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9:15 AM ET, January 4, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Mark Mazzetti / New York Times:
Intelligence Chief Is Shifted to Deputy State Dept. Post  —  John D. Negroponte, whom President Bush installed less than two years ago as the first director of national intelligence, will soon leave his post to become the State Department's second-ranking official, administration officials said Wednesday.
RELATED:
Associated Press:
Angry Nixon vowed to 'ruin' diplomatic corps … WASHINGTON (AP) — Embittered by career diplomats during his first term, President Nixon said he wanted to "ruin the Foreign Service" before leaving office, according to newly released State Department documents.
Discussion: Macsmind
Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
Negroponte to Leave Job to Be State Dept. Deputy  —  Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has persuaded John D. Negroponte to leave his post as director of national intelligence and come to the State Department as her deputy, government officials said last night.  —  Negroponte's move would fill a crucial hole on Rice's team.
Associated Press:
Negroponte stepping aside as top spy to become deputy secretary of state
Discussion: Talking Points Memo
New York Times:
Ethics Overhaul Tops the Agenda in New Congress  —  On the brink of regaining power after 12 years, House Democrats said Wednesday that they would move immediately to try to sever ties between lawmakers and lobbyists who figured into scandals that helped Democrats win control of Congress.
RELATED:
Fox News:
SHEEHAN, IRAQ WAR PROTESTERS BREAK UP HOUSE DEMOCRATS' PRESS CONFERENCE  —  Jan. 3: Peace activist Cindy Sheehan speaks on Capitol Hill.  —  WASHINGTON — Iraq war protesters broke up a press conference by House Democrats on Wednesday with chants to bring American troops home from Iraq.
David Edwards / The Raw Story:
Cindy Sheehan, anti-war activists interrupt Democratic press conference
Washington Post:
Pelosi Walks Tightrope Enforcing Rules
Discussion: GregsOpinion.com
Deborah Sontag / New York Times:
In Padilla Wiretaps, Murky View of 'Jihad' Case  —  In 1997, as the government listened in on their phone call, Adham Hassoun, a computer programmer in Broward County, Fla., proposed a road trip to Jose Padilla, a low-wage worker there.  The excursion to Tampa would be his treat, Mr. Hassoun said …
RELATED:
Nina Totenberg / NPR:
U.S. Faces Major Hurdles in Prosecuting Padilla
Discussion: Associated Press and Daily Kos
Stephen Singer / Associated Press:
Lieberman Party Now in Hands of Critic  —  HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - The party Sen. Joe Lieberman created to mount his independent re-election campaign has been seized by one of his critics, and the secretary of state's office said Wednesday that it won't challenge the takeover.
Discussion: SOTUblog
RELATED:
Christopher Drew / New York Times:
U.S. Bars Lab From Testing Electronic Voting  —  A laboratory that has tested most of the nation's electronic voting systems has been temporarily barred from approving new machines after federal officials found that it was not following its quality-control procedures and could not document that it was conducting all the required tests.
Discussion: CorrenteWire and Prairie Weather
RELATED:
Tony Mauro / LAW.com:
Rehnquist FBI File Sheds New Light on Drug Dependence, Confirmation Battles  —  The late Chief Justice William Rehnquist's Senate confirmation battles in 1971 and 1986 were more intense and political than previously known, according to a newly released FBI file that also offers dramatic …
RELATED:
New York Sun:
Late Supreme Court Justice Hallucinated, Battled Addiction
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
George F. Will / Washington Post:
The Right Minimum Wage  —  A federal minimum wage is an idea whose time came in 1938, when public confidence in markets was at a nadir and the federal government's confidence in itself was at an apogee.  This, in spite of the fact that with 19 percent unemployment and the economy contracting …
Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush Signals Budget Accord  —  President Bush promised yesterday to produce a plan to balance the federal budget in five years and challenged lawmakers to slash their special pet projects in half next year, embracing priorities of the new Democratic leadership that will assume control of Congress today.
RELATED:
Barack Obama / Washington Post:
A Chance To Change The Game  —  This past Election Day, the American people sent a clear message to Washington: Clean up your act.  —  After a year in which too many scandals revealed the influence special interests wield over Washington, it's no surprise that so many incumbents were defeated …
James Gordon Meek / NY Daily News:
W pushes envelope on U.S. spying  —  New postal law lets Bush peek through your mail  —  WASHINGTON - President Bush has quietly claimed sweeping new powers to open Americans' mail without a judge's warrant, the Daily News has learned.  —  The President asserted his new authority …
Ginny / Chicago Boyz:
We May be Biased Toward Hawks, but We've Become Doves  —  Pinker's brief contribution to the Edge's year-end treat gives a cheerful & progresive sense of proportion.  While acknowledging our historical tendency toward cruelty and barbarism, he describes a world more dovish.
RELATED:
Fred Kaplan / Slate:
Iron Man  —  WHY BUSH STILL WON'T CHANGE HIS STRATEGY.  —  In the final paragraph of the New York Times' Jan. 2 story about the impending new Iraq strategy, President George W. Bush is quoted as telling members of the Baker-Hamilton commission that "victory" was still his goal.
Discussion: Winds of Change.NET and Redstate
John Darman / Newsweek:
What the Rudy Memo Missed  —  The Guiliani leak may be the least of his problems.  —  Rudy Giuliani is back on the front pages of the New York City tabloids, thanks to a juicy scandal straight out of junior high.  There's the misplaced binder (The New York Daily News published …
Discussion: New York Times and TalkLeft
 
 
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 More Items: 
Joel Stein / Los Angeles Times:
Have something to say? I don't care
Ann Coulter / Human Events:
The Democratic Party: A Vast Sleeper Cell
BBC:
Belarus hits Russia with oil tax
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
Brooke Hart / Business News:
NBC: Bush to call for more troops
Discussion: Pacific Views
jules crittenden:
Iran Wants War
John Podhoretz / New York Post:
SMART, BUT WRONG  —  WHY W'S FIRING GEN. CASEY
Olivier Guitta / Counterterrorism Blog:
Did Moqtada Al Sadr take part in the actual hanging of Saddam Hussein?
Discussion: Hot Air
Dominique Moïsi / Foreign Affairs:
The Clash of Emotions  —  Article preview: first 500 of 2,098 words total.
Discussion: Legal Fiction
 Earlier Items: 
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
McCain grumbles about having to build "the goddamned fence"
Faster, Please!:
The Time May Have Come  —  There is no escape from the war Iran …
Defense Tech:
THE LAW CATCHES UP TO PRIVATE MILITARIES, EMBEDS
TRex / Firedoglake:
Late Nite FDL: And They Call Us 'Unhinged', Partie Deux
James Vicini / Reuters:
FBI: Guantanamo interrogator squatted over Koran
Times of London:
Young celebrate freedom in a city where fear is still lurking
Discussion: Captain's Quarters
Digby / Hullabaloo:
The Healing Process  —  Following up on my post below …
Mike Males / New York Times:
This Is Your Brain on Drugs, Dad
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Devin Coldewey / TechCrunch:
As the NYT Tech Guild goes on strike, Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas offers the AI company's services to The NYT to help ensure election coverage is available

Joshua Benton / Nieman Lab:
Around 75% of the largest US newspapers aren't endorsing anyone for president this year, as publishers try not to annoy any sliver of their remaining customers

Alyson Krueger / New York Times:
A profile of Town & Country EIC Stellene Volandes, who is trying to keep the Hearst-owned 178-year-old magazine relevant via social media and its website

 
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