Bipartisan in a sentence as an adjective

I personally think they should, but there's a bipartisan consensus not to.

We should be able to come together on bipartisan tax increases for the wealthiest quintile but people just don't know the facts.

Bush initially opposed the TSA, a bipartisan majority of Congress foisted that on him.

It really scares me that the only issues able to find bipartisan support in congress seem to be the bills that benefit nobody.

Crony capitalism is one of the few issues both Democrats and Republicans see eye to eye on. Each party has their specific business favorites, but it's sadly a bipartisan problem.

Which can include anyone advancing any political ideology that is frowned upon by the bipartisan "washington consensus" of what is acceptable debate.

Another is to consider this a rare moment of bipartisan comity; if Republicans see the light on open access, copyright reform and prosecutorial abuse on this, fantastic.

I was ready to agree until you said Wal*Mart, in particular in the context of 'tearing apart society'.Economists--including progressives, such as Matt Yglesais--often comment on the bipartisan fetishization of small businesses and liberal demonization of large ones.

Bipartisan definitions

adjective

supported by both sides; "a two-way treaty"

See also: bipartizan two-party two-way