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3:10 PM ET, July 2, 2012

memeorandum

 Top Items: 
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
Anderson Cooper: “The Fact Is, I'm Gay.”  —  Last week, Entertainment Weekly ran a story on an emerging trend: gay people in public life who come out in a much more restrained and matter-of-fact way than in the past.  In many ways, it's a great development: we're evolved enough not to be gob-smacked when we find out someone's gay.
Marc A. Thiessen / Washington Post:
Why are Republicans so awful at picking Supreme Court justices?  —  Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.'s decision to side with the court's liberal bloc and uphold Obamacare raises an important question for conservatives: Why are Republicans so awful at picking Supreme Court justices?
RELATED:
Austin Frakt / The Incidental Economist:
Obamacare is the biggest tax increase in history ... if you ignore history  —  Maybe you've heard that Obamacare is the biggest tax increase in history.  Not so.  Not even close.  Kevin Drum posted the evidence in a table.  I turned it into a chart.  More here and here.
Amanda Peterson Beadle / ThinkProgress:
Romney Surrogate Falsely Claims That Obamacare Would Harm Breast Cancer Patients
Jeffrey M. Jones / Gallup:
Half of U.S. Hispanics Identify as Political Independents
Discussion: NBC Latino, CNN and Politico
Patricia Zengerle / Reuters:
Ruling ups support for Obama healthcare, still unpopular
Donovan Slack / Politico:
W.H. gets unexpected backup: Romney camp says it's a penalty, not a tax  —  Prominent Dems including White House chief of staff Jack Lew and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi have repeatedly argued in recent days that the fee for not buying insurance under the health care law is in fact a penalty and not a tax.
RELATED:
CNN:
CNN Poll: Health care ruling changes views of Supreme Court  —  Washington (CNN) - The Supreme Court's decision to uphold the national health care law may not have changed many minds regarding the controversial measure, but a new poll indicates it sure did change Americans views of the high court.
Discussion: The Hill
Greg Sargent / Washington Post:
David Axelrod: Top GOP officials are ‘sliming their own nominee’  —  I asked Obama senior strategist David Axelrod for a response to Mitt Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom's claim today that Obamacare's mandate is not a tax, after all.  The assertion puts the Romney campaign at odds …
Discussion: ABCNEWS and Daily Kos
Rob Portman / CNN:
Portman to headline New Hampshire GOP event
Discussion: GOP 12
Rupert Murdoch / CNN:
TRENDING: Murdoch on Romney: ‘Of course I want him to win’
Patrick Gavin / Politico:
CPAC's boy wonder swings left  —  Jonathan Krohn took the political world by storm at 2009's Conservative Political Action Conference when, at just 13 years old, he delivered an impromptu rallying cry for conservatism that became a viral hit and had some pegging him as a future star of the Republican Party.
Wall Street Journal:
A Vast New Taxing Power  —  The Chief Justice's ObamaCare ruling is far from the check on Congress of right-left myth.  —  The commentary on John Roberts's solo walk into the Affordable Care Act wilderness is converging on a common theme: The Chief Justice is a genius.
RELATED:
Meghashyam Mali / Ballot Box:
Dems target vulnerable GOP lawmakers over health law repeal vote  —  The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) is launching a new campaign Monday targeting vulnerable GOP lawmakers on healthcare ahead of the House vote to repeal the Affordable Care Act.
Mj Lee / Politico:
Donald Trump: ‘Roberts wanted to be loved’
Discussion: The Raw Story, Hot Air and The Hill
Greg Sargent / Washington Post:
Mitch McConnell: Covering 30 million uninsured is ‘not the issue’  —  Mitch McConnell's appearance today on Fox News Sunday was remarkably revealing — it showed as clearly as you could want that the Supreme Court decision is finally forcing Republicans to declare what, exactly …
Christopher S. Rugaber / Associated Press:
US manufacturing shrinks for first time in 3 years  —  WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. manufacturing shrank in June for the first time in nearly three years, a troubling sign as evidence builds that economic growth is slowing.  —  The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing managers …
RELATED:
Shobhana Chandra / Bloomberg:
U.S. Manufacturing Contracts For First Time In Three Years
Discussion: Reuters, ThinkProgress and AEIdeas
Ed Kilgore / Washington Monthly:
Scott and Jindal Go Over the Brink on Medicaid Expansion  —  In the continuing campaign for the mantle of America's Worst Governor, Florida's Rick Scott and Louisiana's Bobby Jindal became the first of their peers to put aside coy equivocation and flatly say they would oppose implementation …
RELATED:
David Corn / MoJo Articles:
Romney Invested in Medical-Waste Firm That Disposed of Aborted Fetuses, Government Documents Show  —  And these documents challenge Romney's claim that he left Bain Capital in early 1999.  —  Joe Burbank/Orlando Sentinel/Zuma  —  Earlier this year, Mitt Romney nearly landed …
Associated Press:
Armando Montano, AP summer intern, dies in Mexico City at age 22  —  Eduardo Verdugo/Associated Press - In this June 4, 2012 photo, Armando Montano, 22, poses for an ID photo at the Associated Press office in Mexico City.  Montano, an aspiring journalist who was working this summer …
nbcnewyork.com:
Christie Calls Reporter “Idiot” at Press Conference  —  When a reporter tried to ask Chris Christie an off-topic question at a press conference, the governor snapped at him  —  New Jersey's governor is known for speaking his mind when something displeases him.
Josiah Ryan / Campus Reform:
Secret Service disrupts students' ‘Fire Holder protest’ over ‘suspicious package’  —  The Secret Service on Monday shutdown a student-protest calling for the firing of Attorney General Eric Holder saying they were acting on concerns over a ‘a suspicious package’ apparently left by a tourist on White House grounds.
Washington Post:
Sweaty Washington returns to work; mass outages persist, though numbers decline  —  Area residents experienced slightly less sweltering temperatures and relatively quiet roads on Monday, as utility companies continued to battle massive power outages from Friday's severe storms.
 
