Top Items:
Thomas M. DeFrank / NY Daily News:
W library in record book — $500M center would be priciest for a Prez — DAILY NEWS WASHINGTON BUREAU CHIEF — WASHINGTON - He may be a certified lame duck now, but President Bush and his truest believers are about to launch their final campaign - an eye-popping, half-billion-dollar drive for the Bush presidential library.
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Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
In Need of New Moves, but in Which Direction? — President Bush leaves for Europe on Monday uncertain of the Washington he will return to, or even his place in it. — Certainly the pressure is on for Mr. Bush to right a presidency mired in low poll ratings, beset by an unpopular war …
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
History Offers Post-Midterm Survival Tips For President
History Offers Post-Midterm Survival Tips For President
Discussion:
The Caucus, Booman Tribune, Wake up America, Gun Toting Liberal, Blue Crab Boulevard and First Read
Glenn Greenwald / Unclaimed Territory:
The media's sudden intense interest in the House Intelligence Committee — The New Republic's Michael Crowley last night noticed something about Jane Harman that has evaded most Beltway commentators, including those who have suddenly developed such a bizarre and uncharacteristic interest …
Discussion:
Political Animal, Talking Points Memo, Decision '08, Crooks and Liars and Suburban Guerrilla
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Danny / Beltway Blogroll:
In The Blog's-Eye: The Impeached Former Judge — To voters in Florida's 23rd District, Democrat Alcee Hastings is their representative in the House. They first elected him by 59 percent of the vote in 1992 and subsequently have returned him to Congress by margins ranging from 73 percent to 100 percent.
Sebastian Mallaby / Washington Post:
A Fix for Social Security? — How Personal Accounts Could Please Both Sides — The next six months could be a productive time for economic policy. After a wasted 2005-06 cycle, in which the Bush administration approached entitlement reform too confidently and Democrats refused to talk, both sides may return to the table.
Discussion:
Brad DeLong's Semi …, Political Animal, Ezra Klein, Beat the Press, The Mahablog, Angry Bear and Atlantic Free Press
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Matthew Yglesias:
Both/And Not Either/Or — With regard to the split between the Economic Policy Institute's populists and the Hamilton Project's centrists, I would hope that both sides of this debate would see that they need each other. On issue after issue, there's simply no way you're going to build a constituency …
Discussion:
Eschaton
Haaretz:
Erekat: Despite violation, truce can and must hold — By Haaretz Service and News Agencies — Palestinian lawmaker Saeb Erekat on Monday condemned a Qassam rocket strike on Israel from Gaza earlier in the day, but said that the day-old cease-fire between Israel and the Palestinians "can work, and I believe we have to make it work."
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The Blotter:
U.S. Embassy Asks Bush Twins to Leave Country — Joe Goldman and Rhonda Schwartz Report: — Amid a growing barrage of front-page headlines, U.S. embassy officials "strongly suggested" President Bush's twin daughters, Jenna and Barbara Bush, cut short their trip to Buenos Aires because of security issues …
Jeff Goldstein / protein wisdom:
Willful Suspension of Disbelief, redux — From Curt at Flopping Aces comes the news many of us quietly expected: Centcom has confirmed that Capt. Jamil Hussein, the primary source for the recent kerosene mosque murder reports—and for a whole host of reports of Shia massacres recounted by the AP …
Discussion:
A Blog For All, Flopping Aces, Sister Toldjah, The Anchoress, NewsBusters.org and Wizbang
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Josh Gerstein / New York Sun:
Rep. Frank Accuses Fox News Host of Bias — Following in President Clinton's footsteps, a prominent Democratic congressman yesterday accused a Fox News anchor of conducting a skewed interview designed to make Democrats look bad. — "I've got to say, Chris, you have an odd view of balance …
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Bloomberg:
Ahmadinejad Predicts Collapse of Israel, U.S., U.K. (Update1) — Nov. 26 (Bloomberg) — Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad predicted the collapse of Israel, the U.S. and Britain, attacking what he called their ``oppressive behavior.'' — ``The Zionist regime is on a steep downhill towards collapse …
David Paul Kuhn / Washington Post:
The Gospel According to Jim Wallis — For Democrats to win back the White House, they may well have to rely on the power of the Almighty. And it's not Bill Clinton. — JIM WALLIS IS PREACHING ABOUT A BIBLE TORN APART. Wallis tells the crowd at the Seattle Pacific University chapel …
Michael Wilson / New York Times:
50 Shots Fired, and the Experts Offer a Theory — It is known in police parlance as "contagious shooting" — gunfire that spreads among officers who believe that they, or their colleagues, are facing a threat. It spreads like germs, like laughter, or fear. An officer fires, so his colleagues do, too.
