Example sentences of "' money on " in BNC.

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1 Labour and the Liberal Democrats believe that spending a lot more of taxpayers ' money on education ( Labour £600 million , the Liberal Democrats £4.6 billion ) and denying parents a say over their children 's education , will somehow improve things .
2 We save taxpayers ' money on benefits .
3 They are still trying to persuade you that Palatine really needs Anglo-Welsh , and they are evidently prepared to spend vast amounts of their shareholders ' money on national advertising to impress you .
4 ‘ And yet the banks already earn interest on customers ' money on current account , which they do not pass on . ’
5 LABOUR backbenchers yesterday called for two Cabinet ministers to explain how they allegedly spent £6,000 of taxpayers ' money on three urgent flights home from France , or repay the money .
6 We have spent thousands of citizens ' tax payers ' money on that case and the Eastern Board have spent more than us in defending it .
7 Macready had men posted on the sidewalks to protect his customers ' money on their way to the casino .
8 The only thing that stands between county hall being put to good use is the Labour-controlled Lambeth borough council , which is squandering charge payers ' money on increasingly desperate but unsuccessful attempts to prevent the sale of county hall and its productive use for hotel and residential accommodation .
9 They seem determined to spend their community charge payers ' money on the most irrelevant and frivolous projects rather than concentrating on the real problems that the hon. Gentleman described .
10 The idea of a parents charter is not new ; what is new is the brazenness with which the Government play fast and loose , spending taxpayers ' money on party political propaganda .
11 Mr Healy claimed that Down District Council was in danger of spending grant aid and ratepayers ' money on a high risk tourist venture and confusing it with economic development .
12 These are of course the history teacher 's daily stock in trade , often taken for granted but when we are publicly called upon to justify the spending of taxpayers ' money on our subject , the most obvious may well be one of the strongest arguments for the teaching of history to all young people to the age of 16 .
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