Top Items:
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Tim Russert, on The Uncomfortable Side of a Question — From the moment he hobbled into the wood-paneled courtroom on a single crutch from an ankle injury, Tim Russert seemed very different from the familiar television figure of Sunday morning combat. — He was careful, sober and subdued.
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Washington Post:
Russert Says He Didn't Tell Libby About CIA Officer — Journalist Says He Learned Plame's Role After Leak — Tim Russert, the Washington bureau chief for NBC News, yesterday swiftly and firmly rejected I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby's assertion that the journalist revealed the identity …
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
Russert and Me — I was the most surprised person at the Scooter Libby trial yesterday.
Russert and Me — I was the most surprised person at the Scooter Libby trial yesterday.
Arianna Huffington / The Huffington Post:
The Libby Trial: Why Did Tim Russert Fight So Hard to Avoid Telling …
The Libby Trial: Why Did Tim Russert Fight So Hard to Avoid Telling …
Discussion:
Firedoglake, Hullabaloo, Maine Web Report, JustOneMinute, Crooks and Liars, Kesher Talk and The Strata-Sphere
Shailagh Murray / Washington Post:
7 GOP Senators Back War Debate — Lawmakers Had Blocked Action on Troop Resolution — Senate Republicans who earlier this week helped block deliberations on a resolution opposing President Bush's new troop deployments in Iraq changed course yesterday and vowed to use every tactic at their disposal to ensure a full and open debate.
Discussion:
Unclaimed Territory, Captain's Quarters, Associated Press, The Washington Note, The Left Coaster, PoliBlog (TM), Decision '08, The Moderate Voice, Angry Bear, The Carpetbagger Report, DownWithTyranny!, Blue Crab Boulevard, AMERICAblog, Power Line, Jules Crittenden, State of the Day, Middle Earth Journal and The Heretik
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Jeff Zeleny / New York Times:
House Sets Path for Iraq Vote, but Must Decide What to Say — As the House prepares for three days of debate next week on Iraq, Democratic leaders sought Wednesday to reconcile deep differences within the party in order to shape a symbolic resolution denouncing President Bush's troop buildup plan.
Newsweek:
Maybe the Duck Isn't So Lame — Bush finds a way to win, or at least a way not to lose, a crucial showdown on Iraq. — Maybe he's not such a lame duck after all. — President Bush has been on the run since the midterm election cost his party control of both chambers of Congress.
Washington Times:
Pentagon limits Pelosi jet size — The Department of Defense yesterday sent a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that puts limits on the size of the plane she may use to travel across the country and restricts the guests she can bring, The Washington Times has learned.
Discussion:
Right Wing News
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New York Times:
Mormon Candidate Braces for Religion as Issue — As he begins campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination, Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor, is facing a threshold issue: Will his religion — he is a Mormon — be a big obstacle to winning the White House?
Ryan Grim / The Politico:
Bush Wants Funding Jump for Anti-Drug Ads Rated as Useless — President Bush has proposed a significant jump in funding for an anti-drug advertising campaign that government-funded research shows is at best useless and at worst has increased drug use among some teens.
New York Times:
Copter Crashes Suggest Change in Iraqi Tactics — With two more helicopter crashes near Baghdad, including a Marine transport crash on Wednesday that killed seven people, the number of helicopters that have gone down in Iraq over the past three weeks rose to six.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice, The Heretik, Talking Points Memo, The Carpetbagger Report and The Daily Background
Washington Post:
Veterans Group Speaks Out on War — Congressional Democrats Let VoteVets.org Talk for Them, Bluntly — When Iraq war veteran Jon Soltz accused Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) of "aiding the enemy," the Democratic senators gathered around him yesterday did not wince.
Discussion:
AMERICAblog
Jim Lindgren / The Volokh Conspiracy:
MANY 1967-72 SPITTING INCIDENTS ARE DOCUMENTED IN THE PRESS. Hundreds of Vietnam-era veterans have publicly claimed in recent decades that they were spat on by citizens or anti-war protesters because of their military status either before they went to Vietnam, on leave, or after their return from overseas.
Matthew Yglesias:
Jonah Goldberg Day! — Two years ago today, Jonah Goldberg threw down the following challenge to Juan Cole: … Since Goldberg enjoys throwing a little smear-job in with his punditry, he also offered this: … Got it. So we have a prediction, along with the insinuation that Professor Cole …
Elizabeth Williamson / Washington Post:
Railroad Firms Bringing Aboard Lawmakers' Lobbyist Relatives — The railroad industry is hiring relatives of Capitol Hill lawmakers and staff members as it faces tighter federal safety legislation, employing a tactic untouched by the Democrats' new ethics proposals: lobbying by congressional family members.
James Taranto / Opinion Journal:
Reckless Caution — Edwards vs. Clinton: Indecision 2008. — When NBC's Tim Russert asked John Edwards on Sunday if he, as president, would accept a nuclear-armed Iran, the silver-tongued lawyer got tongue-tied: "I—there's no answer to that question at this moment.