 
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 More Items: 
Washington Post:
Colorado's table was set for monster fire
Discussion: Hot Air and The Raw Story
Jim Geraghty / National Review:
Doing Double Duty at Justice
Discussion: Outside the Beltway
Marc Ambinder / GQ:
Exclusive: In His Second Term, Obama Will Pivot to the Drug War
Discussion: Hit & Run
Thomas B. Edsall / Campaign Stops:
Playing It Dangerously Safe
Discussion: Washington Monthly
Zeke Miller / BuzzFeed:
ObamaCare Ruling Fills Republican Coffers
Discussion: Hot Air and Washington Post
Carlo Munoz / The Hill:
GOP senators propose House-Senate work groups on sequester
Just A Conservative Girl / Potluck:
A Tale of One Tragedy and Two Campaigns
 Earlier Items: 
Associated Press:
Privately devout Romney worships with his family
Discussion: Politico and Business Insider
Andrew Freedman / Climate Change:
Heat Wave Sets More All-Time Temperature Records
Discussion: ThinkProgress and New York Times
Reuters:
Mexico's old rulers claim presidential election win
Jonathan Martin / Politico:
Vice president hopefuls play the name game
J. Bradford DeLong / Brad DeLong:
Eric Rauchway: Megan McArdle Says Something Wrong on the Internet
Discussion: Balloon Juice
 

 
From Mediagazer:

The New York Times Company:
The New York Times names Dick Stevenson as Washington bureau chief; Stevenson has been at the paper for nearly 40 years and Washington editor since 2021

Caitlin Huston / The Hollywood Reporter:
Internal memo: Hearst Magazines president announces layoffs as part of a decision to “reallocate resources” to “continue our focus on digital innovation”

Ayodeji Rotinwa / Columbia Journalism Review:
A look at the Agora Center for Research, a Ugandan newsroom sitting between activism and investigative reporting, posting its work on various social media sites

 
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