Top Items:
Fox News:
Hillary Clinton Draws Boos at Iowa Campaign Event, 1 Day After Hostage Situation — Whatever public sympathy Hillary Clinton had built up during the tense hostage situation at her New Hampshire campaign office appeared to dissipate Saturday, as she was met with a round of boos during an address …
RELATED:
Jonathan Roos / Des Moines Register:
Huckabee new GOP leader in Iowa Poll — Mike Huckabee has leaped ahead of Republican presidential rival Mitt Romney in Iowa, seizing first place in a new Des Moines Register poll of likely Republican caucus participants. — Huckabee wins the support of 29 percent of Iowans who say they definitely …
Byron York / The Corner:
The GOP Race: Huge Changes In Iowa — The new poll from the Des Moines Register shows some dramatic changes in the Republican race in Iowa. The headline is that Mike Huckabee, who was 17 points behind Mitt Romney in the paper's October poll, now leads Romney by five points.
Michelle Malkin:
And now for some shoddy war reporting...from an NRO milblogger — Ugh. This is bad on many levels. W. Thomas Smith, Jr., a former Marine and milblogger who writes at National Review Online's The Tank (and whose work in Iraq I've praised and linked to here), posts a long-winded defense of bogus …
RELATED:
Glenn Greenwald / Salon:
National Review reporter caught fabricating; where is the "liberal media"? — National Review reporter Thomas Smith has been exposed as a fabulist for plainly fictitious claims he made in two separate NR posts in September regarding Hezbollah's alleged armed threat to the Lebanese Government.
Dan Popkey / Idaho Statesman:
More gay men describe sexual encounters with U.S. Sen. Craig — Allegations made since news of the Minneapolis case broke lend weight to rumors about Craig. … David Phillips. Mike Jones. Greg Ruth. Tom Russell. — Four gay men, willing to put their names in print and whose allegations …
David Leppard / Times of London:
US says it has right to kidnap British citizens — AMERICA has told Britain that it can "kidnap" British citizens if they are wanted for crimes in the United States. — A senior lawyer for the American government has told the Court of Appeal in London that kidnapping foreign citizens …
RELATED:
Sudhir Hazareesingh / Times of London:
Israelis hit Syrian 'nuclear bomb plant' — Uzi Mahnaimi in Tel Aviv and Michael Sheridan in Seoul — ISRAEL'S top-secret air raid on Syria in September destroyed a bomb factory assembling warheads fuelled by North Korean plutonium, a leading Israeli nuclear expert has told The Sunday Times.
Los Angeles Times:
The gentry liberals — They're more concerned with global warming and gay rights than with lunch-pail joes. — After decades on the political sidelines, liberalism is making a comeback. Polls show plunging support for Republicans and their brand of conservatism among young, independent voters and Latinos.
NY Daily News:
N.H., Iowa Republicans care more about terror than Rudy Giuliani's trysts — Many voters shrugged off the renewed spotlight on Rudy Giuliani's extramarital affair - but one of his campaign officials Saturday warned the issue could "haunt" his presidential bid.
Jonathan Martin / The Politico:
Huckabee, Morris keep lines open — Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee has been holding private conversations with Dick Morris, according to aides, a longstanding relationship that is raising new questions as Huckabee's campaign begins to take off.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times
Sean Rayment / Telegraph:
Navy would struggle to fight a war - report — The Royal Navy can no longer fight a major war because of years of underfunding and cutbacks, a leaked Whitehall report has revealed. — With an "under-resourced" fleet composed of "ageing and operationally defective ships" …
Chris Gourlay / Times of London:
Mohammed the mole digs author into a risky hole — A BRITISH children's author who named a mole Mohammed to promote multiculturalism has renamed it Morgan for fear of offending Muslims. — Kes Gray, a former advertising executive, first decided on his gesture of cross-cultural solidarity after meeting Muslims in Egypt.
Robert Pear / New York Times:
Business Lobby Presses Agenda Before '08 Vote — Business lobbyists, nervously anticipating Democratic gains in next year's elections, are racing to secure final approval for a wide range of health, safety, labor and economic rules, in the belief that they can get better deals from the Bush administration than from its successor.
The Atlantic Online:
The Density Dodge — Paul Krugman takes on the myth that the United States' low population density is primarily responsible for the country's woeful broadband coverage. As he says, there's obviously some truth to the idea that there's an objective difficulty in delivering high-quality broadband to low-density areas.