Top Items:
Alicia M. Cohn / The Hill:
Romney raises $4.3M after health ruling — Mitt Romney's presidential campaign has raised $4.3 million since the Supreme Court ruled President Obama's healthcare law is constitutional. — Romney started raising funds immediately after the decision, and in a message to supporters Friday morning …
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Paul Krugman / New York Times:
The Real Winners — So the Supreme Court — defying many expectations — upheld the Affordable Care Act, a k a Obamacare. There will, no doubt, be many headlines declaring this a big victory for President Obama, which it is. But the real winners are ordinary Americans — people like you.
Discussion:
Washington Post, Taylor Marsh, alicublog, Prairie Weather, The Moderate Voice, Brad DeLong and Esquire
Charles Krauthammer / National Review:
Why Roberts Did It — It's the judiciary's Nixon-to-China: Chief Justice John Roberts joins the liberal wing of the Supreme Court and upholds the constitutionality of Obamacare. How? By pulling off one of the great constitutional finesses of all time. He managed to uphold …
George F. Will / Washington Post:
Conservatives' consolation prize — Conservatives won a substantial victory Thursday. The physics of American politics — actions provoking reactions — continues to move the crucial debate, about the nature of the American regime, toward conservatism. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. has served this cause.
David Brooks / New York Times:
Modesty and Audacity — Washington is full of arrogant people who grab power whenever they get the chance. But there is at least one modest minimalist in town, and that's John Roberts Jr. — In his remarkable health care opinion Thursday, the chief justice of the Supreme Court restrained the power of his own institution.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, Washington Post and Hot Air
Neal K. Katyal / New York Times:
A Pyrrhic Victory — THE obvious victor in the Supreme Court's health care decision was President Obama, who risked vast amounts of political capital to pass the Affordable Care Act. A somewhat more subtle victor, but equally important, was the rule of law more generally …
Discussion:
Washington Post, At War, Runnin' Scared, No More Mister Nice Blog, Washington Wire and Wall Street Journal
Wall Street Journal:
The Roberts Rules — The Chief Justice rewrites ObamaCare in order to save it. — Thursday was destined to be an historic day for American liberty, and it was, though the new precedent is grim. The remarkable decision upholding the Affordable Care Act is shot through with confusion …
Discussion:
Hit & Run, Real Clear Politics, AEIdeas, National Review, Instapundit, THE ASTUTE BLOGGERS, PoliPundit.com, SCOTUSblog and Conservatives4Palin
Todd Gregory / Media Matters for America:
Drudge Smears Justice Roberts Over His Seizures — In response to the Supreme Court's ruling in favor of health care reform, the Drudge Report is smearing Chief Justice John Roberts over the possibility that he might use epilepsy medication and suggesting that it affected his judgment.
Discussion:
The Raw Story, Los Angeles Times, Yahoo! News, Firedoglake and ThinkProgress
Byron Tau / Politico:
Obama campaign: It's a penalty, not a tax — A top surrogate for President Obama insisted Friday that the individual mandate in the Affordable Care Act was not a tax — despite the fact that the Supreme Court narrowly preserved the law on those grounds. — “Don't believe the hype …
ThinkProgress:
Conservatives Claim Roberts Upheld Obamacare Because Of ‘Cognitive Problems’ Due To Epilepsy Medication
Conservatives Claim Roberts Upheld Obamacare Because Of ‘Cognitive Problems’ Due To Epilepsy Medication
Discussion:
Wonkette, Plunderbund, Business Insider and Livewire
Jonah Goldberg / National Review:
Roberts's Ruling Took Guts
Roberts's Ruling Took Guts
Discussion:
Hit & Run, Bloomberg, Balloon Juice and Ricochet Conversations Feed
Ali Gharib / ThinkProgress:
Glenn Beck Sells Tee Shirts Calling John Roberts A ‘Coward’
Glenn Beck Sells Tee Shirts Calling John Roberts A ‘Coward’
Discussion:
Salon and The Atlantic Wire
Matthew Yglesias / Slate:
The Filibuster Won't Save ObamaCare From President Romney … - Saletan: How Fast Can Republicans Read? The Conflicting Evidence. — Magic Mike Is Soderbergh's Most Fun Movie Since Ocean's Eleven — Why Did Roberts Do It? To Save the Supreme Court.
