Top Items:
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Senior White House Staff May Be Wearing Down — Andrew H. Card Jr. wakes at 4:20 in the morning, shows up at the White House an hour or so later, convenes his senior staff at 7:30 and then proceeds to a blur of other meetings that do not let up until long after the sun sets.
RELATED ITEMS:
John Gizzi / Human Events:
Dining With Claude Allen, But Avoiding the Big Question
Dining With Claude Allen, But Avoiding the Big Question
Discussion:
Flopping Aces, IntoxiNation, The Corner on National …, PoliPundit.com and Michelle Malkin
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
Budget Restraint Emerges as G.O.P. Theme for 2008
Budget Restraint Emerges as G.O.P. Theme for 2008
Discussion:
Thoughts of an Average Woman
John Files / New York Times:
Senator to Propose Censure of Bush Over Spy Program — WASHINGTON, March 12 — Senator Russell D. Feingold said Sunday that he would introduce a measure in the Senate to censure President Bush over the domestic eavesdropping program. — "What the president did by consciously …
RELATED ITEMS:
Associated Press:
Feingold Seeks Senate Censure of Bush — A liberal Democrat and potential White House contender is proposing that the Senate censure President Bush for authorizing domestic eavesdropping, saying the White House misled Americans about its legality. — "The president has broken the law …
Daily Kos:
5 Minutes, For Democracy's Sake — Five minutes is all it takes, really. Less, if you're not that chatty. In five minutes, you can speak up for the rule of the law. In five minutes, you can put your own footprint in history, as one of the mass of millions who advocated for the censure of a President who broke the law.
PR Newswire:
McClatchy to Acquire Knight Ridder — Becomes Country's Second Largest Newspaper Publisher — $6.5 Billion Deal Unites Two Historic Franchises Focused on Great Journalism — New McClatchy Will Serve 30 Markets Growing 50% Faster Than U.S. Average — McClatchy Will Divest Select Papers Outside its Strategic Objectives
Discussion:
Gawker
RELATED ITEMS:
John Fund / Opinion Journal:
You've Got Mail (It's From Yale) — A university official calls Taliban critics "retarded" while the university maintains a stony silence. — The two most dysfunctional management cultures I know of right now are the Bush White House and Yale University.
Discussion:
Radio Blogger, Dean's World, Captain's Quarters, Fausta's blog, The Daily Brief, Solomonia, Kudlow's Money Politic$ and GOP Bloggers
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
Study Finds More News Media Outlets, Covering Less News — The third annual review of the state of American journalism found that while there were more media outlets this year than ever, they were covering less news. — The review was conducted by the Project for Excellence in Journalism …
RELATED ITEMS:
James Rainey / Los Angeles Times:
More News Outlets, Fewer Stories: New Media 'Paradox'
More News Outlets, Fewer Stories: New Media 'Paradox'
Discussion:
The Glittering Eye
George Clooney / The Huffington Post:
I Am a Liberal. There, I Said It! — I am a liberal. And I make no apologies for it. Hell, I'm proud of it. — Too many people run away from the label. They whisper it like you'd whisper "I'm a Nazi." Like it's dirty word. But turn away from saying "I'm a liberal" …
RELATED ITEMS:
David E. Sanger / New York Times:
A Bush Alarm: Urging U.S. to Shun Isolationism — WASHINGTON, March 12 — The president who made pre-emption and going it alone the watchwords of his first term is quietly turning in a new direction, warning at every opportunity of the dangers of turning the nation inward and isolationist …
Discussion:
TAPPED, Balkinization, JustOneMinute, The Strata-Sphere, Rook's Rant, Bring it On!, rubber hose and The Corner on National …
Iraq News:
Dash to Baghdad Left Top U.S. Generals Divided — The war was barely a week old when Gen. Tommy R. Franks threatened to fire the Army's field commander. — From the first days of the invasion in March 2003, American forces had tangled with fanatical Saddam Fedayeen paramilitary fighters.
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
The Big News: Shrinking Reportage — An explosion of media outlets means we now have more coverage and carping about every conceivable event than ever before in history. — But we also have less reporting. — Hundreds of cable and radio commentators, and millions of bloggers, can sound off about the news in real time.
Washington Post:
Judge Unexpectedly Recesses Moussaoui Trial — A federal judge indicated today that she might throw out the death penalty case against Sept. 11 conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui after prosecutors disclosed that a government attorney had violated the court's rules about discussing witness testimony.
Matthew Yglesias / TAPPED:
WHAT ABOUT RUSS? Reading the "is Hillary inevitable" talk here and elsewhere late last week, and Matt Bai's article on Mark Warner as the only viable alternative, I think people are selling Russ Feingold's chances way too short. Here's my argument in a nutshell: — The obvious Feingold comparison is Howard Dean.
CBS News:
Tal Afar: Al Qaeda's Town — (CBS) This is a story about an entire city that was taken over by al Qaeda. It's called Tal Afar and about 200,000 people who live there became prisoners in their own homes when terrorists took control and turned it into their town.
Ian / Expose the Left:
Hinderocker: Leakers Should Be "Criminally Prosecuted" (VIDEO) — Powerline's John Hinderocker, Newsweek's Michael Isikoff, and XXX a First Amendment XX appeared on CNN's Reliable Sources this morning to discuss if the media has the right to disclose classified information, even if it is a risk to national security.
RELATED ITEMS:
Times of London:
Focus: The butcher is dead — Slobodan Milosevic's death yesterday was widely greeted as a tragedy — because he had escaped justice. What sort of man earned himself such hatred? Brendan Simms reports — Although he had sworn that he would never be taken alive, when the time came …
Washington Post:
U.S. Campaign Is Aimed at Iran's Leaders — Uneasy About Tehran's Nuclear Plans, Bush Administration Tries to Build Opposition to Theocracy — As the dispute over its nuclear program arrives at the U.N. Security Council today, Iran has vaulted to the front of the U.S. national security …
Josh White / Washington Post:
Detainee in Photo With Dog Was 'High-Value' Suspect — When Army Sgt. Michael J. Smith faces a court-martial today on charges that he used his military working dog to harass and threaten detainees, one of the prime examples of that alleged misconduct will be a photograph of Smith holding the dog just inches from the face of a detainee.