What unfolded was the culmination of more than a year of frustration, suspicion and recrimination.
The COVID-19 Charmer: How a Self-Described Felon Convinced Elected Officials to Try to Help Him Profit From the Pandemic|by Vianna Davila, Jeremy Schwartz and Lexi Churchill|September 25, 2020|ProPublica
And the spasms of Republican recrimination have been profoundly ahistorical.
Obama’s All Eisenhower On Russia|Robert Shrum|March 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In a country torn apart by bloodshed and recrimination, that alone speaks volumes.
Coming Clean on the Dirty War: José Efraín Rios Montt Goes to Trial|Mac Margolis|March 29, 2013|DAILY BEAST
I interrupted Hilda because I did not want to have the harmony of my party destroyed by recrimination and argument.
Lalage's Lovers|George A. Birmingham
Nothing could exceed the mixture of recrimination and exultation with which the old woman spoke.
The Portion of Labor|Mary E. Wilkins Freeman
She saw also a just recrimination upon her deceit on the part of observant Heaven.
Female Scripture Biographies, Vol. I|Francis Augustus Cox
There was too fine a streak in her to break out in recrimination.
Big Timber|Bertrand W. Sinclair
Here were ever flowing fountains of bitterest discussion and recrimination.
History of the United Netherlands, 1590-1599, Vol. III. Complete|John Lothrop Motley
British Dictionary definitions for recrimination
recrimination
/ (rɪˌkrɪmɪˈneɪʃən) /
noun
the act or an instance of recriminating
lawa charge made by an accused against his accuser; countercharge