• The airline is at loggerheads with the powerful transport workers' union in two separate disputes.

    ECONOMIST: British Airways

  • He is at loggerheads with Barack Obama over how to proceed with a peace process.

    ECONOMIST: Israel and diplomacy

  • What makes it interesting though is that the two ideas are at loggerheads with each other.

    FORBES: Fuel Poverty and Climate Change Legislation

  • KADIMA'S INTERESTS as a political party place it at loggerheads with the government on almost every issue.

    CENTERFORSECURITYPOLICY: Whither American Jewry?

  • We are not at loggerheads with anybody, but we are confused.

    BBC: Northampton

  • Banks also remain at loggerheads with the government and Bank of England over the cause of the long-running decline in lending to small and medium size businesses.

    BBC: No deal yet on bonuses or bank lending

  • As Afghanistan analyst Ann Marlowe tells us, most of the Taliban come from the Ghilzai tribe, which has historically been at loggerheads with the Pashtun Durrani tribe.

    WSJ: A General for Afghanistan

  • The apparent U-turn puts the association at loggerheads with Stormont.

    BBC: Raymond Kennedy

  • The following month, in April 1988, the media found itself at loggerheads with the British government over the killing of the three IRA members by the SAS in Gibraltar.

    BBC: Northern Ireland

  • Washington is at loggerheads with the EU and much of the rest of the world about how best to save the planet from the potentially devastating effects of global warming.

    BBC: US blind eye on climate change

  • Baron has been at loggerheads with England's professional clubs over the amount of time players spend on international duty, the proliferation of Test matches and relegation from the Zurich Premiership.

    BBC: Francis Baron, chief executive of the RFU

  • "Our job isn't to stand at loggerheads with each other and think compromise is a bad word, " she said earlier this year as the council prepared to override a Bloomberg veto.

    WSJ: NY mayoral hopeful would be a first, in 2 ways

  • Such clans were often at loggerheads with the authorities.

    ECONOMIST: Crime without punishment

  • In a ruling that set Mr Bush at loggerheads with his home state, the president had ordered Texas to comply with an ICJ ruling made in 2004 that all the convicted men should get new hearings.

    BBC: Court seeks to stay US executions

  • Joseph Bruno, the state Senate majority leader, who has been at loggerheads with Mr Spitzer since the summer (Mr Spitzer's office accused Mr Bruno of abusing his aircraft privileges), says the policy change is unconstitutional and contradicts a federal act which requires, among other things, a valid Social Security number to get a driver's licence.

    ECONOMIST: Immigration

  • Despite successes in some communities which had identified their own priorities and acted on them, in other places partnerships were "at loggerheads" with local councils, it said.

    BBC: Local Government Minister Carl Sargeant

  • Just a couple days earlier the two parties seemed to be at loggerheads, trading concessions and allegations, but with no indication of heading off a final proxy showdown.

    FORBES: John Hess Saves Face In Last-Minute Truce With Elliott Management

  • The two managers were at loggerheads on the touchline during the game, with the Arsenal boss complaining to the fourth official that Hughes had left his technical area.

    BBC: Mark Hughes disappointed by Arsene Wenger's behaviour

  • Despite the expansion of the federal government since the 1930s, American states have remained a vibrant force, and regained considerable clout in recent years with a Republican-controlled Congress and a Democratic president at loggerheads in Washington.

    ECONOMIST: The Supreme Court

  • The court and the Security Council are at loggerheads over who could trigger an investigation: the council, supposedly the body with prime responsibility for international peace and security and where America, Russia and China all have vetoes, or the prosecutor and judges of the ICC.

    ECONOMIST: The worst crimes, the law and the UN Security Council

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