0 present participle of lurch --
1 to move in a way that is not regular or normal, especially making sudden movements backwards or forwards or from side to side: --
The scheme is therefore lurching from crisis to crisis.
It has now decided to win back the political middle ground by lurching further to the right.
There would be palm-tree justice and a lurching from one case to another, so that the citizen would not know under what law he stood.
We seem to be lurching to disaster once more.
We are not lurching from uncertainty to indecision.
We had the usual nonsense and absurdity that we have heard over the past few days about lurching to the right.
But we must avoid lurching back into the old-style regulation, stifling individual initiative and enterprise.
That kind of lurching—stop and go—has not allowed the long-term investment that everyone wants in the public services.