Top Items:
Tom Daschle / Washington Post:
Power We Didn't Grant — In the face of mounting questions about news stories saying that President Bush approved a program to wiretap American citizens without getting warrants, the White House argues that Congress granted it authority for such surveillance in the 2001 legislation authorizing the use of force against al Qaeda.
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Barton Gellman / Washington Post:
Daschle: Congress Denied Bush War Powers in U.S. — The Bush administration requested, and Congress rejected, war-making authority "in the United States" in negotiations over the joint resolution passed days after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to an opinion article …
Glenn Greenwald / Unclaimed Territory:
The Bush justifications for law-breaking (con't) — My post yesterday requested that Bush defenders explain how there can be any limits at all on his power under the theories of Executive Power which they are advocating to argue that Bush had the right to violate Congressional law.
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
Impeachment Nonsense — 2005 was already the year of the demagogue …
Impeachment Nonsense — 2005 was already the year of the demagogue …
Discussion:
Brad DeLong's Semi …
Donna Cassata / Associated Press:
Alito Defended Officials From Wiretap Suits — WASHINGTON - Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito defended the right of government officials to order domestic wiretaps when he worked for the Reagan Justice Department, documents released Friday show. — He advocated a step by step approach …
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Donna Cassata / Associated Press:
Alito Argued to Overturn Roe in 1985 Memo
Alito Argued to Overturn Roe in 1985 Memo
Discussion:
Bench Memos …
New York Times:
Postponing Debate, Congress Extends Terror Law 5 Weeks — WASHINGTON, Dec. 22 - In a frantic finish before adjourning for the year, Congress extended on Thursday the broad antiterrorism bill known as the USA Patriot Act by five weeks after the Republican chairman of the House Judiciary Committee balked at a longer extension.
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Sinan Salaheddin / Associated Press:
Iraqis March to Denounce Elction Results — BAGHDAD, Iraq - Large demonstrations broke out across the country Friday to denounce parliamentary elections that protesters say were rigged in favor of the main religious Shiite coalition. Also, the U.S. military said two soldiers were killed …
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Dafna Linzer / Washington Post:
GOP Blocks Action on Senate Intelligence Authorization Bill — Senate Republicans late Wednesday blocked the authorization bill that guides the country's intelligence programs. It was the first time in 27 years that the bill had failed to pass before the end of the calendar year.
Discussion:
The Washington Monthly, The Carpetbagger Report, War and Piece and Democrat Taylor Marsh …
New York Times:
Mr. Cheney's Imperial Presidency — George W. Bush has quipped several times during his political career that it would be so much easier to govern in a dictatorship. Apparently he never told his vice president that this was a joke. — Virtually from the time he chose himself …
Edward Cody / Washington Post:
China Vows Peaceful Use Of Its Power — White Paper Tries to Ease Fears of Growing Strength — BEIJING, Dec. 22 — The Chinese government, responding to doubts in the United States and neighboring Asian countries, made what it called a "solemn promise" Thursday that its growing power will never become a threat to other nations.
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Washington Post:
Brown's Turf Wars Sapped FEMA's Strength — Director Who Came to Symbolize Incompetence in Katrina Predicted Agency Would Fail — On Sept. 15, 2003, one of Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge's deputies lobbed a bureaucratic hand grenade across his desk.
Tim Golden / New York Times:
A Midlevel Aide Had a Big Role in Terror Policy — Moments after planes crashed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, lawyers in the Justice Department's elite Office of Legal Counsel began crowding into the office of one of the agency's newest deputies, John C. Yoo, to watch the horror unfold on his television set.
Discussion:
The Rude Pundit
Toni Locy / Associated Press:
Bush Administration Defends Spying Program — WASHINGTON - The Bush administration formally defended its domestic spying program in a letter to Congress late Thursday saying the nation's security outweighs privacy concerns of individuals who are monitored. — In a letter to the chairs …
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Josh White / Washington Post:
Unable to End 'Unlawful' Detention, Judge Says — A federal judge in Washington ruled yesterday that the continued detention of two ethnic Uighurs at the U.S. prison facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, is "unlawful," but he decided he had no authority to order their release.
New York Times:
Workers Choose to Come Back and Talk — Thousands of New York City transit workers put down their picket signs and streamed into bus depots and railyards last night to restart the nation's largest transit system, after leaders of their union agreed to a tentative framework for a new contract …
Discussion:
the talking dog
Robert Burns / Associated Press:
Rumsfeld Says U.S. to Cut Iraq Troop Levels — FALLUJAH, Iraq - Just days after Iraq's elections, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld on Friday announced the first of what is likely to be a series of U.S. combat troop drawdowns in Iraq in 2006. — Rumsfeld, addressing U.S. troops …
Karen Travers / ABCNEWS:
Cheney's iPod Takes Top Priority on Extended Flight — Reporters Wait to File Stories as VP's MP3 Player Charges — WASHINGTON, Dec. 22, 2005 — After a four-day overseas trip that took him to four countries in the Middle East, Vice President Dick Cheney really wanted to get his iPod charged …