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11:10 AM ET, June 7, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
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:
Rob Bluey / Bluey Blog:
Amnesty Opponents Making Progress in Senate  —  Spirits among conservative critics of the immigration bill have brightened today following several Senate votes that indicate at least 40 senators could block the bill during a cloture vote tomorrow.  —  Well-placed sources tell me that activists …
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:   An Amendment Too Far  —  All this week, Republicans have tried …
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.
RELATED:
The Politico:
Obama's quests for 'eye-popping' cash  —  Only a few months ago, political operatives were speculating whether Sen. Barack Obama could come close to Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's daunting fundraising machine.  Now Team Obama is the legend, and the question is whether the junior senator from New York can keep up.
Discussion: The Caucus and Los Angeles Times
Patrick Healy / New York Times:
Goals Are Both Met and Missed in Clinton Fund-Raising
Discussion: MSNBC and TIME
Alec MacGillis / Washington Post:
They Know How to Caucus  —  Teresa Vilmain and Other Experts in an Arcane Presidential Art  —  DES MOINES — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton had a decision to make.  After someone in her campaign leaked a memo late last month suggesting that she skip the Iowa caucuses, the New York Democrat needed …
RELATED:
Sheryl Gay Stolberg / New York Times:
Bush Defends Climate and Missile Plans  —  As leaders of the world's wealthiest democracies began their annual summit meeting today, President Bush defended his plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and tried yet again to dismiss Russian concerns over a missile defense plan, saying it is …
RELATED:
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
Discussion: Unfogged and Rook's Rant
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 …
Discussion: MSNBC and On Deadline
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.
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 …
William Otis / Washington Post:
Neither Prison Nor Pardon  —  Justice in the Libby Case Lies With Bush's Third Option  —  Scooter Libby should not be pardoned.  But his punishment — 30 months in prison, two years' probation and a $250,000 fine — is excessive.  President Bush should commute the sentence by eliminating the jail term while preserving the fine.
RELATED:
Paul R. Pillar / The National Interest:
The Other Intelligence Assessments on Iraq  —  Editor's note: The following is a preview of a longer article that will appear in a forthcoming issue of The National Interest.  —  What comes to mind when someone mentions intelligence and the Iraq War?  Why, of course, the intelligence estimate …
RELATED:
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 …
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 …
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 …
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.
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
Washington Times:
What, me worry?  —  A "routinization" of sorts, to put it charitably, has come to characterize the reporting of terrorism in the United States, as well as the public consumption of the reporting.  This was visible as the news broke of a foiled plot at John F. Kennedy International Airport last weekend.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Charleston Daily Mail:
Don Surber: Banned in Boston in the 21st century
Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
Hillary Fever Skips a Generation
Paul Farhi / Washington Post:
Post Radio Ponders a Fix For Its Low-Rated Formula
The New Republic:
JIMMY CARTER: UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL:
Craig Whitlock / Washington Post:
Germany Taking Hard Line to Foil Disruption at G-8
Discussion: NewsBusters.org
Ken Dilanian / USA Today:
Past as lobbyist may play into future as candidate
Robert E. Rector / Heritage Foundation:
Amnesty Will Cost U.S. Taxpayers at Least $2.6 Trillion
Discussion: American Thinker
Israel Today:
Fred Thompson coming to Israel
 Earlier Items: 
National Review:
Re: Flapdoodlery [John Derbyshire]
Discussion: Vox Popoli
Nicholas Wade / New York Times:
Biologists Make Skin Cells Work Like Stem Cells
John Bresnahan / The Politico:
Lynne Cheney, Susan Thomas floated as possible replacements …
Ben Lando / UPI:
ANALYSIS: OIL STRIKERS MET BY IRAQI TROOPS
Andrew Mangino / Yale Daily News:
Feds arrest dozens of illegal immigrants in New Haven raids
Discussion: Lonewacko and Left in the West
Rich Noyes / NewsBusters.org:
AP Reporter Sees 9-11 As 'Bush Administration Conspiracy Hung on Al-Qaeda'
Joe Klein / Time:
Beware the Bloggers' Bile
 

 
From Techmeme:

Kent Walker / The Keyword:
Google says the DOJ's “wildly overbroad proposal goes miles beyond the Court's decision”, would hurt US consumers, and jeopardize the US' global tech leadership

Mishaal Rahman / Android Authority:
Source: Google has canceled the development of a second-generation Pixel Tablet, planned for release in 2025, due to concerns that it wouldn't sell very well

Hannah Lang / Reuters:
Sources: a16z, Ripple, Kraken, and Circle are jostling for a seat on Trump's promised crypto advisory council, which is expected to set up a bitcoin reserve

 
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