback.

It was clear even then that Buchanan considered me stone crazy, and my dismissal of Nixon as a hopeless bum with no chance of winning anything seemed to amuse him more than anything else.

About eight months later, after one of the strangest and most brutal years in American history, Richard Nixon was President and Pat Buchanan was one of his top two speechwriters along with Ray Price, the house moderate.

Ron Ziegler refused to have me on the Nixon Press Plane and Buchanan intervened to get me past the White House Guard and into what turned out to be a dull and useless seat on the plane with the rest of the White House press corps.

Clair had argued the case in a special session of the Court, I talked to Pat Buchanan and was surprised to hear that Nixon and his wizards in the White House were confident that the verdict would be 5-3 in their favor.

A second attempt was made by the corraled burghers to break out on the night of February 26th, but it was easily repulsed by Nixon.

Like the black teenage burglars who are terrorizing chic Georgetown these days, Nixon conquered so easily that he soon lost any fear of being caught.