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11:05 AM ET, August 6, 2010

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Motoko Rich / New York Times:
Private Growth Is Tepid as U.S. Economy Sheds Jobs Overall  —  With the American economic recovery hanging in the balance, private employers added 71,000 jobs in July, up from a downwardly revised 31,000 in June but below the consensus forecast of 90,000.  The unemployment rate stayed steady at 9.5 percent.
RELATED:
Wall Street Journal:
U.S. Employers Shed Jobs  —  Unemployment Rate Held Steady at 9.5% in July  —  WASHINGTON — The U.S. economy shed more jobs than expected in July while the unemployment rate held steady at 9.5%, a further sign the economic recovery may be losing momentum.
CNBC:
Jobs Picture Worsens With 131,000 Losses; 9.5% Rate  —  U.S. employment fell for a second straight month in July as more temporary census jobs ended while private hiring rose less than expected, pointing to an anemic economic recovery.  —  Non-farm payrolls fell 131,000 …
Ezra Klein:
Jobs report: Public sector loses 202,000 jobs; private sector gains 71,000  —  The July jobs report is bad news for jobs, but tepidly good news for recovery.  Another 143,000 census positions expired, contributing to a total public sector job loss of more than 200,000 jobs.
Discussion: gopleader.gov and Eschaton
Megan McArdle / The Atlantic Online:
Jobs Report Terrible, Again  —  The economy lost 131,000 jobs in July, all of them in the government.  Private payrolls added north of 70,000 workers—anemic in the face of our current unemployment rate, but hey, at least it's something.  But government jobs fell by 200,000, mostly …
Discussion: The Daily Dish and Weekly Standard
Timothy R. Homan / Bloomberg:   U.S. Companies Add 71,000 Jobs; Unemployment at 9.5%
Kirk Victor / Hotline On Call:
Romer To Leave White House  —  Christina Romer, chairwoman of Pres. Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, has decided to resign, according to a source familiar with her plans.  —  Romer, an economics professor at the University of California (Berkeley) before taking the key admin post, did not respond to repeated calls to her office.
RELATED:
Lori Montgomery / Washington Post:
Christina Romer, chair of Obama's Council of Economic Advisers, to resign  —  Christina Romer, chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, has resigned her post to return to her old job as an economics professor at the University of California at Berkeley, the White House said Thursday.
CNN:
Republicans slam White House over new jobs report  —  Washington (CNN) - Congressional Republicans are using the release of July's jobs report to criticize the Obama administration's economic policies.  —  The Labor Department reports Friday that the unemployment rate stayed steady …
Discussion: The Politico
Jackie Calmes / New York Times:
Top Obama Adviser on Economics to Step Down
Discussion: Free exchange and National Review
Shane D'Aprile / Ballot Box:   Boehner: Dem ethics troubles won't have big impact on elections
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
The Flimflam Man  —  One depressing aspect of American politics is the susceptibility of the political and media establishment to charlatans.  You might have thought, given past experience, that D.C. insiders would be on their guard against conservatives with grandiose plans.
Manu Raju / The Politico:
McConnell to Franken: This isn't ‘SNL’  —  When Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell laid out his opposition to Elena Kagan's Supreme Court nomination, someone in the chamber appeared to be moving around in his chair, gasping and rolling his eyes.  —  It was Sen. Al Franken.
RELATED:
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
McConnell scolds Franken for making faces from dais during his speech
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
Senate Votes to Confirm Elena Kagan for U.S. Supreme Court
James Taranto / Wall Street Journal:
Scalia Was Right  —  Why the same-sex marriage ruling will stand.  —  For the first time, a federal judge has held that the Constitution mandates the legal redefinition of marriage.  The California Supreme Court had reached a similar conclusion in 2008, and voters responded by amending …
RELATED:
Jesse McKinley / New York Times:
Gay Marriage Ruling a Challenge for Both Parties
Discussion: Law Blog, The BLT and KRLD-AM
Gretchen Morgenson / New York Times:
Exotic Deals Put Denver Schools Deeper in Debt  —  In the spring of 2008, the Denver public school system needed to plug a $400 million hole in its pension fund.  Bankers at JPMorgan Chase offered what seemed to be a perfect solution.  —  The bankers said that the school system …
Steve Benen / Washington Monthly:
IGNORING AN ALARM.... In light of the latest discouraging jobs report — the third consecutive month in which the job totals were disappointing — there's an obvious course ahead.  Heidi Shierholz, an economist from the Economic Policy Institute, said, “The economic case for more government action …
Discussion: Eschaton
RELATED:
Richard E. Cohen / The Politico:
State aid bill a gamble for Dems
Discussion: The Page
Oleoleolson / AlterNet Blogs:
Massive Censorship Of Digg Uncovered  —  A group of influential conservative members of the behemoth social media site Digg.com have just been caught red-handed in a widespread campaign of censorship, having multiple accounts, upvote padding, and deliberately trying to ban progressives.
Maggie Haberman / The Politico:
Charlie Rangel won't ‘plea bargain’  —  Charlie Rangel suggests he's being pressured into taking a plea deal.  AP  —  Rep. Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.) suggested Thursday in an impassioned speech in Harlem that he was being pressured to take a plea deal to make other people “comfortable” …
RELATED:
New York Times:
Guest List for Rangel's Birthday Celebration Shrinks
Walter Alarkon / The Hill:
Old Washington hands break with GOP leaders on Bush-era tax cuts  —  A number of old Republican hands warning of a deficit crisis have split with the GOP leadership over extending the George W. Bush-era tax cuts.  —  Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio), President Reagan's budget chief David Stockman …
Kenzaburo Oe / New York Times:
Hiroshima and the Art of Outrage  —  THE Futenma Marine Corps Air Station on Okinawa, one of the largest United States military bases in East Asia, is in the center of a crowded city.  The American and Japanese governments acknowledge the dangers of this situation, and they agreed nearly 15 years ago …
Aaron Blake / The Fix:
Bill Haslam wins GOP nomination for governor in Tennessee  —  Knoxville Mayor Bill Haslam ran away with the Republican nomination for governor of Tennessee on Thursday, beating a field that included Rep. Zach Wamp and Lt. Gov. Ron Ramsey.  —  With 6 percent of precincts reporting, Haslam led second-place Wamp 52 percent to 27 percent.
Discussion: CNN, Scared Monkeys and The Page
RELATED:
Sean J. Miller / Ballot Box:
Rep. Wamp loses gov. primary to Mayor Haslam
Discussion: The Politico and MyDD
Walter Shapiro / Politics Daily:
Nancy Pelosi's Fate Could Be Decided Here: The View From Oregon  —  WEST LINN, Oregon — Bullseye Coffee — a café, a yarn shop and a postal box rental center all in one homey room with local art (all for sale) on the walls — is a prime spot to chart how the economic doldrums are shaping this election year.
Discussion: The Eye
Eric Lipton / New York Times:
Current or Former Lawmakers Linked to Endowments Made by Corporations  —  WASHINGTON — Nearly a dozen current or former lawmakers have been honored by university endowments financed in part by corporations with business before Congress, posing some potential conflicts like that attributed …
Discussion: TPMMuckraker and Cynthia Tucker
Keach Hagey / The Politico:
The RNC's least favorite reporter  —  One Times scribe has made the infighting within the Republican National Committee his beat.  Reuters  —  The Republican National Committee, embroiled in an internal squabble over the leadership of chairman Michael Steele, is leaking like a sieve.
Nelson D. Schwartz / New York Times:
2 Top Economists Differ Sharply on Risk of Deflation  —  When the latest unemployment figures are announced on Friday, all of Wall Street will be watching.  But for Richard Berner of Morgan Stanley and Jan Hatzius of Goldman Sachs, the results will be more than just another marker in an avalanche of data.
Discussion: Vox Popoli
 
