Top Items:
Dan Eggen / Washington Post:
Official: Cheney Urged Wiretaps — Stand-In for Ashcroft Alleges Interference — Vice President Cheney told Justice Department officials that he disagreed with their objections to a secret surveillance program during a high-level White House meeting in March 2004, a former senior Justice official told senators yesterday.
RELATED:
Roy Sekoff / Huffington Post:
Obama To Beat Clinton In Second Quarter Fundraising — The Huffington Post has learned from sources close to both candidates that the Obama campaign will surpass the Clinton campaign in second quarter fundraising. "It's a matter of pure mathematics," an Obama fundraiser told HuffPost.
Discussion:
Drudge Report, Taegan Goddard's …, Comments From Left Field, The Atlantic Online and AMERICAblog
RELATED:
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
Immigrant Measure Survives Challenges — The plan to overhaul the nation's immigration system survived its most serious challenges yesterday, when the Senate defeated amendments to disqualify hundreds of thousands of illegal immigrants from legalization and to extend visas to hundreds …
RELATED:
Charles Babington / Associated Press:
Immigration Bill in Doubt After Vote — WASHINGTON (AP) - A fragile compromise that would legalize millions of unlawful immigrants risks coming unraveled after the Senate voted early Thursday to place a five-year limit on a program meant to provide U.S. employers with 200,000 temporary foreign workers annually.
Discussion:
Don Surber, The Strata-Sphere, Macsmind, Reuters, Bluey Blog, Iowa Voice and Agence France Presse
The Blotter:
Document: Iran Caught Red-Handed Shipping Arms to Taliban — Brian Ross and Christopher Isham Report: — NATO officials say they have caught Iran red-handed, shipping heavy arms, C4 explosives and advanced roadside bombs to the Taliban for use against NATO forces, in what the officials …
RELATED:
Cernig / The Newshoggers:
Cheney's Office Recycling The War Hype
Cheney's Office Recycling The War Hype
Discussion:
The Gun Toting Liberal™
Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
When Pardons Turn Political — President Bush has pardoned 113 people during his presidency, including a Tennessee bootlegger and a Mississippi odometer cheat. — But none has drawn the public scrutiny, nor posed the same political challenge, as the candidate that many conservatives hope …
RELATED:
Peter Wallsten / Los Angeles Times:
Libby pardon poses quandary for GOP hopefuls
Libby pardon poses quandary for GOP hopefuls
Discussion:
New York Sun
Raphael G. Satter / Associated Press:
Report: 39 secretly imprisoned by U.S. — LONDON - A coalition of human rights groups has drawn up a list of 39 terror suspects it believes are being secretly imprisoned by U.S. authorities and published their names in a report released Thursday. — Information about the so-called …
Discussion:
Liberty Street
RELATED:
Scott Shane / New York Times:
Rights Groups Call for End to Secret Detentions
Rights Groups Call for End to Secret Detentions
Discussion:
Rook's Rant
Marc Santora / New York Times:
Giuliani and McCain to Skip Straw Poll in Iowa — Bucking a ritual for Republican presidential candidates, Rudolph W. Giuliani and Senator John McCain announced Wednesday that they would skip participation in what has been a significant early test of candidate strength, the straw poll in Ames, Iowa, this summer.
RELATED:
David Yepsen / DesMoinesRegister.com Blogs:
Rudy and McCain: Straws to the Wind.
Rudy and McCain: Straws to the Wind.
Discussion:
Betsy's Page, Michael P.F. van der Galiën, The American Mind, Iowa Voice and Des Moines Register
Nicholas Wade / New York Times:
Biologists Make Skin Cells Work Like Stem Cells — In a surprising advance that could sidestep the ethical debates surrounding stem cell biology, researchers have come much closer to a major goal of regenerative medicine, the conversion of a patient's cells into specialized tissues that might replace those lost to disease.
RELATED:
newsweek:
I'm a McCain Man, Through and Through—Unless the Democrats Nominate Obama. Then, Forget the McCain Thing — Barack Obama cultivates an image as a politician whose appeal reaches across party lines. But even he might be surprised to learn that one of his biggest admirers works for GOP Sen. John McCain …
Daniel Henninger / Opinion Journal:
To Be an American — For many, illegal workers are a rebuke to dutiful citizenship. — People tend to regard the idea of "democratic" politics with high reverence, when in practice it consists most of the time of the right of any citizen to describe one's opponent as an idiot, or worse.
Discussion:
Heading Right
Paul Kane / Washington Post:
Sen. Stevens Told to Keep Records for Graft Probe — Sen. Ted Stevens, the longest-serving Republican in the Senate, disclosed in an interview that the FBI asked him to preserve records as part of a widening investigation into Alaskan political corruption that has touched his son and ensnared …
Robert D. Novak / Washington Post:
A Contender's Worn-Out Welcome — The dynamic performance by John Edwards in Sunday's Democratic presidential debate, assailing his competitors for the nomination, got high marks from political reporters, Republican politicians and left-wing activists. But not from the Democratic establishment.
David D. Kirkpatrick / New York Times:
Campaign Funds for Alaskan; Road Aid to Florida — It is no secret that campaign contributions sometimes lead to lucrative official favors. Rarely, though, are the tradeoffs quite as obvious as in the twisted case of Coconut Road. — The road, a stretch of pavement near Fort Myers …
Joe Klein / Time:
Beware the Bloggers' Bile — A strange thing happened to me the day the House of Representatives voted to pass the Iraq-war-funding bill. Congresswoman Jane Harman of California called as the debate was taking place. "Look, I would love to have cast a vote against Bush on this," she told me.
Discussion:
QandO, TPMCafe blogs, The Impolitic, Shakesville, TalkLeft, The Moderate Voice and Michael P.F. van der Galiën
John Bresnahan / The Politico:
Lynne Cheney, Susan Thomas floated as possible replacements for late Sen. Craig Thomas — Lynne Cheney, wife of Vice President Dick Cheney, is being floated in Senate GOP leadership circles as a possible replacement for the late Sen. Craig Thomas (R-Wyo.), who died Monday night.