hatchet man

hatchet man

A person hired by a company to make sweeping changes to save money, usually by reducing staff. We knew our days were numbered when our company brought in a hatchet man to make cuts to the staff.
See also: hatchet, man
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

hatchet man

a man who does the cruel or difficult things for someone else; someone who does someone else's dirty work. He served as the president's hatchet man and ended up doing all the dirty work.
See also: hatchet, man
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

hatchet man

1. A person assigned or hired to carry out a disagreeable task or unscrupulous order. For example, When it came to firing an employee, Arthur was his boss's hatchet man. This expression originally referred to a hired assassin but in the mid-1900s was transferred to less nefarious enterprises.
2. A person who attacks the reputation of others, especially a journalist hired to do so, as in You can count on Mary's column to destroy the mayor-she's the perfect hatchet man. This usage gave rise to hatchet job, meaning "harsh destructive criticism." [Mid-1900s]
See also: hatchet, man
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

a hatchet man

INFORMAL
A hatchet man is someone who is employed to do unpleasant tasks, especially to get rid of jobs in a company. Note: A hatchet is a small axe. Hall, they reckoned, was a hatchet man, out to shred the workforce and totally crush the union. Note: A woman who does a similar job can be called a hatchet woman. She had a reputation for being a ruthless hatchet woman. Note: This expression is usually used to show disapproval. Note: This expression may relate to violent gang warfare in the United States during the early part of the 20th century. Gangs often hired an assassin or `hatchet man' to hack an important member of a rival gang to death with a hatchet. This work was known as a `hatchet job'.
See also: hatchet, man
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed.

hatchet man

A person who performs nasty tasks for his or her superior, such as firing subordinates, attacking the character of a political opponent, spreading rumors about a competitor, or the like. The term, so used since the 1940s, was applied particularly in politics and journalism, and the work so performed was also called a hatchet job. The magazine Newsweek had it on July 27, 1968: “He’ll be the hatchet man . . . just like Nixon was in 1952.” It also is used in other contexts, for example, “This critic did a real hatchet job on her concert.” A related term is character assassination, dating from about 1950, but it is no longer heard as often.
See also: hatchet, man
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • a hatchet man
  • on condition (that)
  • on condition that
  • go public
  • turkey bacon
  • piss money up the wall
  • tiger in (one's) tank
  • a tiger in your tank
  • company
  • put somebody in touch with somebody/something
References in periodicals archive
It's an effective, unpretentious suspense from Hatchet man Adam Green.
But Bassett knows just how much of a hatchet man Green can be after he was fired as Sheffield United boss during the new Rangers chief executive's first venture into football 17 years ago.
Attempting to hog the limelight by bantering with Jason Gardiner, inarticulate Brazier warns the hatchet man that all his Essex mates are in the audience.
Paying millions to bring Ian McGregor the Hatchet Man from America to close down certain industries, the Falklands War, stopping free milk for school children, I could go on.
Makelele, either acting alone or as the designated hatchet man following discussions with a number of his team-mates, decided Chelsea would be better off with Wayne Bridge at left-back and decided to do something about it.
The incident, captured on national television, happened as Mr MacGregor, an American import dubbed Margaret Thatcher's hatchet man, visited the colliery to meet officials after announcing plans for 20 pit closures and 20,000 job losses.
Exit of former Telefonica prexy Juan Villalonga's hatchet man is seen in Spain as a major victory for Nieto, who cannily stonewalled attempts by Garcia Duran to sign up TV personality Pepe Navarro to host a latenight chatshow designed to lambaste Villalonga's political enemies.
``I will do what is necessary, but I don't believe in jumping in and I am certainly not a hatchet man.
Hatchet man Derek Pavis must be sharpening the Meadow Lane axe after Sam Allardyce's dreadful run continued to leave County staring relegation in the face.
HATCHET man Jeremy Hunt is in line for a PS17million business windfall which would make him the richest of all the Cabinet multi-millionaires.
The star, who strips down to just some palm leaves on Saturday's show, says he could never be as cruel as hatchet man Simon Cowell.
HOW nice to know that as I enter my sixth month of unemployment, hatchet man George Osborne has been enjoying a skiing holiday in Switzerland.
Out of the winning Tom Fool mare Bebopper, Stop The Music was a halfbrother to dual Grade 1 winner Hatchet Man. Winner of the Saratoga Special at two and the Grade 2 Dwyer Handicap at three, Stop The Music also won the Champagne Stakes as a juvenile due to the disqualification of the legendary Secretariat.
I hope the groundsmen are going to work overtime to sort it out'After team-mate Scott Morrison's hatchet man claim, Aberdeen defender Kevin McNaughton wants groundstaff to just patch it
IRISH international Lee Carsley has never boasted a reputation as a midfield hatchet man -until now.