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Terence Hunt / Associated Press:
Bush accepts Bolton's U.N. resignation — WASHINGTON - Unable to win Senate confirmation, U.N. Ambassador John Bolton will step down when his temporary appointment expires within weeks, the White House said Monday. — Bolton's nomination has languished in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee …
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Washington Post:
John Bolton Resigns as U.S. Ambassador to U.N. — President Bush today accepted the resignation of John R. Bolton as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, expressing deep disappointment that "a handful" of senators had blocked his confirmation last year. — Bolton, 58, submitted …
Bloomberg:
U.S. Envoy Khalilzad to Leave Iraq, Officials Say (Update1) — Dec. 4 (Bloomberg) — Zalmay Khalilzad, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, plans to leave his post and will be replaced by Ryan Crocker, the current ambassador to Pakistan, according to two officials familiar with the matter.
Christine Hauser / New York Times:
Bolton to Leave Post as U.S. Envoy to U.N. — President Bush today ended his efforts to have John R. Bolton confirmed by the Senate as United Nations ambassador and said Mr. Bolton will leave the position, which he has held for the past year after being chosen between Congressional terms, this month.
BBC:
Anger at UN chief's Iraq comments — Iraq's national security adviser says he is shocked by UN head Kofi Annan's suggestion that the average Iraqi is worse off than under Saddam Hussein. — Mouwaffaq al-Rubaie also accused the UN of shying away from its responsibility towards the Iraqi people.
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Evan Thomas / Newsweek:
So Now What, Mr. President? — Folks used to wonder why he didn't push into Baghdad. Baker doesn't hear that question much anymore. — George W. Bush was doing everything he doesn't usually like to do. He was traveling in foreign lands (when Bush campaigns, he likes to fly home every night to sleep in his own bed).
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Sheryl Gay Stolberg / New York Times:
Bush Meets With Rival of Iraqi Leader — President Bush met today with one of the most powerful Shiite leaders in Iraq — a political rival of Prime Minister Nouri Kamal al-Maliki — and urged him to "reject the extremists that are trying to stop the advance of this young democracy."
Sebastian Mallaby / Washington Post:
A Split in the GOP Tent — Republicans are good at reinvention. They have appealed to voters' dark side (Nixon's Southern strategy) as well as to their sunny side (Reagan's "Morning in America"). They have skipped from anti-government populism (Newt Gingrich and the leave-us-alone coalition) …
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Cato Institute:
Liberaltarians — Brink Lindsey is vice president for research and author of The Age of Abundance: How Prosperity Transformed America's Politics and Culture, which will be published this spring. — The conservative movement—and, with it, the GOP—is in disarray.
Hope Yen / Associated Press:
Breyer says justices must protect minorities' rights — WASHINGTON — Justice Stephen G. Breyer says the Supreme Court must promote the political rights of minorities and look beyond the Constitution's text when necessary to ensure that "no one gets too powerful."
Discussion:
PoliPundit.com
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George Russell / Fox News:
NORTH KOREA SUSPECTED OF COLLECTING MILLIONS IN REINSURANCE FRAUD — NEW YORK — The cash-strapped regime of North Korea, which has a worldwide reputation for its criminal dealings in weapons sales, drugs and near-perfect counterfeit U.S. $100 bills, may have found a new illicit source …
Vanity Fair:
Trapped in the Closet — Mark Foley's ambition to be a politician became the family dream. He was always in a hurry. His doting parents had no problem with his dropping out of Palm Beach Junior College at age 20; they helped him open a diner in downtown Lake Worth and turn it into the platform for his grandiose goals.
Seth Borenstein / Associated Press:
NASA Says It Will Set Up Polar Moon Camp — NASA announced Monday it will establish an international base camp on one of the moon's poles, permanently staffing it by 2024, four years after astronauts return to the moon. — It is a sweeping departure from the Apollo moon missions of the 1960s …
Julie Jordan / People.com:
Gwyneth Paltrow: I'm Proud to Be American — Gwyneth Paltrow is "deeply upset" over stories claiming she made anti-American remarks, and tells PEOPLE exclusively that she never said anything against her native country. — "First of all I feel so lucky to be American.
Greg Tinti / The Political Pit Bull:
Video: Comedy Central Plans Cartoon Mocking Bush Administration — Oy. … Honestly, I don't have a problem with political satire, even when it mocks the Bush administration or Republicans (SNL's skit on Rice's confirmation is one of my favorites), but I do have one requirement: it has to be funny.
Michael Barone / Real Clear Politics:
Bush Sticks to His Guns — While George W. Bush's many critics and detractors portray him as facing the same dilemma as Lyndon Johnson in Vietnam, Bush himself seems determined to proceed the way Harry Truman did in Korea — or, as some might put it, as Winston Churchill did after Dunkirk.