Independent:
Litvinenko: police probe claims he may have killed himself — Detectives investigating the death of Alexander Litvinenko were last night examining the possibility that the former spy killed himself to discredit Vladimir Putin. — Increasing concerns over the reliability …
Joan Vennochi / Boston Globe:
Romney's dance to the right — IT'S LIKE turning a ballerina into a right-leaning elephant. — For more than a decade, Mitt Romney has been dancing around some hot-button social issues. Now, he is running hard to the right to position himself for the 2008 presidential contest.
Neil Johnson / TBO.com:
Hurricane Predictions Off Track As Tranquil Season Wafts Away — More from this channel: — This feature requires the Macromedia Flash Plugin. Please visit http://www.macromedia.com/go/ getflashplayer to download this plugin. — It was not the hurricane season we expected, thank you.
Discussion:
Townhall.com Blog's …, Blogs for Bush, Think Progress, Centerfield, Outside The Beltway, PoliPundit.com, Tim Blair and Don Surber
Josh Gerstein / New York Sun:
Rangel Adopts the Logic of Kerry's 'Joke' — Rep. Charles Rangel has adopted Senator Kerry's "botched joke" about unsuccessful young people ending up in the military — only Mr. Rangel is not joking. — "If a young fellow has an option of having a decent career, or joining the Army to fight in Iraq …
Ben Stein / New York Times:
In Class Warfare, Guess Which Class Is Winning — NOT long ago, I had the pleasure of a lengthy meeting with one of the smartest men on the planet, Warren E. Buffett, the chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, in his unpretentious offices in Omaha. We talked of many things that, I hope, will inspire me for years to come.
Discussion:
The Corner, The American Scene, Blogs for Bush, Outside The Beltway, Chronicle of the Conspiracy and The Sideshow
John Fund / Opinion Journal:
Better Late Than Never — Two Republicans take a stand against profligate spending. — It's been years since federal agencies have screamed this loudly about fiscal discipline being imposed on them. GOP Sens. Tom Coburn of Oklahoma and Jim DeMint of South Carolina have decided to take a stand …
Louis Uchitelle / New York Times:
Lure of Great Wealth Affects Career Choices — A decade into the practice of medicine, still striving to become "a well regarded physician-scientist," Robert H. Glassman concluded that he was not making enough money. So he answered an ad in the New England Journal of Medicine from a business consulting firm hiring doctors.
Matea Gold / Los Angeles Times:
The gloves come off — Keith Olbermann's anti-Bush views have driven up the ratings of his MSNBC show. — THE Democrats may have wrested back control of power in Congress, but that hasn't quieted the ire of Keith Olbermann. — Last week, he delivered one of his trademark blistering critiques …
Pam Belluck / New York Times:
A G.O.P. Breed Loses Its Place in New England — It was a species as endemic to New England as craggy seascapes and creamy clam chowder: the moderate Yankee Republican. — Dignified in demeanor, independent in ideology and frequently blue in blood, they were politicians in the mold …
USA Today:
Democratic gains in suburbs spell trouble for GOP — WASHINGTON — Democrats made large gains in suburbia in this month's elections, pushing Republican turf to the outer edges of major population centers in a trend that could signal trouble for the GOP, an analysis shows.