Top Items:
Dylan Scott / Talking Points Memo:
Obamacare Sign-Ups: 7,041,000 — How many people have signed up for private coverage under Obamacare? 7,041,000, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney announced Tuesday afternoon. — That number is likely to rise: It does not include the Monday sign-ups in the 14 states operating their own marketplaces.
Discussion:
ACASignups.net and Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion
RELATED:
Sahil Kapur / Talking Points Memo:
Obamacare Cuts Kentucky's Uninsured Rate By 40 Percent
Obamacare Cuts Kentucky's Uninsured Rate By 40 Percent
Discussion:
Lexington Herald-Leader, Daily Kos, Courier-Journal and The Fix
Associated Press:
BREAKING: Obamacare Sign-Ups on Track to Hit 7 Million on Final Day
BREAKING: Obamacare Sign-Ups on Track to Hit 7 Million on Final Day
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo and Business Insider
Robert Pear / New York Times:
Health Website Failures Impede Signup Surge as Deadline Nears
Health Website Failures Impede Signup Surge as Deadline Nears
Discussion:
Wall Street Journal, The Week, Right Turn and Patterico's Pontifications
ThinkProgress:
Inside Paul Ryan's Latest Plan To Gut Medicare — House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) — On Tuesday, House Budget Committee Chairman Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI) released his new budget blueprint for fiscal year 2015. It contains many of the same cuts to social safety net …
Discussion:
Salon, Campaign for America's Future, Hullabaloo and Talking Points Memo
RELATED:
Jonathan Weisman / New York Times:
Ryan Budget Would Cut Food Stamps and Medicaid Deeply
Ryan Budget Would Cut Food Stamps and Medicaid Deeply
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Wall Street Journal and The Week
Greg Miller / Washington Post:
CIA misled on interrogation program, Senate report says — A report by the Senate Intelligence Committee concludes that the CIA misled the government and the public about aspects of its brutal interrogation program for years — concealing details about the severity of its methods …
Discussion:
The Plum Line, The Hill, CNN, The Dish, The Week, FOX News Radio, Business Insider, Prairie Weather, Clayton Cramer, TalkLeft, Reuters, Power Line and Liberaland
RELATED:
Paul Waldman / American Prospect:
The CIA and the Moral Sunk Costs of the Torture Program
The CIA and the Moral Sunk Costs of the Torture Program
Discussion:
Business Insider and The Week
Travis Gettys / The Raw Story:
Starbucks apologizes to La. teacher for barista's Satanic designs drawn in her coffee foam — Starbucks has apologized to a Louisiana teacher who complained that a barista drew Satanic symbols in her coffee foam. — Megan Pinion posted photos of two beverages she bought at a Baton Rouge coffee shop …
Discussion:
Jezebel and Liberaland
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Jonathan Cohn / The New Republic:
It was worth it. Probably. — Open enrollment for the Affordable Care Act ended officially on Monday night. And the last-minute rush to sign up for new insurance plans was every bit as big as the experts had always predicted. Traffic to the online marketplaces and calls to the telephone help centers were the highest ever.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, The Plum Line, Bloomberg View, ABC News and Hot Air
RELATED:
Brian Beutler / Salon:
GOP's self-defeating myopia: Why its Obamacare mania is now a gift to Democrats
GOP's self-defeating myopia: Why its Obamacare mania is now a gift to Democrats
Discussion:
Outside the Beltway, No More Mister Nice Blog, CBS Miami, The Plum Line, msnbc.com and CNN
Peter Schorsch / SaintPetersBlog:
The bizarre double life of conservative congressional hopeful Jake Rush — Running for the U.S. Congress can be the role of a lifetime for a budding politician, which would seem on the surface to fit right in with “conservative” Republican candidate Jacob A. Rush.
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo, Mediaite, Business Insider, Naked Politics, Gawker and RedState
Josh Gerstein / Politico:
CREW scores major FOIA win in Tom DeLay case — A watchdog group pressing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit for records about a federal investigation into former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas) scored a major legal victory Tuesday by winning a court ruling that could increase public access …
John Dickerson / Slate:
Why a Jeb Bush presidential run would be hard on the GOP. — Jeb Bush is having a moment. For two months or so, as Chris Christie's presidential fortunes have appeared abridged, people who have supported the New Jersey governor (or at least are predisposed to support him) …
Discussion:
protein wisdom, Booman Tribune, Politico and Daily Kos
Cass R. Sunstein / Bloomberg View:
Home-Run Hitters of the Supreme Court — In the nation's history, 112 people have served on the Supreme Court of the United States. Suppose that we were to select the all-time greats. Who would make the cut? — To answer that question, we need a metric.
Discussion:
Washington Post and ACS Blog
Eric Lach / Talking Points Memo:
Appeals Court Finds Florida's 2012 Voter Purge Broke The Law — A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that Florida's 2012 efforts to remove non-citizens from its voter rolls violated the National Voter Registration Act. — The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 that the state's efforts …
Discussion:
Liberaland
Nate Silver / FiveThirtyEightFeatures:
A Gaffe Can Matter When It Motivates the Base — We recently published a forecast that described the GOP as more likely than not to win the U.S. Senate in November. But our analysis was less bullish on Republicans' prospects of flipping the seat in Iowa currently held by Democratic Sen. Tom Harkin, who is retiring.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly, Talking Points Memo, Hot Air and Wall Street Journal
Guy Taylor / Washington Times:
CIA officer confirmed no protests before misleading Benghazi account given — Information on ground rejects protest account — Before the Obama administration gave an inaccurate narrative on national television that the Benghazi attacks grew from an anti-American protest …
Discussion:
The PJ Tatler, NO QUARTER USA NET, The Daily Caller, The Gateway Pundit and Weasel Zippers
New York Times:
What Really Killed William Henry Harrison? — William Henry Harrison, the ninth president of the United States, holds a distinction that with luck will never be equaled: He was our shortest-serving president, dying on April 4, 1841, after just a month in office. — What killed him?
Discussion:
Lawyers, Guns & Money
Holly Watt / Telegraph:
British sniper in Afghanistan kills six Taliban with one bullet — Lance Corporal in the Coldstream Guards hit trigger switch of suicide bomber whose device then exploded, Telegraph learns — A British sniper in Afghanistan killed six insurgents with a single bullet after hitting …
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, Scared Monkeys, Independent Journal Review, American Power, Weasel Zippers and The PJ Tatler
David Dayen / The New Republic:
Someone Else's Debt Could Ruin Your Credit Rating — Debt collectors are pursuing one in seven Americans—and often screwing up — Last month, Amrit Singh, an adjunct professor at Hostos Community College in the South Bronx, received a letter from the New York City Marshal, advising him that he owed $10,000, due within 20 days.
Discussion:
Shakesville, susiemadrak.com and Hullabaloo
CBS Sacramento:
Covered California Sends Deaf Callers To Hotline Offering ‘Hot Ladies’ — SACRAMENTO (CBS13) — On the deadline to sign up for health coverage through Covered California, some hearing-impaired residents were sent to a chat line offering ‘hot ladies’ instead of an insurance navigator.
Discussion:
The Daily Caller, Fox News, Weasel Zippers, Washington Free Beacon, National Review and The Lonely Conservative
John McCormack / Weekly Standard:
Joe Manchin Becomes First Democratic Senator to Endorse 20-Week Federal Abortion Limit — On Tuesday afternoon, West Virginia's Joe Manchin became the first Democrat in the United States Senate to support a federal bill that would ban most abortions during the final four months of pregnancy.
Discussion:
LifeNews.com