Top Items:
Scott Shane / New York Times:
Cheney Is Linked to Concealment of C.I.A. Project — The Central Intelligence Agency withheld information about a secret counterterrorism program from Congress for eight years on direct orders from former Vice President Dick Cheney, the agency's director, Leon E. Panetta …
Discussion:
Alan Colmes' Liberaland, The Politico, CBS News, Los Angeles Times, Ben Smith's Blog, MyDD, NO QUARTER, Gawker, The Reaction, The Moderate Voice, Raw Story, Donklephant, Washington Monthly, THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS, The Page, Hullabaloo, The Hill's Blog Briefing Room, TalkLeft, Daily Kos, Liberal Values, Truthdig, The Political Carnival, Jay Hancock's blog, digg.com, Balloon Juice and JONATHAN TURLEY
Daniel Klaidman / Newsweek:
Obama doesn't want to look back, but Attorney General Eric Holder may probe Bush-era torture anyway. … From the magazine issue dated Jul 20, 2009 — It's the morning after Independence Day, and Eric Holder Jr. is feeling the weight of history. The night before, he'd stood on the roof …
RELATED:
McClatchy Washington Bureau:
Sotomayor backers urge reporters to probe New Haven firefighter — WASHINGTON — Supporters of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor are quietly targeting the Connecticut firefighter who's at the center of Sotomayor's most controversial ruling. — On the eve of Sotomayor's Senate confirmation hearing …
RELATED:
Dahlia Lithwick / Slate:
The New Haven firefighter is no stranger to employment disputes. — Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee have announced that Frank Ricci, the firefighter who recently prevailed in his “reverse discrimination” lawsuit against the city of New Haven, Conn., will testify at Sonia Sotomayor's confirmation hearings.
Neil A. Lewis / New York Times:
Nominee Wraps Up Rehearsals — WASHINGTON — For a few hours each day for more than a week, Judge Sonia Sotomayor has sat in a small conference room in a building adjacent to the White House, fielding questions from lawyers helping her prepare for the Senate Judiciary Committee's hearing on her nomination to the Supreme Court.
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times
RELATED:
Amy Goldstein / Washington Post:
In Supreme Court Pick Sotomayor, an Insider's Rise Meets an Outsider's Doubts — In Sotomayor, an Insider's Achievements Meet an Outsider's Insecurities — Within weeks of arriving in New Haven as a law student in the fall of 1976, Sonia Sotomayor fell in with a few first-year classmates whose ascent …
Associated Press:
Gov. Ritter Steered Stimulus Money To Ex-Employer — DENVER (AP) ― Colorado Gov. Bill Ritter has awarded some of the state's first stimulus money to his former employer in a no-bid contract. — Ritter hired his former law firm, the Washington-based Hogan & Hartson …
Paul Singer / Roll Call:
Freshman Rep. Grayson Taken to Cleaners in Ponzi Scheme — Freshman Rep. Alan Grayson (D-Fla.) lost $3 million in a stock swindle between 2000 and 2005, a Florida television station reported this week. — According to Orlando's Local 6, Grayson was an investor in a Ponzi scheme run by the company Derivium Capital.
Discussion:
Redhot
WhiteHouse.gov Blog:
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT TO THE GHANAIAN PARLIAMENT — Accra International Conference Center — Accra, Ghana — THE PRESIDENT: (Trumpet plays.) I like this. Thank you. Thank you. I think Congress needs one of those horns. (Laughter.) That sounds pretty good. Sounds like Louis Armstrong back there.
Ralph Z. Hallow / Washington Times:
EXCLUSIVE: Palin plans to stay in politics — Brushing aside the criticisms of pundits and politicos, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin said she plans to jump immediately back into the national political fray — stumping for conservative issues and even Democrats — after she prematurely vacates her elected post at month's end.
Discussion:
The Other McCain
Dean Baker / American Prospect:
The Post's Editorial Writers Know Zero Economics — That wouldn't be a problem except that they feel so much need to expound on it. Today, they tell readers that: “those calling for an additional stimulus package must explain why this is not enough.” — Wow, haven't they heard?
David Nather / Balance of Power:
Congress Suddenly Remembers It Can Cut Off Funds — Every once in a while, Congress remembers things it can do when an administration tries to ignore laws Congress has written. But it must be weird for President Obama, the former constitutional law professor, to see it happening on his watch.
Booman Tribune:
David Brooks' Strange Tale — I don't know if David Brooks had a couple of drinks at lunch or not, but he went on MSNBC this afternoon and claimed that he had once sat through an entire dinner with a Republican U.S. Senator's hand in his lap. BROOKS: You know, all three of us spend a lot …
Discussion:
D-Day
RELATED:
Glenn Greenwald / Salon:
The new Report on illegal spying is not a real investigation — The Bush-era torture regime might have been that administration's most flamboyant act of criminality, but its illegal NSA warrantless eavesdropping program (and other still-unknown surveillance programs) has always been the clearest.
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
House Health Bill Relies on Wealth Tax — WASHINGTON — House Democrats plan to pay for their health-care legislation with a big tax increase on wealthy households, aiming to raise $540 billion over the next decade with a package of surtaxes on families making $350,000 or more.
RELATED: