Top Items:
Nicholas Confessore / New York Times:
Caroline Kennedy to Seek Clinton's Senate Seat — Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of an American political dynasty, has decided to pursue the United States Senate seat being vacated by Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York, a person told of her decision said on Monday.
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Kenneth Lovett / NY Daily News:
Caroline speaks with Shelly about Senate seat
Caroline speaks with Shelly about Senate seat
Discussion:
Washington Monthly
Associated Press:
Across Mideast, Arabs hail shoe-hurling journalist — BAGHDAD — Thousands of Iraqis took to the streets Monday to demand the release of a reporter who threw his shoes at President George W. Bush, as Arabs across many parts of the Middle East hailed the journalist as a hero and praised …
Discussion:
Little Green Footballs, Reuters, Aswat Al Iraq, NewsBusters.org, Scripting News, Sister Toldjah, Associated Press, Alan Colmes' Liberaland, D-Day, Democracy in America, Taylor Marsh, Gateway Pundit, Booman Tribune, Agence France Presse, USA Today, ATTACKERMAN, Think Progress, MoJoBlog, Sweetness & Light and Below The Beltway
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Ali Frick / Think Progress:
Bush On Al Qaeda Not Existing In Iraq Before Invasion: ‘So What?’ — Yesterday, after an Iraqi journalist used “[t]wo of the worst insults in Islam” against him, an unfazed President Bush sat down with ABC's Martha Raddatz for an exit interview in Iraq. When Raddatz asked Bush about his legacy …
Riyadh Muhammad / Baghdad Bureau:
Brother Explains Shoe-Tossing Iraqi Journalist's Anger — (Photo: Johan Spanner for The New York Times) — BAGHDAD — The brother of Muntader al-Zaidi, the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at President Bush during a joint press conference on Sunday with Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki …
Eric Owles / Baghdad Bureau:
Iraqis Pick Up Their Shoes: Reaction From Around the Country — Hitting someone with a shoe is a strong insult in Iraq. It means the person is as low as the dirt underneath the sole of a shoe, and the actions of Muntader al-Zaidi, a correspondent for an independent Iraqi television station …
New York Times:
Shoe-Hurling Iraqi Becomes a Folk Hero — BAGHDAD — A day after a little-known Iraqi television journalist threw his shoes at President Bush at a news conference in Baghdad on Sunday, his act of defiance toward the American commander-in-chief continued to resonate throughout Iraq and beyond.
Discussion:
1115.org
Alistair Lyon / Reuters:
ANALYSIS-Iraqi shoe-thrower captures Mideast rage at Bush
ANALYSIS-Iraqi shoe-thrower captures Mideast rage at Bush
Discussion:
The Corner
Washington Wire:
The Real Story Behind the Rushed Blagojevich Bust: How the Feds Are Frustrated by Losing (Maybe) Half of Their Case — Cam Simpson reports on the Rod Blagojevich case in Chicago. — Conventional wisdom holds that U.S. Attorney Patrick Fitzgerald ordered the FBI to arrest Rod Blagojevich …
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Jon Cohen / Washington Post:
Obama Sails Over Scandal — Public ratings of Barack Obama are unscathed by the scandal swirling around Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich's apparent effort to trade off his power to appoint Obama's successor to the U.S. Senate, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll.
