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stalking horse
[ staw-king hawrs ]
noun
- a horse, or a figure of a horse, behind which a hunter hides in stalking game.
- anything put forward to mask plans or efforts; pretext.
- a political candidate used to conceal the candidacy of a more important figure or to draw votes from and cause the defeat of a rival.
stalking-horse
noun
- a horse or an imitation one used by a hunter to hide behind while stalking his quarry
- something serving as a means of concealing plans; pretext
- a candidate put forward by one group to divide the opposition or mask the candidacy of another person for whom the stalking-horse would then withdraw
Word History and Origins
Origin of stalking horse1
Example Sentences
The Christian right opposition to Plan B is a stalking horse for banning all hormonal contraception.
The 15-week ban was always a stalking horse for a total ban.
"This is not a stalking horse for rate regulation. Nope. No how, no way," the chair said in October.
For a time, that stalking horse was “inflation,” but the price increases cooled, and Biden got four years older, so here we are.
In their 12-page filing, the prosecutors dismissed as a “conspiracy theory” a separate claim that Mr. Trump has raised in his own defense — that Mr. Biden had “secretly directed” the classified documents case and used the special counsel who filed the indictment, Jack Smith, as a “puppet” and a “stalking horse.”
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