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White House says Rove relayed complaints about prosecutors — WASHINGTON - The White House acknowledged on Sunday that presidential adviser Karl Rove served as a conduit for complaints to the Justice Department about federal prosecutors who were later fired for what critics charge were partisan political reasons.
Discussion:
The Next Hurrah, Booman Tribune, MyDD, Brilliant at Breakfast, The Heretik, Heath Haussamen … and Atlantic Free Press
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Opinion Journal:
Meltdown at Justice — Incompetence is compromising presidential power. — Just when President Bush seemed to have beaten back the Congressional defeatists on Iraq, along comes his own Justice Department to undermine some hard-won antiterror policy gains.
Josh Gerstein / New York Sun:
Gonzales Said To Stonewall a GOP Query — Probe of Leaks Are at Center of Inquiries From the Right — The top Republican on the House's main investigative committee, Rep. Thomas Davis of Virginia, is charging the Justice Department with stonewalling his inquiries about the FBI's assertion …
Dan Eggen / Washington Post:
Justice Official 'Horrified' Phone Call Was Seen as Threat
Justice Official 'Horrified' Phone Call Was Seen as Threat
Discussion:
TalkLeft
Los Angeles Times:
Do we really need a Gen. Pelosi? — Congress can cut funding for Iraq, but it shouldn't micromanage the war. — AFTER WEEKS OF internal strife, House Democrats have brought forth their proposal for forcing President Bush to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq by 2008.
Michael Barone / Real Clear Politics:
Berger & Libby: A Tale of Two Crimes — "History will be kind to me," Winston Churchill once said, "for I intend to write it." — Indeed, he did. His multiple-volume histories of the two world wars are still widely read, though discounted by professional historians as incomplete and in some ways misleading.
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Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
Early Primary Rush Upends '08 Campaign Plans — The trickle of states moving their 2008 presidential primaries to Feb. 5 has turned into an avalanche, forcing all the presidential campaigns to reconsider every aspect of their nominating strategy — where to compete, how to spend money …
Discussion:
PoliBlog (TM)
MSNBC:
Halliburton to move its head office to Dubai — By David Wighton in New York and Simeon Kerr in Dubai — Halliburton, the oil services company once run by Dick Cheney, the US vice-president, on Sunday provided further evidence that the focus of many big US companies is shifting overseas …
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David W. Jones / Washington Times:
Week in Review — Our reporters get their stories from a number of places, but much of the "meat and potatoes" coverage comes from the daily briefings at the White House, Pentagon and State Department. — These events, usually about an hour in length, permit the reporters to seek official comment …
The Australian:
Native American trackers to hunt bin Laden — WASHINGTON: An elite group of Native American trackers is joining the hunt for terrorists crossing Afghanistan's borders. — The unit, the Shadow Wolves, was recruited from several tribes, including the Navajo, Sioux, Lakota and Apache.
Los Angeles Times:
Conservatives balk over Giuliani's judges — His picks as New York mayor raise doubts over whether he'd put 'strict constructionists' on the high court. — WASHINGTON — Rudolph W. Giuliani, in an effort to temper his support for abortion rights and his other socially liberal stances …
Fred Hiatt / Washington Post:
Who's to Blame for Russia? — Who lost Russia? As the world's biggest country backslides ever more quickly into authoritarianism, the answer you hear increasingly is: the United States. — Curiously, you hear it both from Russians, who simultaneously deny that anything bad has happened …
Discussion:
Matthew Yglesias
Sebastian Rotella / Los Angeles Times:
France's Chirac bows out, and the race is on — Long a fixture in French politics, he confirms he won't seek a third term as president. A close contest to succeed him is anticipated. — PARIS — Setting the stage for a suspenseful presidential race, French President Jacques Chirac announced Sunday …
Telegraph:
Scientists threatened for 'climate denial' — Scientists who questioned mankind's impact on climate change have received death threats and claim to have been shunned by the scientific community. — They say the debate on global warming has been "hijacked" by a powerful alliance of politicians …
Anne E. Kornblut / Washington Post:
Obama, Clinton Sparring Early — CLINTON, Iowa — Standing in front of a large banner that blared "Clinton," surrounded by students in Clinton Community College sweat shirts, Sen. Barack Obama offhandedly mentioned the obvious. — "Hillary, you know, she's interesting," Obama said …
Cenk Uygur / The Huffington Post:
Fox Has Jumped the Shark — I once fell asleep early on a Monday night in Philly and missed an important Monday Night Football match-up between the Eagles and the Giants. Next morning when I asked a construction worker on the street who had won, he said, "Whatcha been livin' in a box?!"
Omaha World-Herald:
Hagel hasn't tipped his '08 hand — A tight-lipped Sen. Chuck Hagel arrived in Omaha from Washington on Sunday afternoon and prepared to make what could be the biggest political announcement of his life. — Some Nebraska Republicans speculated that Hagel appeared ready to jump …
Examiner:
AFL-CIO bullying Colorado on Dems' 2008 convention — WASHINGTON - National AFL officials seem determined to remove any remaining doubt in anybody's mind that Gov. Bill Ritter did the right thing in February by vetoing Colorado House bill 1072. That hurriedly approved measure repealed …
Examiner:
Yeas & Nays: Monday, Mar. 12 — WASHINGTON - Jeff Dufour and Patrick Gavin cover people, power and politics in the beltway each weekday. Email them at yan@dcexaminer.com . — Get ready for the V.P.'s bio — It won't be long now before you can peek inside the life of that International Man of Mystery: Vice President Dick Cheney.