From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishride roughshod over somethingride roughshod over somethingIGNOREto ignore someone else’s feelings or ideas because you have the power or authority to do this The planning authorities should not ride roughshod over the wishes of local people. → ride
Examples from the Corpus
ride roughshod over something• Marshall accused the court of riding roughshod over individual rights.• In particular it has attempted to take on board community aspirations and local authority plans rather than ride roughshod over local wishes.• Recent weeks have seen it ride roughshod over ostrich breeders, society con artists, champagne fraudsters and the occasional fallen tycoon.• Critics claim that certain powerful interests are able to ride roughshod over plans and competitors.• Instead they set out to ride roughshod over the legislative branch, attempting to govern without congress rather than with it.• He was readily obeyed, even when he outraged the sensibilities of the privileged and rode roughshod over their traditional rights.• I told them they should be riding roughshod over whoever compiled tha bus and send them to Stavropol Territory right now.