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Jon Ward / The Huffington Post:
Mitt Romney, Surprised By Health Care Decision, Pivots To Tax Attack
Mitt Romney, Surprised By Health Care Decision, Pivots To Tax Attack
Discussion:
New York Magazine, Indecision Forever, The Maddow Blog, The New Republic, Taking Note, Towleroad News #gay, Daily Kos and slacktivist
Frank Newport / Gallup:
Americans Don't Often Name Healthcare as Top U.S. Problem
Americans Don't Often Name Healthcare as Top U.S. Problem
Discussion:
Politico, Jammie Wearing Fools and National Review
New York Times:
States Face a Challenge to Meet Health Law's Deadline
States Face a Challenge to Meet Health Law's Deadline
Discussion:
The Huffington Post, Capital Tonight, The Maddow Blog, ABCNEWS, News Desk, Suburban Guerrilla and The Hill, more at Mediagazer »
Sterling Beard / The Hill:
Pelosi: I ‘never feared’ chief justice would strike down healthcare
J.D. Heyman / People.com:
Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes Are Divorcing — After five years of marriage, Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes are getting a divorce, PEOPLE has learned exclusively. — “This is a personal and private matter for Katie and her family,” says Holmes's attorney Jonathan Wolfe.
Lydia Saad / Gallup:
Americans Issue Split Decision on Healthcare Ruling — Nearly two-thirds believe politics played too great a role — PRINCETON, NJ — Americans are sharply divided over Thursday's Supreme Court decision on the 2010 healthcare law, with 46% agreeing and 46% disagreeing with the high court's ruling that the law is constitutional.
Discussion:
Washington Wire and Washington Examiner
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Dustin Weaver / The Hill:
High court gives GOP new weapon on taxes
High court gives GOP new weapon on taxes
Discussion:
Politico, CNN, Wake up America, The Atlantic Online and Washington Post
Michelle Malkin:
Exclusive: When did the Waldo Canyon Fire start, and when did the feds know it? — As you know, my family and I were evacuated Saturday afternoon on June 23 along with 11,000 other West side/Manitou Springs residents when the Waldo Canyon Fire erupted. According to the Colorado Springs …
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Nick R. Martin / tpmmuckraker.talkingpointsmemo.com:
TPMMuckraker — Conservatives Find A Way To Blame Obama For Monster Colorado Wildfire
TPMMuckraker — Conservatives Find A Way To Blame Obama For Monster Colorado Wildfire
Discussion:
Michelle Malkin and The Maddow Blog
Alexander Burns / Politico:
Romney ad features Hillary Clinton: ‘Shame on you, Barack Obama’ — Mitt Romney's campaign has quietly begun airing a TV ad in Ohio that uses an old clip of Hillary Clinton to blast President Barack Obama. — The ad pulls footage of the 2008 primary campaign, when Clinton …
Discussion:
BuzzFeed, Taylor Marsh, Mediaite, Daily Kos, BuzzFeed and Shakesville
BuzzFeed:
O'Malley On The GOP: “Only Health Care Mandate They Embrace Are Trans-Vaginal Probes” — The Maryland governor suggests Republicans would prefer to secede. — Image by Susan Walsh / AP — Martin O'Malley, the Chairman of the Democratic Governors Association, went off on his Republican colleagues …
Discussion:
Alan Colmes' Liberaland
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David Dayen / Firedoglake:
Medicaid Expansion Rejection Would Particularly Impact People of Color
Medicaid Expansion Rejection Would Particularly Impact People of Color
Discussion:
Colorlines, Hullabaloo and Washington Post
Jonathan Strong / Roll Call:
Darrell Issa Puts Details of Secret Wiretap Applications in Congressional Record — In the midst of a fiery floor debate over contempt proceedings for Attorney General Eric Holder, House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) quietly dropped a bombshell letter into the Congressional Record.
Discussion:
The Jawa Report, The Lonely Conservative and Weekly Standard
Pete Kasperowicz / The Hill:
Congress passes highway funds, extends lower student loan rate — Congress on Friday approved legislation that will extend federal highway programs through 2014, a low interest rate on student loans for one year, and the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) for five years.
Discussion:
Daily Kos and Prairie Weather