Top Items:
Martin Indyk / Washington Post:
A 'Two-State Solution,' Palestinian-Style — Does Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas know something that we don't? For five days his presidential security forces in Gaza came under organized attack by Hamas gunmen. His compound in Gaza City was under siege.
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Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
Takeover by Hamas Illustrates Failure of Bush's Mideast Vision
Takeover by Hamas Illustrates Failure of Bush's Mideast Vision
Discussion:
Conflict Blotter, New York Times, Gateway Pundit, Atlas Shrugs, Taylor Marsh, Jules Crittenden, New York Sun, ShrinkWrapped, Ynetnews, Comments From Left Field, Flopping Aces, Shakesville, Firedoglake, Donklephant, Middle Earth Journal, The Populist, At-Largely, Dr. Sanity, Jerusalem Post, Yourish.com, JammieWearingFool, Michael P.F. van der Galiën and Haaretz
Joseph Lieberman / Opinion Journal:
What I Saw in Iraq — Iran remains a problem, but Anbar has joined the fight against terror. — I recently returned from Iraq and four other countries in the Middle East, my first trip to the region since December. In the intervening five months, almost everything about the American war effort …
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Editor and Publisher:
Latest from McClatchy's Iraqi Staffers: The 'City of Cemeteries' — NEW YORK For several weeks, E&P has been featuring frank and often disturbing blog entries by McClatchy's Iraqi correspondents and staffers from their site, Inside Iraq. The writers' full names are not listed due to security concerns.
Discussion:
The Sideshow
Washington Post:
U.S. Says Iraq Troop Surge Complete — The full contingent of new U.S. forces being sent to Iraq — what military leaders call a "surge" of troops to improve security and stability in the capital — was completed by Friday, with 28,500 additional troops now posted in the country, a U.S. military spokesman said.
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James Risen / New York Times:
Senator Blocks Vote on Subpoenas Over Eavesdropping — A Republican senator blocked a vote in the Judiciary Committee on whether to authorize subpoenas to the Justice Department to obtain secret legal opinions and other documents related to the National Security Agency's program of domestic eavesdropping.
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Michael Kinsley / Time:
The Quiet Gay Revolution — When William F. Buckley Jr. revived American conservatism by founding National Review in 1955, he said the magazine's job was to stand "athwart history, yelling stop." At that time, history did seem to be moving in the wrong direction if you were a conservative, and Buckley was gutsy to admit as much.
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Andrew Sullivan / The Atlantic Online:
We Win — That was quick, wasn't it? Mike Kinsley writes …
We Win — That was quick, wasn't it? Mike Kinsley writes …
Discussion:
Ezra Klein
Jason Horowitz / New York Observer:
Clinton Spokesman: Drudge Version Misses a Detail About Pay Day — Drudge is taking Bill Clinton to task for giving a $100,000 speech via satellite to a group of investors in Hong Kong on the 5th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks. — But Clinton's press office now says that although …
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Economist:
Vote for me, dimwit — How the electorate is irrational — ANYONE who follows an election campaign too closely will sometimes get the feeling that politicians think voters are idiots. A new book says they are. Or rather, Bryan Caplan, an economics professor at George Mason University …
Discussion:
EconLog, The Moderate Voice, Liberal Values, Comments From Left Field, The Atlantic Online and Sadly, No!
New York Times:
The Laptop Is Mightier Than the Sword — WHILE waiting to see if the Iraq surge strategy pays off, President Bush and Defense Secretary Robert Gates have shown Gen. Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the door and brought in Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute as the new White House "war czar."
Discussion:
INTEL DUMP, Danger Room, Democracy in America, Outside The Beltway, Michael P.F. van der Galiën and JunkYardBlog
Michelle Malkin:
www.trentlott.com — ***update: Rush on Lott—"You've got Republicans talking about talk radio like liberals talk about talk radio. That tells you something." Yes, it does. It tells you that the Republican Party is in deep, deep doo-doo. Speaking of doo-doo, the literal kind apparently turned up in the Capitol today.
Discussion:
Hot Air, Associated Press, The Strata-Sphere, GOP.com, Gateway Pundit, JammieWearingFool and New York Times
Chris Bowers / MyDD:
The Best Days Of My Life — After spending all week trying to think of a poignant way of making this announcement, and drawing nothing but blanks, I have decided to just say it as plainly as I can. Today, after more than three years, I am stepping down as the lead writer and managing editor of MyDD.
Paul Kiel / TPMmuckraker:
Complaint: Schlozman Aimed to Replace Lawyers with "Good Americans" — During a hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, Bradley Schlozman, the controversial former senior political appointee in the Civil Rights Division, was battered with questions about his efforts to politicize the division.
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report, Left in the West, First Draft, The Next Hurrah and The Sideshow
Joe Strupp / Editor and Publisher:
Watergate's 35th Anniversary: Would That Story Have Been Broken Today? — Who knows, someone with a cell phone camera working in the parking garage might have snapped a photo of Woodward chatting with this unknown source. Or a blogger would have blown the whistle. — Sunday will be a memorable day for me, for two reasons.
National Review:
The Commitments — Peter Robinson asked whether my opposition to Giuliani has weakened since he pledged to reduce the abortion rate and increase the adoption rate as president, and whether it would weaken further if he pledged to name a pro-life running mate. Short answer: No.
Justin Juozapavicius / Associated Press:
1957 Plymouth unearthed in Oklahoma — TULSA, Okla. - Thousands watched Friday as a crane lifted a muddy package from a hole in the courthouse lawn: a 1957 Plymouth Belvedere buried a half-century ago to celebrate Oklahoma's 50 years of statehood. — The wrapped car was covered in red mud as it came out of the hole.