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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 …
Discussion:
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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 …
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.
Sam Hananel / Associated Press:
Brownback Moves Toward White House Bid — Republican Sen. Sam Brownback, a favorite of the religious right, said Monday he is taking the first step toward launching a bid for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination. — A vigorous abortion opponent, the Kansas senator pledged to make …
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Breaking: Bolton resigns; Update: George Mitchell on the short list? — Just across at Fox. He'll stay on until the end of his recess appointment but that's it. Not a surprise, really. — Bad things happen when you lose your majority. — Standby for updates.
White House:
President Bush Accepts Ambassador John Bolton's Resignation as U.S. Representative to the United Nations — It is with deep regret that I accept John Bolton's decision to end his service in the Administration as Permanent Representative of the United States to the United Nations when his commission expires.
Ian Williams / The Nation:
John Bolton's Greatest Hits — In a rare midterm election in which foreign policy was a major issue, it is not too much of a stretch to say that American voters put UN Ambassador John Bolton out of office. Bolton's resignation from his unconfirmed recess appointment at the UN removes …
Scott T. Paul / boltonwatch.tpmcafe.com:
BOLTON RESIGNS — CBS News is reporting that Bush has accepted Bolton's resignation.
BOLTON RESIGNS — CBS News is reporting that Bush has accepted Bolton's resignation.
Col. Oliver North / Fox News:
HYPE AND HOPE — Washington, D.C. — It all sounded …
HYPE AND HOPE — Washington, D.C. — It all sounded …
Discussion:
Townhall.com Blog's …
Lyle Denniston / SCOTUSblog:
Analysis: Schools' race experiments may be doomed — If, as seems so, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy holds the decisive vote on the constitutionality of public schools' use of race to promote integration, those experiments may well fail to pass muster in the Supreme Court.
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ACSBlog:
Guest Blogger: The Evidence is In on School Integration Efforts: Will the Supreme Court Listen? — by Amy Stuart Wells, Teachers College, Columbia University — The hundreds of social science studies cited in the Amicus briefs filed in support of the school districts in the Louisville …
Hope Yen / Associated Press:
Breyer says justices must protect minorities' rights
Breyer says justices must protect minorities' rights
Discussion:
PoliPundit.com
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).
Walter Pincus / Washington Post:
Democrats Who Opposed War Move Into Key Positions — New Committee Chairmen Had Warned of Postwar Disorder — Although given little public credit at the time, or since, many of the 126 House Democrats who spoke out and voted against the October 2002 resolution that gave President Bush authority …
Discussion:
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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) …
Discussion:
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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.
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 …
Discussion:
PrairiePundit
John Schwartz / New York Times:
After a Rush, Pace of Levee Work Downshifts — NEW ORLEANS — For months, the Army Corps of Engineers raced through the city, frantically patching broken levees and building floodgates to prepare for a hurricane season, now ended, that produced no hurricanes here.
Jim Chen / Jurisdynamics:
Honoring Norman Borlaug — This network has already lauded Norman Borlaug, the recipient of the 1970 Nobel Peace Prize. C.S. Prakash, professor of plant molecular genetics at Tuskegee University, is urging passage of H. R. 4924, the Congressional Tribute to Dr. Norman E. Borlaug Act of 2006.
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.
Lee Bandy / The State:
Biden charms local GOP — It was unlike most Columbia Rotary Club luncheons. — The speaker was U.S. Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, a likely candidate for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination. — The chief topic: the Iraq war. — The audience: predominantly Republican.
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.
Discussion:
The Superficial