Top Items:
John Bresnahan / The Politico:
Pelosi lays down the law with Rahm — In a recent conversation with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Rahm Emanuel offered some advice on a Democratic House leadership race. Pelosi's response, according to several Democratic sources: It is “an internal House Democratic Caucus matter, and we'll handle it.”
BBC:
Shoe thrower ‘beaten in custody’ — The brother of the Iraqi journalist who threw his shoes at US President George W Bush has said that the reporter has been beaten in custody. — Muntadar al-Zaidi has suffered a broken hand, broken ribs and internal bleeding, as well as an eye injury, his older brother, Dargham, told the BBC.
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Washington Post:
Majority of Public Opposes Auto Rescue — Poll Finds Most Blame Industry for Problems, Believe Failure Won't Hurt Economy — Most Americans continue to oppose a government-backed rescue plan for Detroit's Big Three automakers as majorities blame the industry for its own problems …
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Todd J. Zywicki / Wall Street Journal:
Bankruptcy Is the Perfect Remedy for Detroit — Washington hates the idea because it would lose leverage. — While Washington tries to arrange a bailout, the Detroit Three auto makers and their union, the United Auto Workers, keep insisting that bankruptcy would be the kiss of death.
Ben Smith / Ben Smith's Blogs:
Kennedy pushback — Caroline Kennedy's name and her celebrity don't seem to be winning her a particularly warm welcome from certain quarters of the Democratic Party: New York's Democratic pols, who resent her intrusion into their scrap for Clinton's seat; and Democratic opinion-makers …
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Pat Doyle / Minneapolis Star Tribune:
Readers' analysis of challenged ballots shows Coleman lead erased — The Star Tribune has performed its own analysis of the challenged ballots by relying on a virtual “canvassing board” of more than 26,000 readers. — With thousands of frivolous challenges discarded …
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John / Power Line:
THE “FIFTH PILE”: WHAT'S IT ALL ABOUT? — Readers who have followed our many posts on the Minnesota Senate recount, including Scott's just a little while ago, may recall that Secretary of State Mark Ritchie asked all of Minnesota's 80-plus counties to sort their rejected absentee ballots …
Jules Crittenden:
The Bulge — Goering, Hitler and Guderian survey plans for Wacht Am Rhein, a.k.a. The Battle of the Bulge, October 1944. — It began at dawn on Dec. 16, 1944, 64 years ago today, with rapid assaults through the Ardennes forest, as the Germans blitzed one last time, hoping to split the Allied armies and take Antwerp.
Discussion:
Scared Monkeys
Los Angeles Times:
Obama clears himself and staff in Blagojevich case — The president-elect says an internal review shows there were no inappropriate conversations with the Illinois governor about who would fill the vacant Senate seat. — Reporting from Washington and Chicago — Barack Obama said Monday …
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David Johnston / New York Times:
In Blagojevich Case, Is It a Crime, or Just Talk?
In Blagojevich Case, Is It a Crime, or Just Talk?
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blogs, The Note, Chicago Breaking News, Political Punch, TalkLeft, Commentary, Stop The ACLU, MSNBC, Betsy's Page, Washington Post and Associated Press
The Politico:
Madoff sold influence in Washington — Within a day of the Dec. 11 arrest of Wall Street financier Bernard L. Madoff, his Washington lobbyists were scrambling to sever all ties to a man who's been accused of a $50 billion fraud and who may go down in history as the largest financial scam artist ever.
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Sam Dillon / New York Times:
Chicago Schools Chief Is Obama's Education Pick — Arne Duncan, the Chicago schools superintendent known for taking tough steps to improve schools while maintaining respectful relations with teachers and their unions, is President-elect Barack Obama's choice as secretary of education, Democratic officials said Monday.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Shakesville, The Caucus, TIME.com, Associated Press and The New Republic
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Caroline Graham / Daily Mail:
Gay penguins expelled from zoo colony for stealing eggs are given their own to look after following animal rights protest … A pair of gay penguins thrown out of their zoo colony for repeatedly stealing eggs have been given some of their own to look after following a protest by animal rights groups.
Chris Cillizza / The Fix:
CO-Senate: Salazar Departure Creates GOP Opportunity — The expectation that Colorado Sen. Ken Salazar will be nominated as Interior Secretary by President-elect Barack Obama presents Republicans with a prime pickup opportunity in a swing state, an early sign that their fortunes may be turning …
Washington Post:
Poll Finds Support for Obama's War Views — Less Pessimism on Iraq, But 70% Back Pullout — Americans are more upbeat about U.S. prospects in Iraq than at any time in the past five years, but nearly two-thirds continue to believe the war is not worth fighting and 70 percent …
Justin Elliott / TPMMuckraker:
Will Hillary Follow Through On Campaign Pledge To Ban ‘Private Mercenaries’? — Back in February, Senator Hillary Clinton cosponsored legislation calling for the Secretary of State to ban the use of private contractors like Blackwater from guarding State Department employees …
Discussion:
The Washington Independent
The Raw Story:
Cheney admits authorizing torture — Outgoing VP says Guantanamo prison should stay open until end of terror war, but has no idea when that might be. — Monday, outgoing Vice President Dick Cheney made a startling statement on a nation-wide, televised broadcast.
Daphne Retter / New York Post:
CHARLIE'S SICK HOUSE VOTE RECORD — WASHINGTON - Harlem Rep. Charles Rangel missed more votes than any other New York House member, according to a study released by Congressional Quarterly. — Rangel, 78, missed 16 percent of House votes in 2008, partly due to a hospital stay last spring …
Herman J. Cohen / New York Times:
Can Africa Trade Its Way to Peace? — THE conflict in eastern Congo over the past 12 years has been as much a surrogate war between Congo and neighboring Rwanda as an internal ethnic insurgency, as a United Nations report underscored last week. The only way to end a war that has caused five million deaths …