Top Items:
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
Republicans Halt Ethics Legislation — Senate Republicans scuttled broad legislation last night to curtail lobbyists' influence and tighten congressional ethics rules, refusing to let the bill pass without a vote on an unrelated measure that would give President Bush virtual line-item-veto power.
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Robert Bluey / Examiner:
How bloggers took on Harry Reid and won on earmark reform — WASHINGTON - In ways both big and small, bloggers are changing how business is done on Capitol Hill. — Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., learned firsthand last week the effect bloggers can have on public policy when he was handed …
Stephen Farrell / Times of London:
Give us guns - and troops can go, says Iraqi leader — Listen to the interview with Nouri al-Maliki — America's refusal to give Baghdad's security forces sufficient guns and equipment has cost a great number of lives, the Iraqi Prime Minister said yesterday.
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Joshua Partlow / Washington Post:
Maliki Stresses Urgency In Arming Iraqi Forces — Need for U.S. Troops Could Drop 'Dramatically' — The Iraqi government's need for American troops would "dramatically go down" in three to six months if the United States accelerated the process of equipping and arming Iraq's security forces …
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report, On Deadline, Angry Bear, Shakespeare's Sister and Tennessee Guerilla Women
Qassim Abdul-Zahra / Associated Press:
Iraqi PM: 400 Shiite fighters detained
Iraqi PM: 400 Shiite fighters detained
Discussion:
On Deadline
Brett Arends / Boston Herald:
McCain no longer rocks in Granite State — As Mitt, Hillary, Barack and a dozen others jump into the presidential stampede, something interesting is happening in New Hampshire. — For seven years, conventional wisdom has said that the state's pivotal independent voters would line …
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Jimmy Carter / Washington Post:
A New Chance for Peace? — I am concerned that public discussion of my book "Palestine Peace Not Apartheid" has been diverted from the book's basic proposals: that peace talks be resumed after six years of delay and that the tragic persecution of Palestinians be ended.
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Patricia Sullivan / Washington Post:
Newspaper Columnist Art Buchwald Dies at 81 — Art Buchwald, 81, the newspaper humor columnist for more than a half-century who found new comic material in the issues that come up at the end of life, died of kidney failure last night at his son's home in Washington, his family announced today.
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Richard Severo / New York Times:
Art Buchwald, 81, Columnist and Humorist Who Delighted in the Absurd — Art Buchwald, who poked fun at the follies of the rich, the famous and the powerful for half a century as the most widely read newspaper humorist of his time, died Wednesday night in Washington.
Discussion:
The Mahablog
New York Times:
Court to Oversee U.S. Wiretapping in Terror Cases — The Bush administration, in a surprise reversal, said on Wednesday that it had agreed to give a secret court jurisdiction over the National Security Agency's wiretapping program and would end its practice of eavesdropping without warrants on Americans suspected of ties to terrorists.
Discussion:
USA Today, Slate, Bloomberg, TPMmuckraker, The Volokh Conspiracy, The Moderate Voice, Outside The Beltway, Defense Tech, Right Wing Nut House, Balkinization, The Carpetbagger Report, PoliBlog (TM), CorrenteWire, Brilliant at Breakfast, Think Progress, Unclaimed Territory, Confederate Yankee, Daily Kos, PBD, Reason Magazine, Shakespeare's Sister, The Heretik, Patterico's Pontifications, Kiko's House, Captain's Quarters, Sister Toldjah, Washington Post, White House and The Democratic Daily
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Peter Baker / Washington Post:
Bush Retreats on Use of Executive Power — Allowing Court's Role in Surveillance Is Latest Step Back — President Bush's decision to submit his warrantless-surveillance program to the jurisdiction of a special intelligence court represents the latest step back from the expansive interpretation …
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Congressional Procession of Iraq Proposals Likely to Lead Nowhere — "You cannot run a war by committee," Vice President Cheney said over the weekend. — Oh? Just watch them. — Lawmakers were introducing Iraq legislation at a mad pace yesterday, at one point in the afternoon scheduling news conferences in half-hour intervals.
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Heidi Przybyla / Bloomberg:
Bush Faces Deepening War Opposition, Demand for Congress to Act — Jan. 18 (Bloomberg) — President George W. Bush failed to rally public support with his nationally televised speech announcing plans to send more soldiers to Iraq, as most Americans say they want Congress to find a way to stop the troop increase.
ArmsControlWonk:
Chinese Test ASAT? — I noticed this blurb on SEESAT today: … I've been hearing the same murmurings—and my sources tell me that a major defense publication is working on the story. So, I suppose it is time to mention what is now an open secret inside the US defense community.
Ryan Keith / Associated Press:
Obama's Past Offers Ammo for Critics — SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama may have a lot of explaining to do. — He voted against requiring medical care for aborted fetuses who survive. He supported allowing retired police officers to carry concealed weapons …
Ali Akbar Dareini / Associated Press:
Iran's discontent with Ahmadinejad grows — TEHRAN, Iran - Prices for vegetables have tripled in the past month, housing prices have doubled since last summer — and as costs have gone up, so has Iranians' discontent with hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his focus on confrontation with the West.
Lizette Alvarez / New York Times:
Speaking Chic to Power — LAUDING someone for their style on Capitol Hill is a lot like celebrating the best surfer on Florida's Gulf Coast — it's all relative, and some would argue irrelevant. Washington has never embraced fashion (nor, for that matter, has the fashion world embraced Washington), and for understandable reasons.
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
Time Inc. Lays Off More Than 250 — Time Inc. began laying off more than 250 people today at its top magazines, including its most profitable title, People, which said it was shutting down its Washington, Miami and Chicago bureaus entirely. — Employees in those bureaus said they were …
Jonathan E. Kaplan / The Hill:
Van Hollen and Dean bury hatchet — Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), the new chief election strategist for the House Democrats, welcomed Democratic Party Chairman Howard Dean to his office Tuesday for a "jovial" meeting in which the two pledged to work together during the 2008 election cycle.