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smoke-filled room
[ smohk-fild, -fild ]
noun
- a place, as a hotel room, for conducting secret negotiations, effecting compromises, devising strategy, etc.
smoke-filled room
- A popular expression used to describe a place where the political wheeling and dealing of machine bosses ( see machine politics ) is conducted. The image originated during the Republican presidential nominating convention of 1920, in which Warren G. Harding emerged as a dark horse candidate.
Word History and Origins
Origin of smoke-filled room1
Example Sentences
“Even though these landlords are not getting together in the proverbial smoke-filled room and saying, ‘We all need to raise our rents by $100,’ they’re colluding by using the same software that aggregates their data,” he said.
We even have the cliched “smoke-filled room” where this used to happen.
When officers enter the cell, they can be seen wrestling Zumwalt to the floor in the smoke-filled room.
For decades during the 1900s the process was dominated by state and local party bosses, giving rise to the notion of the “smoke-filled room,” where top leaders were said to huddle secretly to determine their presidential candidate.
A rural Ohio newspaperman who had risen to U.S. senator, Harding was a reluctant compromise candidate during the 1920 Republican convention in Chicago, emerging from a proverbially smoke-filled room.
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