Top Items:
New York Times:
Judge Alito Proves a Powerful Match for Senate Questioners — WASHINGTON, Jan. 10 - If Senate Democrats had set out to portray Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr. as extreme on issues ranging from abortion to government surveillance of citizens, they ran up against an elusive target on Tuesday …
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Charles Lane / Washington Post:
Alito Replies Don't Rock Status Quo — On his first day of questioning from senators, Supreme Court nominee Samuel A. Alito Jr. tried to send a reassuring message: The country may be at war, but Americans' personal privacy and civil liberties will be safe with me.
Reuters:
Alito: No president above law — WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito told Congress on Tuesday that no president was above the law when pressed on Bush administration policies on torturing prisoners and domestic spying. — Alito, who opposed abortion …
Justin Bank / FactCheck.org:
Anti-Alito Ad Uses Selective Quotes — It cites a study saying Alito ruled to narrow privacy rights. It didn't quote the part saying he's seen as restrained and nonpartisan. — Summary — IndependentCourt.org, a project of the Coalition for a Fair and Independent Judiciary …
David Stout / New York Times:
Presidential Power Has Limits, Alito Tells Senators
Presidential Power Has Limits, Alito Tells Senators
Discussion:
NewsBusters.org
William Branigin / Washington Post:
Alito Seeks to Distance Himself From Previous Abortion Statements
Alito Seeks to Distance Himself From Previous Abortion Statements
Kevin Drum / The Washington Monthly:
FIGHTING ALITO....Over at Crooks and Liars, Glenn Greenwald says:
FIGHTING ALITO....Over at Crooks and Liars, Glenn Greenwald says:
Brian Ross / ABCNEWS:
NSA Whistleblower Alleges Illegal Spying — Former Employee Admits to Being a New York Times Source — Jan 10, 2006 — Russell Tice, a longtime insider at the National Security Agency, is now a whistleblower the agency would like to keep quiet. — For 20 years, Tice worked in the shadows …
Discussion:
NewsBusters.org, Macsmind, The Strata-Sphere, BLACKFIVE, Media Blog on National …, Daily Kos, Martin's Musings and The Political Teen
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Dan Eggen / Washington Post:
Probe Set In NSA Bugging — The National Security Agency's inspector general has opened an investigation into eavesdropping without warrants in the United States by the agency authorized by President Bush after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, according to a letter released late yesterday.
CNN:
Poll finds U.S. split over eavesdropping — Half say warrants unnecessary; most want changes to Patriot Act — WASHINGTON (CNN) — Though Americans are growing more skeptical of the White House record on civil liberties, the nation is divided over whether the Bush administration …
Discussion:
Decision '08
White House:
President Addresses Veterans of Foreign Wars on the War on Terror — Washington, D.C. — Fact Sheet: Progress and the Work Ahead in Iraq — National Strategy for Victory in Iraq — In Focus: Renewal in Iraq — In Focus: National Security — In Focus: Veterans
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Captain Ed / Captain's Quarters:
Alito 1, Schumer -35 — I wish I had an automatic transcript device. Judge Alito just blew Chuck Schumer out of the water on abortion. After holding up his Robert ByrdTM mini-Constitution, Schumer demanded several times whether he still believes as he wrote in his 1985 memo …
Francis Harris / Telegraph:
Syria 'tried to fuel holy war in Iraq against US and Britain' — President Bashar al-Assad of Syria secretly incited Iraq's top Shia leader to declare holy war against US and British forces, according to Washington's former administrator in the country. — In his new book, My Year in Iraq …
Bull Moose:
The Donkey Differs — The Moose welcomes a healthy debate in the DLC Zoo. — The always erudite and eloquent New Donkey differs with the Moose on the NSA eavesdropping matter. Without belaboring the matter, the Moose continues to believe that the President had authority both under Article II …
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Washington Post:
Differing Views on Terrorism — Americans Divided on Eavesdropping Program, Poll Finds — Americans overwhelmingly support aggressive government pursuit of terrorist threats, even if it may infringe on personal privacy, but they divide sharply along partisan lines over the legitimacy …
Washington Post:
Barry Tested Positive for Cocaine Use In the Fall — D.C. Council member Marion Barry tested positive for cocaine use in the fall in a drug test ordered by a court after he pleaded guilty to misdemeanor tax charges, according to two sources familiar with Barry's case.
Discussion:
Cold Fury
New York Times:
I.R.S. Limited Tax Refunds of Poor, Congress Is Told — Tax refunds sought by hundreds of thousands of poor Americans have been frozen and their returns labeled fraudulent, blocking refunds for years to come, the Internal Revenue Service's taxpayer advocate told Congress today.
Suzanne Gamboa / Associated Press:
DeLay tried to force closure of Indian-owned casino — WASHINGTON — Former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay tried to pressure the Bush administration into shutting down an Indian-owned casino that lobbyist Jack Abramoff wanted closed — shortly after a tribal client of Abramoff's donated …
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
Lobbying Colors GOP Leadership Contest — Rivals for DeLay Post No Strangers to K St. — In years past, when the House recessed for its winter break, Rep. John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) decamped for warmer climates and a sailing trip to the Caribbean with some of the city's top lobbyists …
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo