Top Items:
Scott Shane / New York Times:
Democrats Say C.I.A. Deceived Congress for Years — WASHINGTON — The director of the Central Intelligence Agency, Leon E. Panetta, has told the House Intelligence Committee in closed-door testimony that the C.I.A. concealed “significant actions” from Congress from 2001 until late last month, seven Democratic committee members said.
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Spencer Ackerman / The Washington Independent:
[UPDATED] Six Seven Members of Congress Say Panetta Testified That CIA Misled Congress — Remember how CIA Director Leon Panetta said in May that members of the House Intelligence Committee “will have to determine” whether the CIA accurately and appropriately briefed Congress about the agency's “enhanced interrogation program”?
Alex Isenstadt / The Politico:
Letter by six House Dems claims Panetta admits the CIA misled Congress
Letter by six House Dems claims Panetta admits the CIA misled Congress
Mike Murphy / NY Daily News:
To go forward, GOP must snap out of its Sarah Palin spell — Gov. Sarah Palin is the political train wreck that keeps on giving. First, she was an awful choice last year as John McCain's running mate. I came to this conclusion with regret - I am one of McCain's biggest admirers. — But facts are facts.
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Thomas Beaumont / Des Moines Register:
Iowa GOP wants Palin at dinner — Iowa Republican Party officials Wednesday said they are aggressively courting Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin to headline the state GOP's premier annual fundraising event. — And they have put a well-connected Des Moines woman in charge of trying to land …
Bunny / THE WEEK News & Opinion:
The Republicans' dwindling options — With Sarah Palin and Mark Sanford out of the running, the GOP has to hope that Mitt Romney shows his good side in 2012. — Americans adore irresponsible, flashy celebrities. But they do not vote for them. Michael Jackson's funeral crashed the Internet.
Jonathan Cohn / The Treatment:
Houston—er, Washington—We Have a Problem — On Wednesday, according to a Capitol Hill source, the Senate Finance Committee distributed to its members a list of about twenty ways to help pay for health care reform. Everything you could imagine was on the list: Taxes on soda and cigarettes.
Discussion:
Ben Smith's Blog, Matthew Yglesias, Firedoglake, The Politico, Bloomberg, Obsidian Wings, Ezra Klein, Wonk Room, Time and Democratic Strategist
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The Politico:
Harry Reid opens $320B health plan hole — Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid tried his best Wednesday to soften some of the toughest talk of the day before on health care - meeting with Republicans in hopes of showing bipartisanship on the issue isn't dead. — But taxing health benefits to pay for an overhaul?
Discussion:
The Hill, Washington Post, New York Times, D-Day, Swampland, Bloomberg, AmSpecBlog, The Page and Open Left
Steve Benen / Washington Monthly:
A SHAKY STORY STARTS TO LOOK WORSE.... The rationale for Sarah Palin's resignation has never made sense, but it seems even less clear now. — One of the few specific points the governor has raised deals with “frivolous” ethics violations filed by her political enemies.
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Barak Ravid / Haaretz:
Netanyahu's paranoia extends to ‘self-hating Jews’ Emmanuel and Axelrod — At about 3:15 P.M. yesterday, the government's 100th day in office, political correspondents' beepers went off. In an unprecedented move, the Prime Minister's Bureau was inviting the correspondents to a press conference …
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Phil Trexler / Akron Beacon Journal:
Akron police investigate teen mob attack on family — Akron police say they aren't ready to call it a hate crime or a gang initiation. — But to Marty Marshall, his wife and two kids, it seems pretty clear. — It came after a family night of celebrating America and freedom with a fireworks show at Firestone Stadium.
The Politico:
Tom Coburn knew of John Ensign's affair — Sen. Tom Coburn knew more than a year ago that his Republican colleague John Ensign was having an affair with a staffer - and he reportedly urged Ensign to end the relationship and pay a substantial sum of money to the staffer and her husband.
Discussion:
Glenn Thrush's Blog, US News, The Huffington Post, The Note, Las Vegas Sun, Hotline On Call and Raw Story
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Brad Heath / USA Today:
Billions in aid go to areas that backed Obama in '08 — WASHINGTON — Billions of dollars in federal aid delivered directly to the local level to help revive the economy have gone overwhelmingly to places that supported President Obama in last year's presidential election.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Townhall.com, Wake up America, Hot Air, The Caucus, Gateway Pundit, Shot in the Dark, Cold Fury and THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS
Mark Penn / The Politico:
Strategy corner: the 10 percent tripwire — Unless some tough decisions are made soon, rising jobless figures will most likely hit what could be a public opinion and political tripwire: 10 percent unemployment. — If and when the country crosses that line, it will be the No. 1 news story for days …
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Richard Lawson / Gawker:
Brian Kilmeade Would Like Species and ‘Ethnics’ to Remain Pure — To stave off dementia! Yes, today the befuddled screech owls on Fox & Friends were discussing a study that states that those that stay married fend off Alzheimer's and dementia better than lonely divorcees. Brian Kilmeade took issue with this.
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David Weigel / The Washington Independent:
DeMint: America is ‘Where Germany Was Before World War II’ — Last night, Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) gave a short talk and Q&A at at the National Press Club about his book “Saving Freedom.” DeMint told a room of around 100 people about a conversation he'd had with an Iranian immigrant …
Ben Smith / The Politico:
Independents begin to edge away from President Obama — In a potentially alarming trend for the White House, independent voters are deserting President Barack Obama nationally and especially in key swing states, recent polls suggest. — Obama's job approval rating hit a — still healthy …
Josh Kraushaar / Scorecard's Blog:
Republican recruiting successes — Candidate recruitment is one of the strongest leading indicators for future political success—and the National Republican Senatorial Committee's recent string of landing top candidates portends a better-than-expected 2010 election cycle for the GOP.
Discussion:
The Washington Independent
Eric Zimmermann / The Hill's Blog Briefing Room:
White House spells Obama's name wrong — Someone might want to look into whether an impostor took President Obama's place during his trip to Russia — In a release touting an agreement between Obama and President Dmitry Medvedev over how to craft a follow-up to the START arms reduction treaty …
Discussion:
Top of the Ticket, The Enterprise Blog, RedState, Scared Monkeys, JammieWearingFool, Don Surber, Weekly Standard and Political Punch
Ben Parr / Mashable!:
Bing Now Bigger Than Digg, Twitter and CNN — With the headlines that Microsoft's new search engine Bing has been grabbing, it's easy to forget that it only went live about a month ago. Since its launch at the beginning of June, it has given Google pause and even had its own web infomercial.
Charlotte Spratt / Daily Mail:
Miss Obama's peacenik T-shirt sends a message to G8 leaders — Her father had just won agreement from the Russians to cut back on the world's stockpiles of nuclear weapons. — And Barack Obama's eldest daughter was obviously keen to make her own statement on the issue - even if it was merely a fashion statement.
Carrick Mollenkamp / Wall Street Journal:
Subprime Returns as Housing Woe — In Atlanta, a Foreclosure Dichotomy Threatens Homes Values — The U.S. housing market is facing new downward pressure as holders of subprime-mortgage bonds flood the market with foreclosed homes at prices that are much lower than where many banks are willing to sell.
Jerry Markon / Washington Post:
Uncommon Detail Marks Rulings by Sotomayor — She Almost Oversteps Her Role, Experts Say — Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's opinions show support for the rights of criminal defendants and suspects, skepticism of corporations, and sympathy for plaintiffs alleging discrimination …
Real Time Economics:
Guest Contribution: The Fall of the Toxic-Assets Plan — The government announced plans to move forward with its Public-Private Investment Program yesterday. Lucian Bebchuk, professor of law, economics, and finance and director of the corporate governance program at Harvard Law School …
Wall Street Journal:
White House Ponders Bernanke's Future — As the White House begins to ponder whether to reappoint or replace Ben Bernanke when his term expires in January, the Federal Reserve chairman's standing on Wall Street is on the rise while attacks on him from Congress mount.
Byron York / Washington Examiner:
AmeriCorps stonewalls questions of White House involvement in IG firing — A top official of the Corporation for National and Community Service, the government agency that oversees AmeriCorps, has refused to answer questions from congressional investigators about the White House's role …
New York Times:
Cities Lose Out on Road Funds From Federal Stimulus — Two-thirds of the country lives in large metropolitan areas, home to the nation's worst traffic jams and some of its oldest roads and bridges. But cities and their surrounding regions are getting far less than two-thirds of federal transportation stimulus money.
Discussion:
Top of the Ticket, msnbc.com, NPR Blogs, Felix Salmon, The Bellows, On Deadline and Associated Press