Power broker (term)
WordNet

noun


(1)   A person who is important by virtue of the people or votes they control
"A power broker who does you a favor will expect you to return it"
WiktionaryText

Noun



  1. A person or group having the ability to influence important decisions, especially in public policy, politics, and business.
    • 1969, "Men of the Year," Time, 3 Jan.,
      In France, a near-revolution by students and workers came close to toppling Charles de Gaulle in May; its economic aftermath in November almost certainly discredited forever Gaullism's vaunted role as the power broker of Europe.
    • 1988, Lewis B. Ware et al., Low-Intensity Conflict in the Third World, Air Univ. Press, ISBN 978-1585660223, p. 139,
      Gen Ali Murtopo—vice chairman of Indonesia's Supreme Advisory Council, former information minister, a major power broker in and out of the army—declared after a meeting with the president that the killings were justified.
    • 2007, Louise Armitstead, "Qataris to seal bid for Nasdaq’s LSE stake," The Sunday Times (London), 16 Sep.,
      The Qatar government, which runs the QIA, will become a major power-broker in determining the future of the London exchange.
 
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