Top Items:
Washington Times:
Passports probe focuses on worker — The State Department investigation of improper computer access to passport records of three presidential candidates is focusing on one remaining employee — a contract worker with a company headed by an adviser to the presidential campaign of Sen. Barack Obama
RELATED:
Little Green Footballs:
Passport Probe Finds Link to Obama Campaign? — Bill Gertz and Jon Ward report that one of the people who illegally accessed the presidential candidates' passport records works for a company headed by an adviser to the Barack Obama campaign.
Mike Baker / Associated Press:
Bill Clinton: Democratic race could come down to NC vote — North Carolina voters, usually a nonentity in presidential primaries, could be the deciding factor in the Democratic presidential nomination this year, former President Bill Clinton said Friday. — New York Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton …
RELATED:
New York Times:
First a Tense Talk With Clinton, Then Richardson Backs Obama — PORTLAND, Ore. — “I talked to Senator Clinton last night,” Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico said on Friday, describing the tense telephone call in which he informed Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton that, despite two months …
Pete Yost / Associated Press:
White House: Computer hard drives tossed — WASHINGTON - Older White House computer hard drives have been destroyed, the White House disclosed to a federal court Friday in a controversy over millions of possibly missing e-mails from 2003 to 2005. — The White House revealed new information …
Ed Morrissey / Hot Air:
A Century in Iraq, if it works right: Obama adviser — Yesterday I noted the accusation of McCarthyism against Bill Clinton by Barack Obama military adviser Gen. Tony McPeak. The former Air Force Chief of Staff has a history of interesting statements, including a couple at the beginning of the war both McPeak and Obama oppose.
Discussion:
Weekly Standard Blog
RELATED:
Jules Crittenden:
It's the Clintons, Stupid — Exasperated Politico, scratching its head over the indomitable energizer Clinton, examines the “Clinton myth,” informs us the media is too much invested in Clinton to admit her defeat, does the math that incontrovertibly shows Obama just squeaking past her …
RELATED:
Cornelia Dean / New York Times:
No Admission for Evolutionary Biologist at Creationist Film — Two evolutionary biologists — P. Z. Myers of the University of Minnesota, Morris, and Richard Dawkins of Oxford — tried to go to the movies at the Mall of America in Minneapolis Thursday evening. Dr. Dawkins got in. Dr. Myers did not.
Michael Rubin / The Corner:
Washington Post's curious Iran reporting — William Branigin and Robin Wright have a rather factually flawed Washington Post article on President Bush's speech on Iran that suggests either extreme sloppiness or that integrity has gone out the window in the news section.
Discussion:
Weekly Standard Blog
RELATED:
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
Broad Concerns about Internet Voting — The verdict is in on Internet voting, and if Caucus readers are any guide, it's a non-starter, at least for now. We asked our readers a few days ago whether Internet voting might be a plausible way to stage re-votes in Michigan and Florida.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice
RELATED:
Catherine Crier / The Huffington Post:
Newsrooms Revolt! — Profound sadness was my dominant emotion as I watched one of the cable news shows this morning. Two attractive young ‘political analysts’, a handsome African American and a winsome blonde, (guess their politics), ‘illuminated’ the presidential race.
Discussion:
TalkLeft
Matthew Yglesias:
Incompetence — The past week saw a lot of “what did I get wrong"-type articles about Iraq and they frequently put me in the mind of the incompetence dodge. I note that one frequent way in which people argue for the proposition that poor execution, rather than an underlying flawed concept …
Discussion:
Lawyers, Guns and Money
Ian Urbina / New York Times:
Hopes for Wireless Cities Fade as Internet Providers Pull Out — PHILADELPHIA — It was hailed as Internet for the masses when Philadelphia officials announced plans in 2005 to erect the largest municipal Wi-Fi grid in the country, stretching wireless access over 135 square miles with the hope …
World Public Opinion:
American Public Says Government Leaders Should Pay Attention to Polls — Eight in Ten Say Public Should Have Greater Influence on Government — In sharp contrast to views recently expressed by Vice President Cheney, a new poll finds that an overwhelming majority of Americans believe government leaders …
Christopher Pearson / The Australian:
Climate facts to warm to — CATASTROPHIC predictions of global warming usually conjure with the notion of a tipping point, a point of no return. — Last Monday - on ABC Radio National, of all places - there was a tipping point of a different kind in the debate on climate change.