Top Items:
The White House:
The quickest and broadest tax cut ever — Two important takeaways from the President's Weekly Address this morning. — #1, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act will start having an impact as soon as a few weeks from now, in the form of the quickest and broadest tax cut in history:
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Ben Smith / The Politico:
Obama: Deficit is big, my plan is bigger — Last week, America ran up the credit card. This week, the statement arrives. — President Barack Obama is set to deliver the worst fiscal news since the Great Depression. — On Monday, he'll outline a deficit of $1.3 trillion …
Discussion:
Agence France Presse
Washington Post:
Obama to Unveil an Ambitious Budget Plan — President Obama is putting the finishing touches on an ambitious first budget that seeks to cut the federal deficit in half over the next four years, primarily by raising taxes on business and the wealthy and by slashing spending on the wars in Iraq …
Jackie Calmes / New York Times:
Obama Has Plan to Slash Deficit, Despite Stimulus Bill — WASHINGTON — After a string of costly bailout and stimulus measures, President Obama will set a goal this week to cut the annual deficit at least in half by the end of his term, administration officials said.
Discussion:
Matthew Yglesias, marbury, No More Mister Nice Blog, TIME.com, Riehl World View and Truthdig
New York Times:
A Reconciliation on Gay Marriage — IN politics, as in marriage, moments come along when sensitive compromise can avert a major conflict down the road. The two of us believe that the issue of same-sex marriage has reached such a point now. — We take very different positions on gay marriage.
Discussion:
The Volokh Conspiracy
Reuters:
Swiss party wants to punish U.S. for UBS probe — The right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) called on Saturday for retaliation against the United States over a U.S. tax probe into the country's biggest bank UBS that threatens prized banking secrecy. — The populist SVP, the country's biggest party …
Brad Stone / New York Times:
Former Chief of eBay Tries a New Bid. It's Political. — SAN FRANCISCO — Meg Whitman, a former chief executive of eBay, once said that running the Internet auction site was like being the mayor of a large city, with the mix of politics, competing constituencies and widespread resistance to change.
Wall Street Journal:
J. Edgar Moyers — The TV moralist's government record. — One of the darker periods of modern American history was J. Edgar Hoover's long reign over the FBI, as we have learned since he died in 1972. So it is more than a historical footnote to discover new records showing …
Discussion:
Outside The Beltway
Ed Morrissey / Hot Air:
Should Minnesota lower the drinking age to 18? — The argument over the legal drinking age will once again arise in Minnesota, and along with it, issues of states' rights, citizenship, and public safety. Four members of the state legislature will introduce a bill to lower the age to 18 …
Discussion:
PoliGazette
Mark Steyn / National Review:
From Islamabad to Bradford — 'It is hard to understand this deal," said Richard Holbrooke, President Obama's special envoy. And, if the special envoy of the so-called smartest and most impressive administration in living memory can't understand it, what chance do the rest of us have?
Charlie Savage / New York Times:
Obama Upholds Detainee Policy in Afghanistan — WASHINGTON — The Obama administration has told a federal judge that military detainees in Afghanistan have no legal right to challenge their imprisonment there, embracing a key argument of former President Bush's legal team.
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Charles J. Hanley / Associated Press:
Mass migrations and war: Dire climate scenario — CAPE TOWN, South Africa - If we don't deal with climate change decisively, “what we're talking about then is extended world war,” the eminent economist said. — His audience Saturday, small and elite, had been stranded here by bad weather and were talking climate.