Top Items:
Hilary Bok / The Washington Monthly:
Above The Law, Take 2 — I just wanted to echo what Shakespearer's Sister said about the report that Bush signed an order allowing the NSA to spy on US citizens without a warrant. — This is against the law. I have put references to the relevant statute below the fold; the brief version is …
Discussion:
MyDD, The American Mind, Liberty Street, Pacific Views, Simianbrain, Obsidian Wings, Opinions You Should Have, Whatever, Prometheus 6 and AMERICAblog
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MSNBC:
Bush declines comment on NSA spying report — Specter vows to hold hearings on alleged eavesdropping without warrants … MSNBC TV — MSNBC staff and news service reports — NEW YORK - President Bush refused to say whether the National Security Agency eavesdropped without warrants …
Katherine Shrader / Associated Press:
Bush Approved Eavesdropping, Official Says — WASHINGTON - President Bush has personally authorized a secretive eavesdropping program in the United States more than three dozen times since October 2001, a senior intelligence official said Friday night. — The disclosure follows angry demands …
Katherine Shrader / Associated Press:
Shocked Lawmakers Demand Spy Program Probe — WASHINGTON - Dismayed lawmakers demanded on Friday that Congress look into whether the highly secretive National Security Agency was granted new powers to eavesdrop without warrants on people inside the United States.
Washington Post:
On Hill, Anger and Calls for Hearings Greet News of Stateside Surveillance — Congressional leaders of both parties called for hearings and issued condemnations yesterday in the wake of reports that President Bush signed a secret order in 2002 allowing the National Security Agency to spy …
Discussion:
The Democratic Daily Blog
Drudge Report:
NYT 'SPYING' SPLASH TIED TO BOOK RELEASE
NYT 'SPYING' SPLASH TIED TO BOOK RELEASE
Discussion:
The Jawa Report v3.0 Beta, Atlas Shrugs, Decision '08, lgf, NewsBusters.org, Carol Platt Liebau and AMERICAN FUTURE
Hindrocket / Power Line:
LET'S SEND THESE GUYS TO JAIL
LET'S SEND THESE GUYS TO JAIL
Discussion:
QandO, ProfessorBainbridge.com, Hugh Hewitt, Confederate Yankee, Roger L. Simon, Let Freedom Ring, News Blog, AMERICAN FUTURE, INTEL DUMP, Lawyers, Guns and Money, The Volokh Conspiracy, The Corner on National …, The Mahablog, The Road To Surfdom, Gateway Pundit, Left I on the News, The Carpetbagger Report, Balkinization and Dan Gillmor's blog
Rudolph W. Giuliani / New York Times:
Taking Liberties With the Nation's Security — YESTERDAY the Senate failed to reauthorize the USA Patriot Act, as a Democratic-led filibuster prevented a vote. This action - which leaves the act, key elements of which are due to expire on Dec. 31, in limbo - represents a grave potential threat to the nation's security.
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Jesse J. Holland / Associated Press:
Senate Rejects Extension of Patriot Act — WASHINGTON - The Senate on Friday refused to reauthorize major portions of the USA Patriot Act after critics complained they infringed too much on Americans' privacy and liberty, dealing a huge defeat to the Bush administration and Republican leaders.
Jeff Bliss / Bloomberg:
U.S. Senate Rejects Bush Plea to Advance Patriot Act (Update1) — Dec. 16 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Senate, rejecting pleas from its Republican leaders and President George W. Bush, refused to end debate on legislation to renew the anti-terror USA Patriot Act.
Discussion:
ACSBlog
David Stout / New York Times:
Supporters of Patriot Act Suffer a Stinging Defeat in Senate — WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - Supporters of the broad anti-terrorism law known as the USA Patriot Act suffered a stinging defeat in the Senate today, falling well short of the 60 votes needed to bring the act to a final vote and leaving it in limbo for the moment.
Byron York / The Corner on National Review Online:
FRUSTRATED, ANGRY REPUBLICANS
FRUSTRATED, ANGRY REPUBLICANS
Discussion:
Instapundit.com
New York Times:
Lawmakers Back Use of Evidence Coerced From Detainees — WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - House and Senate negotiators agreed Friday to a measure that would enable the government to keep prisoners at Guantánamo Bay indefinitely on the basis of evidence obtained by coercive interrogations.
Discussion:
Balkinization
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David Ignatius / Washington Post:
Stepping Back From Torture — It's not about who our enemies are, it's about who we are.
Stepping Back From Torture — It's not about who our enemies are, it's about who we are.
Discussion:
The Corner on National …
Constant Brand / Associated Press:
Iran Could Be Sanctioned for Riling Israel — BRUSSELS, Belgium - Iran could face sanctions if it keeps provoking Israel and the West, European leaders warned Saturday, even as the Tehran regime's interior minister said the Iranian president's remarks had been "misunderstood."
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Scott Shane / New York Times:
Behind Power, One Principle as Bush Pushes Prerogatives — WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - A single, fiercely debated legal principle lies behind nearly every major initiative in the Bush administration's war on terror, scholars say: the sweeping assertion of the powers of the presidency.
Discussion:
Concurring Opinions
David Bauder / Associated Press:
Robert Novak Leaving CNN for Fox News — NEW YORK — Commentator Robert Novak, who hasn't been seen on CNN since swearing and storming off the set in August, will leave the network after 25 years and join Fox News Channel as a contributor next month. — Novak, 74, said Friday he probably …
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New York Times:
Columnist Resigns His Post, Admitting Lobbyist Paid Him — WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - A senior scholar at the Cato Institute, the respected libertarian research organization, has resigned after revelations that he took payments from the lobbyist Jack Abramoff in exchange for writing columns favorable to his clients.
Discussion:
Spot-On
White House:
Personnel Announcement — President George W. Bush today announced his intention to nominate four individuals to serve in his Administration: — The President intends to nominate Robert D. Lenhard, of Maryland, to be a Member of the Federal Election Commission, for the remainder of a six-year term expiring April 30, 2011.
Reuters:
In survey of ten US presidents, Bush fares badly — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush ranks as the least popular and most bellicose of the last ten U.S. presidents, according to a new survey. — Only nine percent of the 662 people polled picked Bush as their favorite among the last 10 presidents.
BBC:
Iraq vote 'met global standards' — International observers have praised the organisers of Iraq's parliamentary election, which they said generally met international standards. — A spokesman for the International Mission for Iraqi Elections conceded that there had been minor problems, but said the vote had generally gone well.