Premium Only Content

Elite cabal
Cabal meaning:
cabal
noun [ C ] disapproving
UK /kəˈbæl/ US /kəˈbɑːl/
a small group of people who plan secretly to take action, especially political action:
He was assassinated by a cabal of aides within his own regime.
Here, too, the issue had been one of 'publicness', with a supposedly voluntary charity having come under the effective control of a small cabal of surgeons.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Here was the scent of monopoly: the government had no trouble sniffing out a manufacturers' cabal to fix output and wages, and deprive workers of their pleasures.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
Parrott demonstrates that the crown was reliant on short-term credit provided by a cabal of well-connected financiers, the clients of the ministers they funded, and therefore unassailable.
From the Cambridge English Corpus
The system is not the distribution of public monies by a medical cabal in its interests, as has sometimes been suggested.
From the Hansard archive
It was not done in a secret cabal.
From the Hansard archive
I speak for myself, not as spokesman of a group, cabal, or little clique.
From the Hansard archive
I do not believe that we should provide for a situation where the mayor could be removed by a political cabal within the assembly.
From the Hansard archive
I prefer to refer to it as the product of a cabal.
From the Hansard archive
I am not speaking for any clique or cabal.
From the Hansard archive
No one can seriously believe that decisions taken by a cabal of about half a dozen machine politicians, behind closed doors, amount to democracy.
From the Hansard archive
People believe extraordinary things by way of dogmas and cabals on the "money supply ".
From the Hansard archive
When they spoke, this was not some trade union cabal saying what we should get.
From the Hansard archive
That would dispel the view that there is some hidden cabal with a quid pro quo, a two-way street of gossip and innuendo.
From the Hansard archive
Instead of the cabal choosing the people who were elected, the electorate would choose them.
From the Hansard archive
I find it patronizing in concept, undemocratic in its probable operation, and open to cabals, cliques, and cartels.
From the Hansard archive
These examples are from corpora and sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
-
2:54:21
Barry Cunningham
9 hours agoBREAKING NEWS: THE ATTACK ON ELON MUSK AND TESLA DEFINES THE DEMOCRAT PARTY!
71.4K50 -
35:39
pewculture
22 hours ago $4.66 earnedThe Pew Culture Podcast #15 - Rango
68.2K2 -
31:05
MYLUNCHBREAK CHANNEL PAGE
18 hours agoA.I. Chat GPT Destroys History
93.4K82 -
11:53
BlackDiamondGunsandGear
11 hours agoYou Are you doing it WRONG!
38.9K24 -
2:39:36
Mally_Mouse
9 hours agoSaturday Shenanigans: Spicy Hydrate!! - Let's Play: R.E.P.O.
47K5 -
3:01:58
Jewels Jones Live ®
3 days agoJUDICIAL LAWFARE | A Political Rendezvous - Ep. 115
105K60 -
58:31
Mike Rowe
19 days agoHonoring A Great Man, Secret Service Agent #9 Clint Hill | The Way I Heard It with Mike Rowe
97.5K122 -
12:13
Russell Brand
1 day agoThe Most Dishonest News Reporting You'll Ever See
152K297 -
39:13
Rethinking the Dollar
14 hours agoSilver's Flirting With a 12-Year High—Is This the Big Breakout? | Morning Check-In
91.1K20 -
15:38
Professor Nez
13 hours ago🚨LBJ Phone Call to Jackie Kennedy is the WEIRDEST THING I've EVER Heard! JFK Files Analysis
89.1K190