cosponsor
a joint sponsor, as of a legislative bill.
to act as cosponsor for.
Origin of cosponsor
1Other words from cosponsor
- co·spon·sor·ship, noun
Words Nearby cosponsor
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use cosponsor in a sentence
When she signed on as a cosponsor to the bill in 2019, we assumed whatever language concerns she had previously had been resolved.
State groups seen as key to winning over undecided senators on Equality Act | Chris Johnson | March 3, 2021 | Washington BladeGovTrack reported that 50 of her 79 bills and resolutions in 2019 had cosponsors from across the aisle.
How family ties and a history of bipartisanship inform Sen. Amy Klobuchar’s crusade to deplatform big tech | Kate Kaye | March 2, 2021 | DigidaySeveral federal bills had languished in committee over the last two years, despite many bipartisan cosponsors.
Pregnant in the pandemic? It helps to have good Wi-Fi. | Cat Ferguson | December 14, 2020 | MIT Technology ReviewCollins is also a cosponsor of a bill to give same-sex couples equal access to immigrant visas.
‘We’re in Trouble’ If Immigration Bill Doesn’t Rack Up 70 Votes | Patricia Murphy | June 13, 2013 | THE DAILY BEASTShe got nine Republicans to cosponsor the bill with her Democrat self.
Massachusetts Sen. Scott Brown is in an especially difficult position as a cosponsor of Blunt.
He speculated that the group came about from “Newt going around the floor, looking for a cosponsor.”
Back to the Future: A Democrat Recalls Newt Gingrich’s Moon Plan | Ben Jacobs | January 29, 2012 | THE DAILY BEAST
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