Top Items:
Huma Khan / Political Punch:
Bumps in the Road: Obama's HHS Secretary Nominee Faces Tax Questions Over Car and Driver — ABC News has learned that the nomination of former Senator Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D., to be President Obama's secretary of health and human services has hit a traffic snarl on its way through the Senate Finance Committee.
Discussion:
New York Times, Washington Monthly, The Politico, QandO, Fausta's Blog, Outside The Beltway, USA Today, Michelle Malkin, RedState, Warner_Todd_Huston's blog, Fox News, Hot Air, TigerHawk, Neptunus Lex, NewsBusters.org, Betsy's Page, TIME.com, Don Surber, The Moderate Voice, Glenn Thrush's Blogs, PoliticalBase.com Blog, D-Day and AmSpecBlog
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John / Power Line:
CORRUPTION, DEMOCRAT STYLE — As a life-long politician, Tom Daschle never earned much money. But he retired from the Senate, after being defeated for re-election by John Thune, as a multimillionaire. He retired to Georgetown, of course, not to South Dakota.
Discussion:
Riehl World View
Dotcomabc / Political Punch:
More Daschle Tax Issues — ABC News has obtained the Senate Finance Committee Report on Tom Daschle's nomination to be Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, which indicates that Daschle's tax problems were even more substantial than earlier reported.
Washington Post:
Daschle Owed Back Taxes That Exceeded $128,000 — Former Senator Paid Days Before First Confirmation Hearing — Thomas A. Daschle, nominated to be secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, did not pay more than $128,000 in taxes over three years, a revelation that poses …
Molly Hooper / The Hill:
GOP losing patience with Obama, Dem leaders — Republicans wrapped up their retreat Friday by signaling they are losing patience with President Obama and the Democratic leadership in Congress. — Former Gov. Mitt Romney (R-Mass.) criticized the new administration on Friday …
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Colbert I. King / Washington Post:
Republicans Need to Remember Hoover — Republicans are given to saying and doing the darnedest things. — Remember last fall when House Republicans, led by Minority Leader John Boehner, whined that they were forced to kill the Bush administration's bank bailout bill because Speaker Nancy Pelosi …
Jeff G. / protein wisdom:
What getting kicked to the curb in the age of new media looks like … What this means is that as of April 1, I am officially out of work. So save going to a pay model, this site will likely have to shut down. — Small price to pay for helping PJM pick up an audience and credibility during its “formative years.”
Discussion:
Atlas Shrugs, The Other McCain, Right Wing Nut House, Althouse, Culture11, Vox Popoli and The Jawa Report
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TBogg:
“Roger Simon is pretty much a back stabbing douche so this was probably inevitable.” — diggs — digg it — Nobody could have anticipated that Pajamas Media would sucker the rubes and then destroy teh intertubes: … The comments are like a Sam Shepard play where the repressed loathing …
Steven Gray / Time:
Steele Makes History, but Can the New Party Chief Remake the GOP? — Michael Steele speaks at the Republican National Convention — The selection on Friday of Michael Steele, 50, as the Republican National Committee's next chairman is remarkable not merely because he is the first African American to head the party of Lincoln.
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Amanda Carpenter / Townhall.com:
Clintonista Already Dishing Out Oppo Hit Pieces on Steele
Clintonista Already Dishing Out Oppo Hit Pieces on Steele
Discussion:
Oliver Willis
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
Republicans Choose First Black Party Chairman
Republicans Choose First Black Party Chairman
Discussion:
the talking dog
New York Times:
It's Theirs and They're Not Apologizing — Getting between a broker and his bonus is like getting between a schnauzer and his lunch bowl. He may not bite you, but you are going to smell his breath. — “People come here because they want to work hard and get paid a lot for working hard …
Discussion:
AMERICAblog News
Stephen Farrell / New York Times:
Under Tight Security, Voting Seems Calm in Iraq — BAGHDAD — Voters turned out early and calmly on Saturday for Iraq's provincial elections, the first in the country for four years. By noon, halfway through the voting, no one had been reported injured or killed. — Early reporting showed a lighter turnout than expected.
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Brian Murphy / Associated Press:
Iraq imposes security lockdown ahead of elections
Iraq imposes security lockdown ahead of elections
Discussion:
War Is Boring
Adam Liptak / New York Times:
Supreme Court Steps Closer to Repeal of Evidence Ruling — WASHINGTON — In 1983, a young lawyer in the Reagan White House was hard at work on what he called in a memorandum “the campaign to amend or abolish the exclusionary rule” — the principle that evidence obtained by police misconduct cannot be used against a defendant.
Julianna Goldman / Bloomberg:
White House Lawyers Look to Limit Commercial Use of President — Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) — Barack Obama's popularity makes him a marketer's dream. Now, the honeymoon may be over for those trying to profit from his appeal. — White House lawyers want to control the use of the president's image …
The Huffington Post:
Claire McCaskill Lays Down Law On CEO Compensation — Sen. Claire McCaskill has delivered a sharp threat to the wallets of corporate executives who have received large compensation packages even as their companies received government bailout funds. Things, she warned, are going to change.
Discussion:
TalkLeft, Commentary, The Huffington Post, D-Day, Political Punch, Hot Air and Weekly Standard
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David Dishneau / Associated Press:
Feds allege plot to destroy Fannie Mae data — Fired Fannie Mae worker charged with planting virus to destroy mortgage giant's computer data — HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP) — A fired Fannie Mae contract worker pleaded not guilty Friday to a federal charge he planted a virus designed to destroy …