Top Items:
Camille Paglia / Salon:
Hillary without tears — Why it's time to close the book on the Clintons — and herald the Obamas! Plus: Iran war hawks, Russian drag queens and the genius of Zeppelin. — As her husband has dragged his numerous female play objects before her and has humiliated her on the public stage year after year …
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Glen Johnson / Associated Press:
2004 Dem nominee Kerry endorsing Obama — MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. - Barack Obama is being endorsed by fellow Sen. John Kerry, the Democrats' 2004 presidential nominee who lost to George W. Bush that year and gave up his own plans for a 2008 run a year ago. — Kerry, a senator from Massachusetts …
Eric Kleefeld / TPM Election Central:
Report: Kerry Endorsing Obama — John Kerry will endorse Barack Obama, the Associated Press is reporting, quoting an unnamed source. — Late Update: Kerry and Obama will be making an appearance together today in Charleston, South Carolina, MSNBC reports. —gs
Mike Allen / The Politico:
John Kerry to endorse Obama — Sen. John F. Kerry (D-Mass.), the Democratic Party's 2004 presidential nominee, will endorse Sen. Barack Obama (D-Ill.) for president in South Carolina today, Democratic sources told Politico. — Kerry is flying to South Carolina for an event to be held shortly …
Karen Brooks / Dallas Morning News:
Bloggers form theory New Hampshire vote was rigged — Posts question polls' inaccuracy, point to documentary on fraud — kmbrooks@dallasnews.com — AUSTIN - The results weren't even in when the blogosphere started to hum with a theory that sharply divided Democrats online …
You Decide 08!:
JOHN KERRY ENDORSING BARACK OBAMA — MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. — Barack Obama is being endorsed by 2004 Democratic presidential nominee Sen. John Kerry, FOX News has confirmed. — Kerry, a senator from Massachusetts, plans to announce his support Thursday at a rally at the College of Charleston …
Washington Post:
For U.S., The Goal Is Now ‘Iraqi Solutions’ — Approach Acknowledges Benchmarks Aren't Met — In the year since President Bush announced he was changing course in Iraq with a troop “surge” and a new strategy, U.S. military and diplomatic officials have begun their own quiet policy shift.
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James Risen / New York Times:
2005 Use of Gas by Blackwater Leaves Questions — WASHINGTON — The helicopter was hovering over a Baghdad checkpoint into the Green Zone, one typically crowded with cars, Iraqi civilians and United States military personnel. — Suddenly, on that May day in 2005, the copter dropped CS gas …
Discussion:
MLive.com, Daily Kos, WhirledView, On Deadline, rubber hose, All Spin Zone and Brilliant at Breakfast
Wall Street Journal:
The Surge Worked — It was exactly one year ago tonight, in a televised address to the nation, that President George W. Bush announced his fateful decision to change course in Iraq, and to send five additional U.S. combat brigades there as part of a new counterinsurgency strategy and under the command of a new general, David Petraeus.
Discussion:
Washington Post, Blue Crab Boulevard, Matt Zeitlin, Gateway Pundit, American Power, Bookworm Room, TIME: Swampland and New York Times
Robert Morris / MyrtleBeachOnline.com:
Six candidates to appear at GOP debate — Following the New Hampshire primary, six Republican candidates will attend Thursday night's debate in Myrtle Beach, state party officials said today. — Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee …
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Dahlia Lithwick / Slate:
THE SUPREME COURT LOOKS CLOSELY AT INDIANA'S VOTER-ID LAW. — It's rare that the life of the law dovetails with the life of the nation, although today the Supreme Court looks at a vitally important voting-rights case just as we're all obsessing over the presidential primaries.
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Washington Post:
New Estimate of Violent Deaths Among Iraqis Is Lower — A new survey estimates that 151,000 Iraqis died from violence in the three years following the U.S.-led invasion of the country. Roughly 9 out of 10 of those deaths were a consequence of U.S. military operations, insurgent attacks and sectarian warfare.
Discussion:
Matthew Yglesias, content.nejm.org, abu muqawama, BBC, TigerHawk, Jules Crittenden, Marginal Revolution, USS Neverdock and On Deadline
Gail Collins / New York Times:
Hillary's Free Pass — MANCHESTER, N.H. — Whatever your politics, people, you have to admit this is one great presidential race. What next? Fred Thompson takes Florida on a sympathy vote from retirees? (They like a leader who's really, really rested.) John Edwards finds a new emotion for South Carolina?
Karl Rove / Wall Street Journal:
Why Hillary Won — What would Shakespeare's Jack Cade say after the New Hampshire Democratic primary? Maybe the demagogue in “Henry VI” would call for the pollsters to be killed first, not the lawyers. — The opinion researchers find themselves in a difficult place after most predicted a big Obama sweep.
Lee Speigel / Political Punch:
Romney's Fishy Delegate Claim — Why is the former Massachusetts governor telling folks that he leads in delegates? — In Boston today, Romney told supporters, “we have more delegates than any other Republican candidate running for president." — Here's the ABC News GOP Delegate Estimate: