Top Items:
Patrick Healy / New York Times:
Bill Clinton Flatly Asserts He Opposed War at Start — During a campaign swing for his wife, former President Bill Clinton said flatly yesterday that he opposed the war in Iraq "from the beginning" — a statement that is more absolute than his comments before the invasion in March 2003.
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, The Fact Hub, Sweetness & Light, Sister Toldjah, Hotline On Call, NY Daily News, Jules Crittenden, Don Surber, Macsmind, Oliver Willis, The Carpetbagger Report, Obsidian Wings, Outside The Beltway, Liberty Pundit, THE LIBERAL JOURNAL, Dr. Sanity, New York Sun, Hot Air, Gateway Pundit, Death, BitsBlog, USS Neverdock and Los Angeles Times
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Ed OKeefe / Political Radar:
Bill Clinton Rewrites History on Iraq? — ABC News' Teddy Davis, Eloise Harper, and Nancy Flores Report: Former President Bill Clinton portrayed himself as having been against the Iraq war "from the beginning" while campaigning Tuesday for his wife, Senator Hillary Clinton, in Iowa.
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, Captain's Quarters, TownHall Blog, Eschaton, The Opinionator, The Plank, Liberal Values, RADAMISTO and Weasel Zippers
Amy Schatz / Wall Street Journal:
YouTube Debate Raises Stakes — Republicans to Joust — As Polls Show Voters — Are Still Searching — ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Despite reservations, Republican presidential candidates will answer questions tonight from the public submitted via YouTube in a two-hour debate to air on CNN.
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Pamela Geller / Atlas Shrugs:
BUSH: WE ARE ALL TERRORISTS NOW — Bush has lost his mind and his moral compass. This statement is an outrage. A lie and a blood libel. Israel has never committed any acts of terrorism. What a tool of Islamic jihad. Based on that, Bush is a terrorist, anyone that defends himself, his family, his country is a terrorist.
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New York Times:
Text of Bush's Remarks at Annapolis Conference — Here are the remarks President Bush delivered today at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Md., as transcribed by Federal News Service, Inc., a private firm not affiliated with the government. — Mr. Bush's remarks opened a meeting …
Isabel Kershner / New York Times:
Palestinian Is Killed in Hebron as Police Disperse Protest Over Mideast Peace Talks
Palestinian Is Killed in Hebron as Police Disperse Protest Over Mideast Peace Talks
Discussion:
The Corner
Michael Luo / New York Times:
In Iowa, Mormon Issue Is Benefiting Huckabee — The religious divide over Mitt Romney's Mormon faith that his supporters had long feared would occur is emerging in Iowa as he is being challenged in state polls by Mike Huckabee, a former Baptist pastor who has played up his faith in his bid for the Republican presidential nomination.
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Amit R. Paley / Washington Post:
Cabbies, Though Still Wary, Find a Wider Comfort Zone — BAGHDAD — Haider Abbas, a 36-year-old taxi driver, had only a few moments to answer what is often a life-or-death question in this city: Would he drive a passenger home? — The home, on that scorching afternoon last month …
John R. Wilke / Wall Street Journal:
Head of Rove Inquiry in Hot Seat Himself — Bloch Used Private Company, — Geeks on Call, to Delete Files — On His Office Computer — WASHINGTON — The head of the federal agency investigating Karl Rove's White House political operation is facing allegations that he improperly …
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
Senate Race That Fizzled Honed Skills for '08 Stage — By the time Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani of New York stepped before a wall of television crews in the Public Hearing Room at City Hall on May 19, 2000, there were no surprises left. — In the course of three tumultuous weeks …
Carlotta Gall / New York Times:
Musharraf Quits Pakistani Army Post — President Pervez Musharraf resigned his military post as Chief of Army Staff today, handing over the command stick to his successor in a ceremony at army headquarters and ending his eight years of military rule. He remains president and will be sworn …
Discussion:
The Van Der Galiën Gazette
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Robert Gates / Real Clear Politics:
How to Meet Our Nation's Challenges — It is both an honor and a pleasure to be part of the Landon Lecture series - a forum that has for more than four decades has hosted some of America's leading intellectuals and statesmen. Considering that fact, I at first wondered if the invitation was in fact meant for Bill Gates.
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The Politico:
Clinton tops Obama among African-Americans — Six weeks out from the first round of presidential voting, Hillary Rodham Clinton gets better reviews than Barack Obama among African-American voters, a crucial voting bloc in Democratic politics, a new poll shows.
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Kevin G. Hall / McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Democrats' health plans echo Nixon's failed GOP proposal — WASHINGTON — Even before Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton unveiled her new health-care plan, Republicans attacked it as socialized medicine. They neglected to mention, however, that her plan bears a striking resemblance …
Opinion Journal:
Flat Tax Fred — Thompson's reform leads the GOP field. — Fred Thompson's Presidential campaign has been struggling, in part because of a sense that he lacks passion and an agenda. But late last week he unveiled a tax reform that is more ambitious than anything we've seen so far from the rest of the GOP field.
Erie Daily Times-Morning News:
Kucinich poses 2-party ticket — The race goes on, but one thing that can be said for U.S. Rep. and presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich, of Ohio, and that is he is always proposing something new. This time he mentioned a possible Democrat-Republican ticket.
Peter Beinart / Washington Post:
Obama's Amnesia Problem — It's a cultural cliche: Americans don't care about the past. De Tocqueville noticed it in the 1830s, speculating that in 50 years Americans would know less about the America he visited than the French knew about the Middle Ages. Nearly two centuries later, people are still making the point.
Discussion:
Firedoglake
afp.com:
French police deploy 1,000 officers to keep lid on riots — VILLIERS LE BEL, France (AFP) - The French authorities deployed 1,000 police to a northern Paris suburb Tuesday to prevent a third night of youth riots amid signs that the violence could be spreading.
Glenn Greenwald / Salon:
Everything that is rancid and corrupt with modern journalism: The Nutshell — Time Magazine has done a superb service for the country by illustrating everything that is rancid and corrupt with our political media. After I emailed Time.com Editor Josh Tyrangiel asking why the online version …