Top Items:
New York Times:
Bush Is Business as Usual Despite Party Grumbles — WASHINGTON, March 11 — Inside the White House, the staff is exhausted and the mood is defiant. Republicans are clamoring for a new chief of staff, the West Wing just cut its losses on a deal that would have given a Dubai company control …
Discussion:
The Mahablog, The Moderate Voice, Mathew Gross, Middle Earth Journal, Norwegianity, AMERICAblog, UNCoRRELATED and The Next Hurrah
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Washington Post:
Arrest of Ex-Bush Aide Shocks Associates — Once-Soaring GOP Career Man Said to Be Devoted to His Family and Church — Claude A. Allen has said his mother warned him that as a black man he risked ruining his life, or at least his career, by becoming a Republican.
Discussion:
Michelle Malkin, The Corner on National …, MyDD, Brilliant at Breakfast, PBD, Associated Press and AMERICAblog
Tom Curry / MSNBC:
And the winner is Frist, the home state favorite — But the big surprise is Massachusetts' Gov. Mitt Romney's showing … MSNBC TV — MEMPHIS, Tenn. - — Tom Curry — And the winner is Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist. — The climax of a three-day gathering of Republican activists …
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Hotline On Call:
SRLC Straw Poll: Frist Wins; Romney Second — After five hours of voting and with more than 1,400 ballots cast, The Hotline SRLC Straw Poll has come to a close with a tremendous turnout. Sen. Bill Frist (TN) led the pack with nearly 37% of the vote, followed by MA Gov. Mitt Romney with 14%.
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway, The Fix, Hugh Hewitt, RedState, CorrenteWire, Thoughts from Kansas and The Corner on National …
Anthony Deutsch / Associated Press:
Autopsy Performed on Milosevic's Remains — THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — Dutch pathologists performed an autopsy on Slobodan Milosevic's remains Sunday amid claims by the former Yugoslav leader's supporters that he was poisoned and a statement by the chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor raising the possibility he committed suicide.
Discussion:
The Blogging of the President
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Robert Farley / Lawyers, Guns and Money:
Brief Thoughts on Slobodan
Brief Thoughts on Slobodan
Discussion:
battlepanda.blogspot.com
John Crewdson / Chicago Tribune:
Internet blows CIA cover — It's easy to track America's covert operatives. All you need to know is how to navigate the Internet. — WASHINGTON — She is 52 years old, married, grew up in the Kansas City suburbs and now lives in Virginia, in a new three-bedroom house.
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John Crewdson / duluthsuperior.com:
Plame's identity, if truly a secret, was thinly veiled — WASHINGTON - The question of whether Valerie Plame's employment by the Central Intelligence Agency was a secret is the key issue in the two-year investigation to determine if someone broke the law by leaking her CIA affiliation to the news media.
Ann Scott Tyson / Washington Post:
Army Guard Refilling Its Ranks — The Army National Guard, which has suffered a severe three-year recruiting slump, has begun to reel in soldiers in record numbers, aided in part by a new initiative that pays Guard members $2,000 for each person they enlist.
Discussion:
Rantingprofs
Jeanne / Body and Soul:
"The wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God" — You all know by now, I'm sure, that Tom Fox's body was found in Iraq yesterday. As far as I can tell, the Washington Post is the only major paper to put the story on the front page. The WaPo website also carries an AP story …
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David J. Rothkopf / Washington Post:
Look Who's Running the World Now — The Dick Cheney era of foreign policy is over. — From 2001 to 2005, the vice president's influence over U.S. foreign policy may have been greater than that of any individual other than the president since Henry A. Kissinger held the positions …
Discussion:
The Heretik, SIVACRACY.NET, The Reaction, Norwegianity, Middle Earth Journal and War and Piece
Adam Cohen / New York Times:
Bloggers at the Gates: What Was Good for EBay Should Be Good for Politics — After the disastrous 2004 election, prominent Democrats gathered in Monterey, Calif., to discuss what to do next. The organizers scheduled a session on coalition building, but each special interest complained that its issue was being slighted.
New York Times:
Even as U.S. Invaded, Hussein Saw Iraqi Unrest as Top Threat — As American warplanes streaked overhead two weeks after the invasion began, Lt. Gen. Raad Majid al-Hamdani drove to Baghdad for a crucial meeting with Iraqi leaders. He pleaded for reinforcements to stiffen the capital's defenses …
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Gatekeeper v. amateurs — The powerful — the rich and the elected — used to be the gatekeepers to information. Then, with the advent of mass media, journalists took over that role. They were the gatekeepers to the public. A few decades ago, for reasons I'll go into in a moment …
Greg Mitchell / Editor and Publisher:
Preview of 'Vanity Fair' Article on Plamegate: Too Much of Nothing? — NEW YORK A massive Vanity Affair review of the Plame/CIA case coming to newsstands on Tuesday is notable for the absence of major revelations. The article, "Lies and Consequences," covers all or parts of 17 pages …
Independent:
Donald Rumsfeld makes $5m killing on bird flu drug — Donald Rumsfeld has made a killing out of bird flu. The US Defence Secretary has made more than $5m (£2.9m) in capital gains from selling shares in the biotechnology firm that discovered and developed Tamiflu …
Joseph Rago / Opinion Journal:
Status Reporter — Tom Wolfe's advice: Escape the "parenthesis states" and explore America. — NEW YORK—Tom Wolfe turned out the manuscript of his last novel on a manual typewriter and "quite a bit of it by hand," he adds, "only because I had badly injured a finger and couldn't do the typing."
Editor and Publisher:
John Burns, Back from Baghdad: U.S. Effort In Iraq Will Likely Fail — NEW YORK A day after returning to the U.S., after another long term as bureau chief in Baghdad, John F. Burns of The New York Times said on Bill Maher's live Friday night HBO program that he now feels, for the first time …
Matt Bai / New York Times:
The Fallback — If you harbor serious thoughts of running for the presidency, the first thing you do — long before you commission any polls or make any ads, years before you charter planes to take you back and forth between Iowa and New Hampshire — is to sit down with guys like Chris Korge.