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7:15 PM ET, August 4, 2007

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Washington Post:
Senate Votes To Expand Warrantless Surveillance  —  White House Applauds; Changes Are Temporary  —  The Senate bowed to White House pressure last night and passed a Republican plan for overhauling the federal government's terrorist surveillance laws, approving changes that would temporarily …
RELATED:
New York Times:
Democrats Feel Pressure on Spy Program  —  Under pressure from President Bush, House Democrats on Saturday grudgingly prepared to clear the way for approving changes in a terrorist surveillance program despite serious reservations about the scope of the measure.
Discussion: TalkLeft
Marty Lederman / Balkinization:
Senate Passes Administration Bill [UPDATED with Link to and Analysis of S.1927]
Discussion: rubber hose
Ben Smith / The Politico:
Candidates court bloggers, avoid commitment  —  CHICAGO — The second YearlyKos convention is a show of strength for the new blogging establishment: A parade of major Democratic politicians, including the leaders of the House and Senate and almost every presidential candidate …
RELATED:
Ron Fournier / Associated Press:
Democrats court liberal bloggers  —  CHICAGO - Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton refused Saturday to forsake campaign donations from lobbyists, turning aside challenges from her two main rivals with a rare defense of the special interest industry.
New York Times:
Slowly, Clinton Shifts on War, Quieting Foes
Pajamas Media:
Soldier Censored at Kos Convention  —  An as yet unidentified uniformed soldier attempted to address the panel on the subject of the "Surge".  He was unceremoniously escorted out by panelist Jon Soltz.  —  The soldier's words were either suppressed or inaudible on the convention's own video.
RELATED:
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Video: Pajamas Media interviews soldier who spoke up at Yearly Kos; Update: Soltz's VoteVets bio features photo of him in uniform  —  Even more interesting than the rules governing what he did yesterday will be the rules governing what he can do this week.  The media's going to want to talk …
William Kristol / Weekly Standard:
The Turn  —  Defeatists in retreat.  —  Hot July brings cooling showers, / Apricots and gillyflowers, as Sara Coleridge's doggerel has it.  But for the American antiwar movement, this July brought only a cold drizzle, wilted blossoms, and bitter fruit.  —  For the Iraq war's opponents, July began as a month of hope.
RELATED:
Lawyers, Guns and Money:
Kristol Meth  —  The war's most enduring organ-grinder is gettin' his Friedman on today, declaring once again that Bush's war has reached a turning point, and that Americans are slowly — to the chagrin of the New York Times — awakening to the Good News.  Steve Bennen gives substance to the obvious …
Discussion: The Impolitic
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
And Now It's Oberstar's Turn  —  Yesterday, Senator Amy Klobuchar blamed the collapse of the I-35W bridge on a lack of highway funds — even though the 2005 highway bill increased federal funding to Minnesota by 46% over its five-year span.  Apparently realizing that line of argument wouldn't hold …
Discussion: Balloon Juice and Sister Toldjah
RELATED:
Kevin Drum / Washington Monthly:
OBAMA vs. CLINTON REVISITED....Mark Kleiman thinks there's more to the Hillary-Obama foreign policy contretemps than I'm giving it credit for.  I'm not so sure, but it will take a little bit of in-the-weeds explaining to say why.  Here goes.  —  First, on the question of striking al-Qaeda targets in Pakistan, Mark says:
RELATED:
insideBayArea:
Police: Oakland Post editor's killer confesses to slaying  —  A 19-year-old handyman at Your Black Muslim Bakery admitted to police Friday night that he ambushed and killed Oakland Post editor Chauncey Bailey, investigators said.  —  Police said Devaughndre Broussard told them he killed Bailey …
Discussion: Associated Press
RELATED:
The Influence Peddler:
Confirmation: GOP Won the Vote  —  Congressional Quarterly seems to have the definitive article on the furor in the House the other night.  They lead with the news of a 'ceasefire,' but later confirm that the vote ought to have been a Republican win.  —  The piece leads with the creation …
Discussion: CNN and The Jawa Report
RELATED:
Aluf Benn / Haaretz:
Hurrah!  The Saudis are coming!  —  Rehavia.  Achievement  —  Condoleezza Rice's aides have become adept at spotting when their boss is irritable: she starts scratching one of her hands.  When she feels like someone has done her wrong, she gets "that look": "Her eyes narrow, her face tightens …
Discussion: American Footprints and CANNONFIRE
RELATED:
The Big Trunk / Power Line:   ISRAEL: THE OUTSIDE STORY
Deb Riechmann / Associated Press:
Bush surveys bridge, pledges aid  —  MINNEAPOLIS - President Bush pledged Saturday to cut red tape that could delay rebuilding a highway bridge that once arched over the Mississippi River but now lies crumbled in muddy water concealing some victims.  —  Bush, still dogged by his administration's …
Dan / Daniel W. Drezner:
YOUR DISCUSSION QUESTION FOR THE WEEKEND  —  Your humble blogger will be away for the rest of the weekend.  —  Before I go, I could leave you with a link to some fluff like Entertainment Weekly's list of celebrity bloggers (where else but her blog would you find Pamela Anderson's statement, "I love theatre.").
Discussion: Kevin Sullivan
RELATED:
The Atlantic Online:
Community Standards  —  Atrios, or as we call him in real life …
Discussion: Eschaton
Washington Post:
Gonzales Now Says Top Aides Got Political Briefings  —  Justice Department officials attended at least a dozen political briefings at the White House since 2001, including some meetings led by Karl Rove, President Bush's chief political adviser, and others that were focused on election trends prior …
Hendrik Hertzberg / New Yorker:
AN OPENING  —  Presumably you've heard about "private contractors," the well-paid, well-armed, not always well-disciplined security people who do a lot of the work in Iraq that in earlier wars would have been done by the U.S. Army.  More than one left-wing blogger has caught flak for describing …
Discussion: Washington Monthly
Sudarsan Raghavan / Washington Post:
In Iraq, a Perilous Alliance With Former Enemies  —  FORWARD OPERATING BASE ISKAN, Iraq — Inside a brightly lit room, the walls adorned with memorials to 23 dead American soldiers, Lt. Col. Robert Balcavage stared at the three Sunni tribal leaders he wanted to recruit.  —  Their fighters had battled U.S. troops.
Discussion: NION and TIME: Swampland
 
 
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 More Items: 
Mike Drummond / McClatchy Washington Bureau:
At U.S. base, Iraqis must use separate latrine
Discussion: Thought Theater and Greatscat!
Suzanne Ito / ACLU Blog:
Voodoo Science Can Convict the Innocent
Andrew Sullivan / The Atlantic Online:
The Conservative Principles Poll [Stephen]
New York Times:
Partisan Anger Stalls Congress in Final Push
The Atlantic Online:
The Gates, Crashed  —  The best possible evidence for the idea …
Howie Klein / Firedoglake:
Blue America Welcomes Russ Warner
Discussion: Crooks and Liars
 Earlier Items: 
Little Green Footballs:
Thug, Dictator, and Useful Idiot
Discussion: The Jawa Report
Telegraph:
Foot and mouth outbreak sparks emergency
Walter Shapiro / Salon:
Joe Lieberman, from his indie perch
Brad Friedman / The BRAD BLOG:
PAPER BALLOTS FOR CALIFORNIA! …
Discussion: Democrats.com, PC World and D-Day
Chris Kelly / The Huffington Post:
The National Review Invades Canada
Bryan / Hot Air:
Alms for Jihad update Updated
Discussion: Power Line
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Caitlin Huston / The Hollywood Reporter:
Internal memo: Hearst Magazines president announces layoffs as part of a decision to “reallocate resources” to “continue our focus on digital innovation”

Jon Brodkin / Ars Technica:
FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel announced she will leave the agency on January 20; she was the first woman to be confirmed to lead the agency

Lachlan Cartwright / The Ankler:
Sources: MSNBC renewed Rachel Maddow's contract early this fall, but with a pay cut; MSNBC bosses' plan to shake up daytime and weekend programming

 
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