 
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 More Items: 
Uwe E. Reinhardt / Economix:
Is Health Care Special?
Discussion: The New Republic
Declan McCullagh / CNET News:
Defense Dept. demands that Wikileaks return files
Discussion: Threat Level and Who Is IOZ?
Christopher S. Rugaber / Associated Press:
Companies hire at slow pace for 3rd straight month
David Catanese / The Politico:
Norton wins inaugural AUL nod
Brookings Institute:
2010 Arab Public Opinion Poll: Results of Arab Opinion Survey …
Eric Kleefeld / TPMDC:
Target CEO Apologizes For Company's Support Of Tom Emmer
 Earlier Items: 
Michael McAuliff / Mouth of the Potomac:
Schumer Bill Sends Reinforcements, Drones to Border
Brian Bakst / Associated Press:
Target apologizes for Minn. political donation
Megan McArdle / The Atlantic Online:
Housing Insanity  —  If you want to know why us libertarian types …
CNN:
Hearing set for soldier in Obama birth certificate case
Discussion: Washington Post
Greg Sargent / The Plum Line:
Obama admin skewers GOP attack on stimulus cocaine monkeys
Larry J. Sabato / Sabato's Crystal Ball:
The Record-Setting Midterm of 2010  —  Larry J. Sabato …
 

 
From Mediagazer:

Mandy Dalugdug / Music Business Worldwide:
UMG, ABKCO, and Concord sue Believe and its subsidiary TuneCore for $500M+, alleging Believe built its business via “industrial-scale copyright infringement”

Reuters:
French judicial source: investigators searched Netflix's offices in France and the Netherlands as part of a preliminary investigation into tax fraud laundering

Manish Singh / TechCrunch:
India issues a notice to Wikipedia over bias concerns, questioning if it should be classified as a publisher, after judges called its open editing “dangerous”

 
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