Top Items:
Martin Arnold / Financial Times:
Defeated Socialists search for scapegoats — Let the finger-pointing begin. Ségolène Royal's defeat on Sunday night left the French Socialist party in disarray and searching for someone to blame. There is hardly a shortage of scapegoats. — It is the party's third consecutive presidential defeat.
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Craig S. Smith / New York Times:
Sarkozy Wins the Chance to Prove His Critics Wrong — Arrogant, brutal, an authoritarian demagogue, a "perfect Iago": the president-elect of France has been called a lot of unpleasant things in recent months and now has five years to prove his critics wrong.
Discussion:
NewsBusters.org
John Fund / Opinion Journal:
L'Adulte — Can Sarkozy reform France? — Conservative Nikolas Sarkozy's comfortable victory over Socialist Ségolène Royal in France's presidential race may that indicate Europe's slowest-growing major economy is finally ready for some change.
Angela Charlton / Associated Press:
Nicolas Sarkozy wins French presidency — PARIS - Nicolas Sarkozy, a blunt and uncompromising pro-American conservative, was elected president of France Sunday with a mandate to chart a new course for an economically sluggish nation struggling to incorporate immigrants and their children.
MSNBC:
Nicolas Sarkozy elected French president — Socialist Royal concedes; U.S. 'can count on our friendship,' new leader says — French President-elect Nicolas Sarkozy is cheered Sunday by supporters at the Gaveau concert hall in Paris, shortly after polls closed. — NBC video — At the polls in France
New York Times:
French Voters Pick Sarkozy to Be President; Turnout High — Nicolas Sarkozy, an immigrant's son who had the French presidency in his sights for three decades, won a decisive victory in the election on Sunday, keeping the right in power for the next five years.
Discussion:
Charles Bremner, Publius Pundit, theGarance.com, Matthew Yglesias, The Australian and Pajamas Media
Washington Post:
Sarkozy Wins, Vows to Restore Pride in France — Nicolas Sarkozy, the combative son of a Hungarian immigrant, was elected president of France on Sunday, promising a new generation of leadership to transform the country, restore its self-respect and reinvigorate ties with the United States and Europe.
Discussion:
Fausta's blog
Angelique Chrisafis / Guardian:
Cheering crowds hail Sarkozy's triumph — Nicolas Sarkozy was last night handed a mandate to change France after a massive turnout in one of the most divisive presidential election campaigns in the country's history. — As rioting broke out at Bastille, on the other side of central Paris …
Glenn Reynolds / Instapundit.com:
SARKOZY WINS: Substantial margin, huge turnout. — UPDATE: More here:
SARKOZY WINS: Substantial margin, huge turnout. — UPDATE: More here:
Matthew Campbell / Times of London:
French suburbs threaten riotous dawn for the reign of Sarkozy
French suburbs threaten riotous dawn for the reign of Sarkozy
Discussion:
Tim Blair
Charles Bremner / Times of London: There'll be a new, hands-on style of presidency . . . and a fair bit of pain
Roger Cohen / International Herald Tribune:
Sarkozy pledges strong break with the past
Sarkozy pledges strong break with the past
Discussion:
Andrew Bolt
Hugh Hewitt / Hugh Hewitt's TownHall Blog:
Newspaper Suicide: The Star Tribune Kills Lileks' Column — Let's see. Your circulation is crashing. The value of your paper has plummeted. Everyone in the industry recognizes that the the future is online, and most realize that the byline has become the brand and that writers …
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See-Dubya / Hot Air:
Lileks could use a hand — James Lileks is a funny guy and a damn fine writer. I've been reading him at Lileks.com since 2002 and am amazed that he hasn't been snapped up by a major national paper. For a long time he did have an indispensible political column with Newhouse News Service …
Discussion:
JunkYardBlog
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
CBS's Late Bloomer — NEW YORK—Byron Pitts was chatting with students at a Harlem charter school the day before a recent visit by President Bush when the CBS correspondent had a realization: They viewed him as just another empty suit who couldn't possibly understand their problems. Little did they know.
Joel Garreau / Washington Post:
Bots on The Ground — In the Field of Battle (Or Even Above It), Robots Are a Soldier's Best Friend — The most effective way to find and destroy a land mine is to step on it. — This has bad results, of course, if you're a human. But not so much if you're a robot and have as many legs …
Real Cities:
Congress considers broadening Justice Department inquiry — WASHINGTON - Congressional investigators are beginning to focus on accusations that a top civil rights official at the Justice Department illegally hired lawyers based on their political affiliations, especially for sensitive voting rights jobs.
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Sonya Geis / Washington Post:
Flavoring Suspected in Illness — Calif. Considers Banning Chemical Used in Microwave Popcorn — SOUTH GATE, Calif. — She was once in constant motion; her co-workers compared her to a roadrunner because of the way she darted around the workplace. But now Irma Ortiz sits at the edge of her couch …
Discussion:
The Pump Handle
Los Angeles Times:
Bring them home — Iraqis need political reconciliation, not occupation; and U.S. troops shouldn't referee a civil war. — WHATEVER THE future holds, the United States has not "lost" and cannot "lose" Iraq. It was never ours in the first place. And however history will judge the war …
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MySanAntonio.com:
Bob Richter: Gore sure didn't want coverage, but here's why he's getting it — Al Gore's speech Saturday at the American Institute of Architects convention was closed to the media, but you can read about it in today's Express-News on Page 1B. How we cracked the former vice president's iron curtain …
Discussion:
The Democratic Daily