Top Items:
Marc Santora / New York Times:
Doctor in New York City Is Sick With Ebola — A doctor in New York City who recently returned from treating Ebola patients in Guinea became the first person in the city to test positive for the virus Thursday, setting off a search for anyone who might have come into contact with him.
Discussion:
ThinkProgress, The Hill, New York Magazine, Gawker, The Verge, PJ Media, Hot Air, Associated Press, Mediaite, The Mahablog, USA Today, MichelleMalkin.com, CNN, No More Mister Nice Blog, Althouse, Mashable, The Dish, Taylor Marsh, Gothamist, Shakesville, Outside the Beltway, Intellihub.com, Vox Popoli, The PJ Tatler, Refinery29, Twitchy, Hinterland Gazette, Joe. My. God., Le·gal In·sur·rec· tion, Little Green Footballs, Patterico's Pontifications, The Moderate Voice, TalkLeft, Prairie Weather, New York Post, Balloon Juice, CBS New York and The Gateway Pundit
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Faith Karimi / CNN:
From Guinea to the U.S.: Timeline of first Ebola patient in New York City
From Guinea to the U.S.: Timeline of first Ebola patient in New York City
Discussion:
Talking Points Memo and ImmigrationProf Blog
Ashley Killough / CNN:
CNN Poll: Georgia Senate race statistical tie — (CNN) — Democrat Michelle Nunn has a slight 47%-44% edge over Republican David Perdue in the Georgia race for an open Senate seat, according to a new CNN/ORC International survey released Friday. — The three-point margin falls within …
Discussion:
Political Insider blog, Washington Post, The PJ Tatler, Hot Air, Bloomberg Politics, Politico and Hinterland Gazette
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Michael Warren / Weekly Standard:
Dynasties “R” Us — The names to watch in Georgia are Carter, Nunn, and Perdue. — Republican governor Nathan Deal has spent much of his race for reelection talking up Georgia's progress since he took office in 2011: targeted tax reform, economic development, a bigger education budget.
Discussion:
Washington Monthly and Daily Kos
Peter Beinart / The Atlantic Online:
How Independents Could Seize Control of the Senate — As the bulk of close election observers have pointed out, the odds favor the Republicans capturing enough Senate seats to make a majority next year. Of course, it is not a certainty (to any except the election modelers at The Monkey Cage).
Discussion:
Washington Monthly
Ed O'Keefe / Washington Post:
Ballot dispute in Georgia heads to courts — and could be a factor in state's close Senate race — With an increasingly competitive and closely-watched Senate race on the line, an Atlanta courtroom will be the focus of a key voting rights dispute Friday that could make it harder for Democrats …
Alex Roarty / National Journal:
Could the ‘Perfect’ Campaign Lose? — Kay Hagan is trying to prove months of good work can withstand a national climate that's threatening other Dems. Republicans are confident she can't. — RALEIGH, N.C.—It took Kay Hagan 10 minutes to cover everything she wanted to say about public education.
Discussion:
Washington Post
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J. David Goodman / New York Times:
New York City Police Kill Man Who Hit 2 Officers With Hatchet — A hatchet-wielding man who charged at four rookie New York City police officers on Thursday as they posed for a photograph on a Queens street was shot and killed after he struck one of the officers in the head and another in the arm …
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Garrett Epps / The Atlantic Online:
On Race and Voter ID, John Roberts Wants It Both Ways — Once, the chief justice said the only way to stop discriminating on race was to stop discrimination on race. Now his tune isn't so clear. — “The way to stop discrimination on the basis of race,” Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in 2007 …
Discussion:
The Huffington Post and Prairie Weather
Jim O'Sullivan / The Boston Globe:
Baker opens up lead over Coakley in new poll — Republican Charlie Baker has opened up a 9-point lead over Democrat Martha Coakley, 45 percent to 36 percent, according to a new Globe poll that depicts a far more comfortable advantage than either candidate for governor has enjoyed in months.
Discussion:
Associated Press, Hot Air, OnPolitics, WBUR, Outside the Beltway, Althouse, Washington Post, National Review, Viking Pundit and Bloomberg Politics
Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
Barack Obama, bewildered bystander — The president is upset. Very upset. Frustrated and angry. Seething about the government's handling of Ebola, said the front-page headline in the New York Times last Saturday. — There's only one problem with this pose, so obligingly transcribed for him by the Times.
Discussion:
Patterico's Pontifications and Betsy's Page
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Ron Fournier / National Journal:
What a Real White House Shake-Up Looks Like
What a Real White House Shake-Up Looks Like
Discussion:
Politico, Liberaland and Bloomberg Politics
Paul Krugman / New York Times:
Plutocrats Against Democracy — It's always good when leaders tell the truth, especially if that wasn't their intention. So we should be grateful to Leung Chun-ying, the Beijing-backed leader of Hong Kong, for blurting out the real reason pro-democracy demonstrators can't get what they want …
Discussion:
BillMoyers.com and Hullabaloo
Janet Hook / Wall Street Journal:
GOP Gains in Key Senate Races as Gender Gap Narrows — In Iowa, Arkansas and Colorado, Democrats' Advantage Among Women Voters Has Diminished — In a warning flag for Democrats, recent polls suggest the party is failing to draw enough support from women in three key Senate races—in Iowa …
Discussion:
The Hugh Hewitt Show, Washington Post and The Federalist
Dan Morse / Washington Post:
Dallas nurse treated for Ebola at NIH now ‘virus free’ — Nina Pham, the first nurse diagnosed with Ebola in the United States after caring for an infected patient in Dallas, has been declared “virus free,” officials at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., said Friday morning.
Discussion:
Outside the Beltway
Edgar Sandoval / NY Daily News:
Gov. Christie feels his minimum wage views were misunderstood, while NJ diner waitresses say he lacks empathy — The New Jersey governor, speaking at a Garden State diner, explained that most people missed his point — and he's come to accept that. Waitress Stacey Ellis said his remarks showed zero empathy for workers like her.
Discussion:
Shakesville and Talking Points Memo
Mark Binelli / Rolling Stone:
The Great Kansas Tea Party Disaster — Extremist Republicans turned their government into a lab experiment of tax cuts and privatization. And now they may be losing control of one of the reddest states in the nation — The Republican party headquarters in Wichita, Kansas …
Discussion:
Washington Monthly
Bloomberg:
Ebola Spreads to Mali as WHO Races to Contain Outbreak — Mali became the sixth West African country to report a case of Ebola, opening a new front in the international effort to prevent the outbreak of the deadly viral infection from spreading further. — A 2-year-old girl who traveled …
Discussion:
Washington Post, ThinkProgress and New York Times
RELATED:
Cari Romm / The Atlantic Online:
Ebola Reaches Mali
Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
Alison Grimes doubles down on a 4-Pinocchio claim — “I am Alison Lundergan Grimes and this is the Big Sandy power plant in Louisa, Kentucky. They are shutting down half the plant and laying off their workers because Mitch McConnell didn't fight to get the scrubbers it needs to reduce coal emissions.
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Sahil Kapur / Talking Points Memo:
Glenn Beck: Not ‘All That Bad’ If McConnell Loses To Grimes (AUDIO)
Glenn Beck: Not ‘All That Bad’ If McConnell Loses To Grimes (AUDIO)
Discussion:
Mediaite