Chris Fusco / Chicago Sun Times:
Blagojevich may let voters fill Obama's Senate seat
Blagojevich may let voters fill Obama's Senate seat
Discussion:
New York Times, National Review, Chicago Breaking News, Clout St, The Capitol Fax Blog, Chicago Tribune and Hot Air
Amit R. Paley / Washington Post:
Limits on Executive Pay May Prove Toothless — Loophole in Bailout Provision Leaves Enforcement in Doubt — Congress wanted to guarantee that the $700 billion financial bailout would limit the eye-popping pay of Wall Street executives, so lawmakers included a mechanism …
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Richard Whitt / Google Public Policy Blog:
Net neutrality and the benefits of caching — One of the first posts I wrote for this blog last summer tried to define what we at Google mean when we talk about the concept of net neutrality. — Broadband providers — the on-ramps to the Internet — should not be allowed to prioritize traffic based …
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Senate Guru:
MN-Sen: Looking Ahead to the Challenged Ballot Review — At its peak, the number of ballots challenged by the Senate campaigns of Democrat Al Franken and Republican Norm Coleman reached 6,655. However, it looks like the Canvassing Board will only have to review no more than 1,500 ballots …
Discussion:
TwinCities.com, Open Left, The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, The Washington Independent and D-Day
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Michael O'Brien / The Hill's Blog Briefing Room:
Coleman Seeks to Halt Recount Until Process Clear
Coleman Seeks to Halt Recount Until Process Clear
Discussion:
The Raw Story
Mary Ann Akers / The Sleuth:
Obama to Inaugural Volunteers: No Mas (and No Tickets) — To give you an idea of just how jam-packed Washington will be on inauguration day, Barack Obama's inaugural committee is turning away scores of volunteers. — An email sent from the Presidential Inaugural Committee over the weekend …
Discussion:
TIME.com
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William Kristol / New York Times:
Left and Right, Piling On — In 1953, the president of General Motors, Charles Wilson, was nominated by President Eisenhower to be secretary of defense. During his confirmation hearings, Wilson was asked if he'd be able, as defense secretary, to make decisions contrary to the interests …
Monica Davey / New York Times:
Two Sides of a Troubled Governor, Sinking Deeper — CHICAGO — Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich is a polished speaker who can win over elderly women at luncheons in southern Illinois with his earnest attention and eloquently recite historical anecdotes from the lives of the leaders he says he most admires …
Discussion:
Chicago Tribune, Political Machine, Commentary, The Caucus, Gawker and Washington Monthly
Danielle Allen / Washington Post:
Red-State Army? — In Hopewell Township, N.J., the veterans of American Legion Post 339 have put their building up for sale. “Today's vets don't come out,” 82-year old Jim Hall told The Times of Trenton last month. The post is down from 425 paying members in the 1960s and '70s to 202 this year; only about a dozen regularly attend.
Brian Stelter / New York Times:
David Shuster to Host MSNBC Political Program — MSNBC is replacing one David with another on its 6 p.m. program, “1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.” — The cable news channel, owned by NBC Universal, is expected to announce Monday that David Shuster, a Washington correspondent …
Chicago Breaking News:
Lake Co. sheriff switches parties — Flanked by some of the state's most prominent Republicans, Democratic Lake County Sheriff Mark Curran announced Monday he is joining the GOP. — “I am changing parties as a matter of conscience,” Curran said at a news conference at the Lake County GOP headquarters in Libertyville.
Lawrence Di Rita / Washington Post:
Gen. Shinseki's Silence — The announcement that retired Army chief of staff Eric Shinseki will be President-elect Barack Obama's nominee for secretary of veterans affairs has energized one of the most enduring myths of the Bush presidency. Among the media coverage in recent days …
City Journal:
The (Really) Moderate Muslims of Kosovo — On February 17, 2008, Kosovo declared independence from Serbia, becoming the newest country in the world—and one of the most unusual. Most of its citizens are Muslim, an oddity in Europe; further, unlike most Muslim-majority nations …
Discussion:
Cold Fury
New York Times:
Spousal Ties to Lobbying Test a Vow From Obama — WASHINGTON — Linda Hall Daschle is one of the most important aviation lobbyists in town. Ms. Daschle is also the wife of Tom Daschle, whom President-elect Barack Obama has chosen to be the next secretary of health and human services.
Robert J. Samuelson / Washington Post:
An Obama Gift for K Street — We here in Washington are anticipating a stampede of lobbyists, influence peddlers, media consultants, paid “experts” and self-styled crusaders. Who brought us this onslaught of special pleaders? Why, it's Barack Obama, the man who vowed to “change” …