Top Items:
Alex Isenstadt / Politico:
Dems worry leaders in denial on Obamacare — Democratic leaders claim the bungled launch of Obamacare is just the latest news sensation — a media-stirred tempest that looks in the heat of the moment like it could upend the midterm election, but ends up fizzling well before voters head to the polls.
Discussion:
USA Today
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Elise Viebeck / The Hill:
Filibuster's end imperils Sebelius — Kathleen Sebelius may become the biggest loser in the Senate's approval of filibuster reform. — The Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary has kept her job despite the botched rollout of ObamaCare's insurance exchanges, but it will now be easier for Obama to replace her.
Franklin Foer / The New Republic:
Obamacare's Threat to Liberalism
Obamacare's Threat to Liberalism
Discussion:
Power Line and New York Times
Niall Stanage / The Hill:
For flailing Obama, it's fixing healthcare, stupid
Wall Street Journal:
Tehran can continue to enrich uranium at 10,000 working centrifuges. — President Obama is hailing a weekend accord that he says has “halted the progress of the Iranian nuclear program,” and we devoutly wish this were true. The reality is that the agreement in Geneva with five Western nations takes Iran …
Discussion:
Washington Post and The Hugh Hewitt Show
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Michael R. Gordon / New York Times:
Longer-Term Deal With Iran Faces Major Challenges
Longer-Term Deal With Iran Faces Major Challenges
Discussion:
WJLA-TV, The Week, NBCNews, The Caucus, News Desk and Associated Press
Barrie McKenna / Globe and Mail:
Canada ‘deeply skeptical’ Iran will follow through on nuclear deal
Canada ‘deeply skeptical’ Iran will follow through on nuclear deal
Discussion:
Brookings Institute, Michael J. Totten's blog and National Review
Washington Post:
An Iran deal worth trying — risks and all
An Iran deal worth trying — risks and all
Discussion:
The Plum Line, Bloomberg, Mediaite, DownWithTyranny! and neo-neocon
Mark Landler / New York Times:
Nuclear Accord With Iran Opens Diplomatic Doors in the Mideast
Nuclear Accord With Iran Opens Diplomatic Doors in the Mideast
Discussion:
Jerusalem Post, Washington Post, First Read, BillMoyers.com, Wall Street Journal and Hot Air
Bob Dreyfuss / thenation.com/blogs/161:
Historic US-Iran Deal Is First Step Toward Peace
Historic US-Iran Deal Is First Step Toward Peace
Discussion:
The Atlantic Online, BuzzFeed, Daily Kos and New York Times
Juan Williams / The Hill:
Pressure builds on Boehner — If Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) put the Senate's immigration bill to a vote in the House, it wins. — The math is pretty simple. It will take 218 votes to pass it. All 200 Democrats are on board as well as three Republican co-sponsors.
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Bernie Becker / The Hill:
Top Dems, Republicans blast Obama's nuke deal with Iran — Top lawmakers on both side of the aisle on Sunday voiced skepticism about the newly struck agreement with Iran, and vowed to keep up the pressure with sanctions. — Senior members in both chambers said that, at first glance …
Discussion:
The PJ Tatler and CNN
CNN:
President's marks as manager take hit in new CNN/ORC poll — Washington (CNN) - Only four out of 10 Americans believe President Barack Obama can manage the federal government effectively, according to a new national poll. — And a CNN/ORC International survey released Monday morning …
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, LifeNews.com, Weasel Zippers, The PJ Tatler, Hot Air, Post Politics, Politico and National Review
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
California, Here We Come? — It goes without saying that the rollout of Obamacare was an epic disaster. But what kind of disaster was it? Was it a failure of management, messing up the initial implementation of a fundamentally sound policy? Or was it a demonstration that the Affordable Care Act is inherently unworkable?
Discussion:
National Review, The Hugh Hewitt Show, Health Care Policy …, Balloon Juice and PoliticusUSA
Lawrence R. Jacobs / New York Times:
Right vs. Left in the Midwest — MINNESOTA and Wisconsin share much more than bone-chilling winters: German and Northern European roots; farming; and, until recently, a populist progressive tradition stretching back a century to Wisconsin's Fighting Bob La Follette and the birth of Minnesota's Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party.
Discussion:
Liberaland, Jared Bernstein and The Mahablog
Connor Adams Sheets / International Business Times:
Angola ‘Bans Islam’, Dismantles Mosques, According To News Reports — A number of news outlets have reported that Angola has “banned” Islam and started to dismantle mosques in a bold effort to stem the spread of Muslim extremism. — Weekly French-language Moroccan newspaper La Nouvelle Tribune published …
Discussion:
The Daily Caller and The Gateway Pundit
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Susan Mohamed / OnIslam.net:
Angola Bans Islam, Destroys Mosques
Angola Bans Islam, Destroys Mosques
Discussion:
Weasel Zippers, Jihad Watch, Atlas Shrugs, Blazing Cat Fur and The Volokh Conspiracy
Adam Liptak / New York Times:
Court Confronts Religious Rights of Corporations — WASHINGTON — Hobby Lobby, a chain of crafts stores, closes on Sundays, costing its owners millions but honoring their Christian faith. — The stores play religious music. Employees get free spiritual counseling.
Discussion:
Unfogged
MySanAntonio.com:
SAPD officer accused of rape — A San Antonio police officer was arrested Saturday and accused of raping a 19-year-old woman on the South Side early the day before. At a news conference Saturday, police said the officer has been accused of sexual assault before.
Discussion:
Crooks and Liars and Scared Monkeys
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Lucy McCalmont / Politico:
Obama: 'I'm not a particularly ideological person' — President Barack Obama says he is not a “particularly ideological person,” but remains passionate about certain issues. — “I'm not a particularly ideological person,” Obama said Sunday during a fundraiser in Seattle.
Discussion:
Taylor Marsh
David Jesse / USA Today:
Government books $41.3 billion in student loan profits — Figures come as concerns mount about growing loan debt for students, graduates. — CONNECT — The federal government made enough money on student loans over the last year that, if it wanted, it could provide maximum-level Pell Grants …
James Jay Carafano / National Review:
Munich II — No, that's not a facile, partisan jab. What just went down in Geneva is, in fact, a replay of the greatest diplomatic tragedy of the 20th century. — The Munich deal rested on the ridiculous notion that Hitler could be satiated. The new pact builds on the equally ludicrous idea …
Discussion:
The Mahablog, No More Mister Nice Blog, The PJ Tatler, Crooked Timber, RT, Betsy's Page, Power Line and Guardian